Encyclopaedia Metallum

Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives (commonly known as Metal Archives per the URL or abbreviated as MA) is an online encyclopedia based upon musical artists who predominantly perform heavy metal music along with its various sub-genres.[1] Encyclopaedia Metallum was described by Matt Sullivan of Nashville Scene as "the Internet's central database for all that is 'tr00' in the metal world."[2] Terrorizer described the site as "a fully-exhaustive list of pretty much every metal band ever, with full discographies, an active forum and an interlinking members list that shows the ever-incestuous beauty of the metal scene".[3] Nevertheless, there are exceptions for bands which fall under disputed genres not accepted by the website.

Encyclopaedia Metallum
Logo of the Encyclopaedia Metallum
Type of site
Music database, reviews
OwnerMorrigan, Hellblazer
Created byMorrigan, Hellblazer
URLmetal-archives.com
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
LaunchedJuly 2002
Current statusActive

Encyclopaedia Metallum attempts to provide comprehensive information on each band, such as a discography, logos, pictures, lyrics, line-ups, biography, trivia and user-submitted reviews. The site also provides a system for submitting bands to the archives. The website is free of advertisements and is run completely independently.

History

The Encyclopaedia Metallum was launched in July 2002 by a Canadian couple from Montreal using the pseudonyms HellBlazer and Morrigan. A couple of years prior, HellBlazer had the idea of an encyclopedia for heavy metal and attempted to create an HTML page for every metal band by hand. Although he gave up on that initial attempt, a fully automated site with contributions from its users was in the works.[4] The site initially went live early in July 2002 and the first band (Amorphis) was added on July 7, 2002.[5] In just over a year the site had amassed a database of over 10,000 bands.[6] The site continues to grow at a rate of about 500 bands per month.[7]

On January 1, 2013, the site announced that bands with entirely digital discographies could now be submitted to the Archives, changing the site's decade-long policy of physical releases only.[8] Digital releases must have a fixed track listing, album art, professional or finished production and be available in a high-quality or lossless format through official distribution sources (such as Bandcamp and/or iTunes).

On November 13, 2014, the number of bands listed in the database reached 100,000.[9]

April Fools' Day pranks

The site has a tradition of April Fool's Day pranks that are sometimes taken seriously. This started in 2009 with the addition of Korn into the Metal Archives, with the news article of the day claiming that the first album was metal enough for the site. Several users left joke reviews praising the band's first self-titled album. A series of staged arguments between moderators appeared throughout the day on the site's forum. Several more April Fools' pranks would follow in later years:

2012 – The site posted an FBI logo on the main page, suggesting that the site was suspended by the FBI for promoting internet piracy. Despite the ability to bypass this image just by clicking on it, many people took the prank seriously and thought that the Metal Archives had shut down.

2013 – Nickelback were added to the Metal Archives in a prank that was similar to the 2009 Korn prank, as it also had user-submitted joke reviews praising various Nickelback albums. Staged arguments between moderators also broke out on the forums.

2014 – An influx of reviews of an EP entitled Penis Metal by Chilean black metal band Hades Archer were summitted, mostly praising the album. As of 2022, it is the most-reviewed album on the site. There was also a second prank involving the deletion of controversial band Meshuggah whose genre on the site is listed as djent, which are normally not allowed. This led to another series of staged arguments between moderators on the forums. Meshuggah were reinstated the following day.

2015 – The website made an announcement introducing a paid premium membership service due to the site growing bigger and requiring more server space and bandwidth, causing it to be more expensive to maintain. For "basic users" without the membership, they are only limited to 15 page views a day, and would have to see advertisements on the site. Three membership tiers were announced: "Metal Soldier", "Metal General", and "Metal Dictator".

2016 – The site announced it would no longer be moderating user-submitted reviews on albums, causing users to believe there would be a huge influx of poorly written reviews.

2017 – An announcement was made that the Metal Archives would be launching a section dedicated to metal news and commentary, and described it as "social media-friendly". Various joke articles were written parodying clickbait news websites.

2018 – The site announced they were "100% complete" and would no longer be accepting new bands into the archives.

2019 – An announcement was made that bands would now be filtered based on their subjective quality.

2020 – The site would be dedicating its servers' computational resources entirely to COVID-19 relief organizations for biomedical research until a cure was found. They stated the site would be taken offline because of this.

2021 – The website replaced all of their band photos with cat photos.[10][11] The prank wound up becoming very popular on the site and abroad with their web traffic more than doubling and led to a launch of a permanent cat version of the site.[12]

2022 – The site announced that they would be removing genres in order to simplify and avoid confusion, with them claiming that many bands' genres are nearly impossible to pin down. They also mentioned that any user that uses the word "djent" would be banned from the site and forums.

2023 – An announcement was made that an AI system was made to check if a band was metal or not. However, this system determined that black metal bands are not metal, when analyzed scientifically. The website removed many popular black metal bands from the archives for the day.

Accepted and excluded bands

A map of heavy metal bands per capita based on Encyclopaedia Metallum data.

Encyclopaedia Metallum maintains a system where a user with a registered account is free to submit a band to the database that they deem to be within a heavy metal genre, but once the band page gets submitted it goes through an approval process where a moderator (or in some cases, multiple moderators) will review the band's music to determine if it's suitable for the website's classification of metal. Traditional heavy metal genres and era (such as the NWOBHM) have stringent rulings; users are warned in the rules section to consider bands submitted under these classifications as "ambiguous", in the sense that if a band is submitted with these terms as their genre, the music will be extensively reviewed by the moderators before they decide whether or not to accept the band onto the website.[13] This is because, in the past, some submissions labeled with those genres have turned out not to be metal according to the site's guidelines. Bands or artists commonly associated with either hard rock or glam metal will only be accepted if the moderators consider their material to be at least "fully, unambiguously metal", examples being Deep Purple, Def Leppard, Mötley Crüe, Scorpions, Skid Row and Stryper, while the site will not accept certain rock- or hard rock-based acts like AC/DC, Guns N' Roses, Kiss, Led Zeppelin or Poison.[14]

Additionally, there are some rare cases of non-metal bands featured on the site that are considered to be part of the metal scene despite not being metal themselves (usually dark ambient and folk bands that are side projects of already well-known established metal artists), examples being Mortiis, Elend, Nest, Of the Wand & the Moon, Autumn Tears, Stille Volk, etc. These bands were selected by the moderators "in an admittedly arbitrary fashion", and their submission by normal users was discouraged.[14] In 2021 the staff collectively decided that they will not be adding any more of these "exception bands" to the database.[15]

Certain genres related to metal that the site does not accept are djent and nu metal, although some bands who are on the site have released albums in the latter genre, such as Machine Head and Chimaira, who both released nu metal material in the early 2000s, but are mostly recognized as groove metal bands. Metalcore and deathcore are only allowed on the site if the moderators consider at least one album "clearly more metal than core", examples being Killswitch Engage, As I Lay Dying, After the Burial, Carnifex, All Shall Perish, The Red Chord, and Despised Icon, while other bands such as Bring Me the Horizon, Converge, Atreyu, Born of Osiris, Between the Buried and Me, and Oceano are not allowed on the site.[14]

See also

References

  1. Miers, Jeff (June 13, 2008). "Club Chatter". The Buffalo News. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  2. Sullivan, Matt (December 22, 2009). "The indie-fication of metal, 2009". Nashville Scene. City Press LLC. Archived from the original on December 28, 2009. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  3. "A Decade in Downloading", Terrorizer's Secret History of... the Decade, December 2009
  4. "Encyclopaedia Metallum - Miasma Interview". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  5. "Amorphis". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  6. "10,000 bands!". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  7. "Band archives - By created date". Encyclopaedia Metallum. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  8. "Happy New Year! We have a present for you". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  9. "100,000 bands". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  10. Kennelty, Greg (1 April 2021). "Metal Archives Has Replaced Every Band Photo With A Cat Photo". Metal Injection. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  11. Schaffner, Lauryn (1 April 2021). "All Band Photos on Metal Archives Are Metal Cats, See 15 of Them". Loudwire. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  12. "Cats". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  13. "Websites "rules"... heavy metal/hard rock to be considered "ambiguous"" Archived 2010-03-11 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. "Rules & Guidelines". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  15. "Submission of non-metal side-projects and similar". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
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