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Kirkmeyer, B. (2025). A retrospective of Ian Christe’s “Sound of the Beast: The Complete Headbanging History of Heavy Metal”. Metal Music Studies, 11(2), 131–134.
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Klypchak, B. (2025). Memoir-ish reflections on “Please Kill Me: The Uncensored History of Punk”. Metal Music Studies, 11(2), 121–125.
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Kosek, J. (2025). Cultural and Social Dimensions of Contemporary Heavy Metal Narratives. Podstawy Edukacji, 18, 423–440.
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Kruk, J., & Robertson, W. C. (2025). Peripheral Linguistic Brutality: Metal Languaging in the Asia Pacific. Asia Pop!. Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press.
Abstract: << Peripheral Linguistic Brutality is a sociolinguistic investigation into the production of “metalness” through language in the Asia Pacific. Focusing on the ways local music scenes adopt, reject, and modify linguistic ideologies, Jess Kruk and Wesley Robertson (hosts of the podcast Lingua Brutallica) examine how translocal participation in metal settings shapes how and why specific language forms are used to construct “metal language.”
Although much research has been done on language flows and use in global subcultures, their volume intervenes in two key ways. First, most prior work has focused on hip-hop, which unlike metal has an established “origin” dialect, namely AAVE (African American Vernacular English), linked to concepts of authenticity in the scene. Secondly, writing on global language flows has centered around what happens when a language, mainly English, enters a new space or context—not on how individuals employ imported forms and reimagine already extant linguistic resources as indexes, or markers, of new identities. Through interviews with practicing metal lyricists from Australia, Indonesia, Japan, and Taiwan, Peripheral Linguistic Brutality therefore fills gaps in the knowledge of language’s role in translocal subcultures.
Specifically, it sheds new light on how global subcultures spawn new local beliefs about the meaning and purpose of language forms, the sociolinguistic conflicts that can arise and influence language use when a scene enters a new locale, and metal itself as a global practice. >> Source: https://uhpress.hawaii.edu
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Lapkouski, P. A. (2025). Кросс-культурное взаимодействие в экстремальной музыке (на материале дэт-метала и грайндкора) [Cross-Cultural Interaction in Extreme Music (Death Metal and Grindcore)]. Научный вестник Московской консерватории [Journal of Moscow Conservatory], 16(2), 360–371.
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Latif, M. A. (2025). Music in religion. Theology, 128(1), 41–47.
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Lee, D. W. (2025). Systematic Onslaught: The Aesthetics and Functions of Blast Beats in Contemporary Extreme Metal. In L. Burns, & C. Scotto (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook to Metal Music Composition: Evolution of Structure, Expression, and Production (pp. 167–181). Abingdon; New York: Routledge.
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Lilja, E. (2025). Perspectives on Harmony in Early Heavy Metal: Chords, Modes, Functions, and Texture. In L. Burns, & C. Scotto (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook to Metal Music Composition: Evolution of Structure, Expression, and Production (pp. 13–36). Abingdon; New York: Routledge.
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Lucas, O. R. (2025). Traditional Instruments in Global Folk Metal. In L. Burns, & C. Scotto (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook to Metal Music Composition: Evolution of Structure, Expression, and Production (pp. 203–216). Abingdon; New York: Routledge.
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Mądro, A. (2025). “Legend Never Dies”: Mythology and Canon of Literature in Symphony X’s Underworld. In C. Anderton, & L. Burns (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Progressive Rock, Metal, and the Literary Imagination (pp. 224–233). Routledge Music Handbooks. Oxfordshire, England: Routledge.
Abstract: << This an outstanding collection of chapters that explore the intersections between progressive rock, metal and the literary imagination. Each contribution here is a must-read and the editors have done an incredible job framing the
Handbook.
Karl Spracklen, PhD, AcSS
Leeds Beckett University, Portland >>
"This Handbook illustrates the many ways that progressive rock and metal music forge striking engagements with literary texts and themes.
The authors and their objects of analytic inquiry offer global and diverse perspectives on these genres and their literary connections: from ancient times to the modern world, from children’s literature to epic poetry, from mythology to science fiction, and from esoteric fantasy to harsh political criticism.
The musical treatments of these literary materials span the continents from South and North America through Europe and Asia. The collection presents critical perspectives on the enduring and complex relationships between words and music as these are expressed in progressive rock and metal.
The book is aimed primarily at an academic market, valuable for second through final year students on undergraduate courses devoted to both popular music and to literary studies, and to postgraduate programs and researchers in a range of fields, including: popular music studies, musicology, creative music performance and composition, songwriting, literary studies, narrative studies, folklore studies, science fiction studies, cultural studies, liberal studies, and sociology, and for media and history courses that have an interest in the intersection of narratives, music and society."
Source for both: https://www.routledge.com
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