Crossover thrash | |
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Genre Info | |
Stylistic Origins | Thrash metal, hardcore punk |
Cultural Origins | Early 80's |
Typical Instruments | Vocals, electric guitar, bass, and drums |
Crossover thrash (often abbreviated to crossover, sometimes also called punk metal) is a form of thrash metal and hardcore punk which had mixed both genres together or had influences from each other. The genre lies on a continuum between heavy metal and punk rock. Other genres on the same continuum have significant overlap with crossover thrash, and besides tradition hardcore punk and thrash metal, include such related genres as thrashcore, grindcore and skate punk.
Terminological ambiguity[]
The genre is often confused with thrashcore, which is essentially a faster hardcore punk rather than a more punk-oriented form of metal. Throughout the early and mid 1980s, the term "thrash" was often used as a synonym for hardcore punk (as in the New York Thrash compilation of 1982). The term "thrashcore" to distinguish acts of the genre from others was not coined until at least 1993. Many crossover bands, such as D.R.I., began as influential thrashcore bands.[2] The "-core" suffix of "thrashcore" is sometimes used to distinguish it from crossover thrash and thrash metal, the latter of which is often referred to simply as "thrash", which in turn is rarely used to refer to crossover thrash or thrashcore. Thrashcore is occasionally used by the music press to refer to thrash metal-inflected metalcore.
Musical characteristics[]
Crossover incorporates fast paced thrash riffs mixed with breakdown riffs commonly used in hardcore and helped forge a derivative known as groove metal (sometimes referred to as post-thrash). Drumming is typically done at high speed, with D-beats sometimes being used.
Heavy Metal |
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Alternative metal • Avant-garde metal • Black metal • Christian metal • Crossover thrash • Death metal • Doom metal • Extreme metal • Folk metal • Glam metal |