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Encyclopaedia Metallum Overview

Encyclopaedia Metallum, also known as Metal Archives, is an online encyclopedia dedicated to heavy metal music and its sub-genres, offering comprehensive information on bands, including discographies and user reviews. Launched in July 2002, it has grown to include over 100,000 bands and allows user submissions, which are subject to a moderation process to ensure they meet the site's metal classification. The site maintains strict guidelines on accepted genres and has excluded certain bands and genres that do not align with its definition of metal.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
335 views2 pages

Encyclopaedia Metallum Overview

Encyclopaedia Metallum, also known as Metal Archives, is an online encyclopedia dedicated to heavy metal music and its sub-genres, offering comprehensive information on bands, including discographies and user reviews. Launched in July 2002, it has grown to include over 100,000 bands and allows user submissions, which are subject to a moderation process to ensure they meet the site's metal classification. The site maintains strict guidelines on accepted genres and has excluded certain bands and genres that do not align with its definition of metal.

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Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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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 numerous exceptions for bands which fall

under disputed genres not accepted by the website.

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[edit]

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 November 13, 2014, the number of bands listed in the

database reached 100,000.[8]

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.[9] 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).[citation needed]

A 2018 study of Encyclopaedia Metallum's database of approximately 350,000 musicians active between 1964 and 2015 found that 97% of metal

musicians were male and only 3% were female, though the latter figure has increased slightly since the 1970s.[10][11] In January 2022,

Stereogum reported that death metal bands made up most of Encyclopaedia Metallum's database with approximately 51,000 bands listed, but

noted that the highest number of active bands was within black metal (approx. 26,000).[12]

Accepted and excluded bands[edit]

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, Queen 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]

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