Death Metal

What’s In a Name

We find ourselves explaining where we got our name from… a lot.

No, we are not Death Metal or Goth freaks- The Hell Gate is an actual bridge in Astoria Queens- a unique, beautiful, gothic style railroad bridge  & synonymous with the East River view to take we have on life from Queens NY.
We chose not to go down the Donald Trump school of naming routes (random use of latin) or name ourselves or play the bullshit bingo option of using a variation on “stock” “pic” “foto” etc etc – the fodder stock school of no imagination.

A beautiful photograph of the Hell Gate bridge from the 1940s  is in the  link here, you’ll have to scroll down a bit to get to it – the actual website of the  NYC Municipal online photo gallery is currently down because so many people logged onto it yesterday .

Metal Up Your Ass

James Hetfield of Metallica, photo by Peter Anderson/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

An interesting article and even more insightful comments were published on the Guardian UK last Friday about the Mercury Prize basically overlooking the genre of Heavy Metal. This is not really surprising nor news. Metal has never been embraced by music taste makers/critics, especially in the UK. To basically have The Darkness as one of the only hard rock/metal nominations in the past 11 years for the Mercury Prize pretty much says it all.

Metal remains outsider music that has a tribe mentality. Many Metal acts have decent album sales and do great on the road without the support of airplay or conventional media coverage- even in the blogsphere Metal is not nearly covered at the same rate Indie Rock and Hip Hop are.

The “us against them” attitude that is a cornerstone of Metal has its distribution roots in word of mouth and trading of bootlegs. Now with the boom of social media, Metal has diversified even more with a mind-boggling array of sub genres that go way beyond Nu-Metal and Death Metal (Grindcore anyone?) The insular community of Metal does not need outside accolades such as the Mercury Prize for validation. The fans are the most fickle critics Heavy Metal will ever face- what would be refreshing is if the media acknowledged and respected the musicianship.