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Glam metal

Glam metal (also known as hair metal or pop metal) is a subgenre of heavy metal that features pop-influenced hooks and guitar riffs, upbeat rock anthems, and slow power ballads. It borrows heavily from the fashion and image of 1970s glam rock.

Glam metal
Other names
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsLate 1970s and early 1980s, Los Angeles and New York City
Regional scenes
  • Australia
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
  • Europe
  • Ireland
  • Sweden
  • Norway
  • Finland
  • Japan
  • Hong Kong
Other topics

Early glam metal evolved directly from the glam rock movement of the 1970s, as visual elements taken from acts such as T. Rex, the New York Dolls, and David Bowie (and to a lesser extent, the punk and new wave movements taking place concurrently in New York City) were fused with the decidedly more heavy metal leaning and theatrical acts such as Alice Cooper and Kiss. The first examples of this fusion began appearing in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the United States, particularly on the Los Angeles Sunset Strip music scene. Early glam metal bands include Mötley Crüe, Hanoi Rocks, Ratt, Quiet Riot, Twisted Sister, Bon Jovi, and Dokken. Glam metal achieved significant commercial success from approximately 1983 to 1991, bringing to prominence bands such as Poison, Skid Row, Cinderella and Warrant. From a strictly visual perspective, glam metal is defined by flashy and tight-fitting clothing, makeup, and an overall androgynous aesthetic in which the traditional "denim & leather" aspect of heavy metal culture is replaced by spandex, lace, and usually heavy use of bright colours.

Glam metal suffered a decline in popularity in the early-mid 1990s, as the grunge and alternative phenomena revolutionized hard rock, and fans' tastes moved toward a more natural and stripped-down aesthetic and a rejection of the glam metal visual style. During this period, many of the most successful acts of the genre's 1980s pinnacle suddenly found themselves facing disbandment as their audiences moved in another direction. Glam metal has experienced a resurgence since the late 1990s, with successful reunion tours of many popular acts from the genre's 1980s heyday, as well as the emergence of new, predominantly European bands, including the Darkness, Crashdiet, Reckless Love, and American band Steel Panther.

Characteristics, fashion, and terminology

Musically, glam metal combines a traditional heavy metal sound with elements of hard rock and punk rock,[4] adding pop-influenced catchy hooks and guitar riffs.[5][6] Like other heavy metal songs of the 1980s (most notably thrash metal songs), they often feature shred guitar solos.[7] They also include extensive use of harmonies, particularly in the characteristic power ballads – slow, emotional songs that gradually build to a strong finale.[8] These were among the most commercially successful singles in the genre and opened it up to a wider audience that would otherwise not have been attracted to traditional heavy metal. Lyrical themes often deal with love and lust, with songs often directed at a particular woman.[9]

Aesthetically glam metal draws heavily on the glam rock or glitter rock of the 1970s,[10] often with very long backcombed hair, use of hair spray, use of make-up, gaudy clothing and accessories (chiefly consisting of tight denim or leather jeans, spandex, and headbands).[11] The visual aspects of glam metal appealed to music television producers, particularly MTV, whose establishment coincided with the rise of the genre.[12] Glam metal performers became infamous for their debauched lifestyles of drugs, strippers and late-night parties, which were widely covered in the tabloid press.[13]

Sociologist Deena Weinstein points to the large number of terms used to describe more commercial forms of heavy metal, which she groups together as lite metal. These include, beside glam metal: melodic metal, false metal, poodle bands, nerf metal, pop metal or metal pop, the last of which was coined by critic Philip Bashe in 1983 to describe bands such as Van Halen and Def Leppard.[9] AllMusic employs the umbrella term "pop metal", which refers to the whole pop-tinted hard rock and heavy metal scene of the 1980s (including Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and Europe), and locates hair metal as a late-1980s variation of pop metal characterized by flashy clothing and heavy makeup influenced by glam rock (as embodied by Poison and Mötley Crüe).[14] Use of the derogatory term "hair metal" started in the early 1990s, as grunge gained popularity at the expense of 1980s metal.[14] In the "definitive metal family tree" of his documentary Metal: A Headbanger's Journey, anthropologist Sam Dunn differentiates pop metal, which includes bands like Def Leppard, Europe, and Whitesnake, from glam metal bands such as Mötley Crüe and Poison.[15]

History

Predecessors

 
The New York Dolls in 1973. Their visual style influenced the look of many 1980s-era glam metal groups.

Music journalist Stephen Davis claims the influences of the style can be traced back to acts like Kiss, Boston, Cheap Trick, and the New York Dolls.[3] Kiss, and to a lesser extent Alice Cooper, were major influences on the genre.[16] Finnish band Hanoi Rocks, heavily influenced themselves by the New York Dolls, have been credited with setting a blueprint for the look of hair metal.[17]

Van Halen has been seen as highly influential on the movement, emerging in 1978 from the Los Angeles music scene on Sunset Strip, with a sound based around the lead guitar skills of Eddie Van Halen. He popularized a playing technique of two-handed hammer-ons and pull-offs called tapping, showcased on the song "Eruption" from the album Van Halen.[4] This sound, and lead singer David Lee Roth's stage antics, would be highly influential on glam metal.[18] Def Leppard, often categorized with the New Wave of British heavy metal, released their second album High 'n' Dry in 1981, mixing glam rock with heavy metal, and helping to define the sound of hard rock for the decade.[19]

Mainstream success (1981–1991)

First wave (1981–1986)

In the early 1980s, bands from across the United States began to move towards what would become the glam metal sound. In 1981, Mötley Crüe (from Los Angeles) released their first album Too Fast for Love, Dokken (also from Los Angeles) released their first album Breaking the Chains, and Kix (from western Maryland) released their first album Kix. In 1982, Night Ranger (from San Francisco) released their initial album Dawn Patrol which reached the top 40 in the United States.[20]

 
Quiet Riot was one of the first glam metal bands to achieve mainstream success.

1983 was the breakout year for heavy metal: Quiet Riot's Metal Health was the first heavy metal album to reach number one in the Billboard charts. Quiet Riot success paved the way for many heavy metal acts, glam and otherwise, as the decade progressed.[21] That same year saw a larger wave of heavy metal albums achieve previously unheard of commercial success, with Mötley Crüe releasing its second album Shout at the Devil, Def Leppard releasing its third album Pyromania, and Kiss releasing Lick It Up.

Def Leppard's Pyromania, later certified 10× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), reached number two on the Billboard 200. The singles "Foolin'", "Photograph", and "Rock of Ages", helped by the emergence of MTV, reached the Top 40.[19][22][23] Pyromania's style was widely emulated, particularly by the emerging Californian scene.[6] However, remarked Leppard's Joe Elliott, "I don't know how anybody could confuse us with that lot. We weren't even around when all those so-called glam bands came up. We were in fuckin' Holland making Hysteria. While they were out banging chicks or whatever, we were looking at windmills and playing pool on a table without any pockets. We were as far away from LA as any band could be."[24]

The most active glam metal scene was starting to appear in clubs on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles, including The Trip, the Whisky a Go Go, and the Starwood. These clubs began to avoid booking punk rock bands because of fears of violence and began booking many metal bands, usually on a "pay to play" basis, thus creating a vibrant scene for hard rock music.[4][25] An increasing number of metal bands were able to produce debut albums in 1984, including Ratt (from Los Angeles) with its breakthrough album Out of the Cellar, Bon Jovi (from New Jersey) with its debut Bon Jovi, Great White with Great White, Black 'n Blue (from Portland, Oregon) with Black 'n Blue, Autograph with its first album Sign In Please, and W.A.S.P. with its self-titled debut album.

All these bands played a part in developing the overall look and sound of glam metal during the early 1980s.[4] In 1985, many more commercially successful glam metal albums began to appear. Mötley Crüe released Theatre of Pain, Ratt's second album Invasion of Your Privacy, Dokken's third album Under Lock and Key, Stryper's first release Soldiers Under Command, Bon Jovi's second release 7800° Fahrenheit, and Autograph's second album That's The Stuff. Los Angeles continued to foster the most important scene around the Sunset Strip, with groups like London, which had originally formed as a glam rock band in the 1970s, and had seen future members of Mötley Crüe, Cinderella and Guns N' Roses pass through its ranks, finally releasing their début album Non Stop Rock in 1985 as well.[26]

Second wave (1986–1991)

By the mid-late 1980s, glam metal had begun to become a major mainstream success in America with many of these bands' music videos appearing on heavy rotation on MTV often at the top of MTV's daily dial countdown, and some of the bands appeared on the channel's shows such as Headbangers Ball, which became one of the most popular programs with over 1.3 million views a week.[12][27] The groups also received heavy rotation on radio stations such as KNAC in Los Angeles.[28]

1986 was a significant year for glam metal music as one of the most commercially significant releases of the era was put out by Bon Jovi with Slippery When Wet which mixed metal with a pop sensibility, and spent a total of eight weeks at the top of the Billboard 200 album chart, selling over 12 million copies in the United States. It became the first hard rock album to spawn three top ten singles, two of which reached number one.[29] The album has been credited with widening the audience for the genre, particularly by appealing to women as well as the traditional male dominated audience, and opening the door to MTV and commercial success for other bands at the end of the decade.[30]

The Swedish band Europe released the anthemic album The Final Countdown which reached the top ten in several countries, including the U.S. and while the title single reached number one in 26 countries.[31] Stryper made their mainstream breakthrough in 1986 with the release of their platinum album To Hell with the Devil and brought Christian lyrics to their hard rock music style and glam metal looks.[32] Two Pennsylvania bands, with Harrisburg's Poison and Philadelphia's Cinderella released multi-platinum début albums, respectively Look What the Cat Dragged In and Night Songs in 1986.[33][34] Van Halen released 5150 their first album with Sammy Hagar on lead vocals, which was number one in the U.S. for three weeks and sold over six million copies.[18] Additionally, some established hard rock and heavy metal bands of the era such as Scorpions, Whitesnake, Dio, Aerosmith, Kiss, Alice Cooper, Ozzy Osbourne, Judas Priest, Saxon and Accept began incorporating hair metal elements into their sounds and images, as the genre's popularity skyrocketed in 1985–1986.[35]

 
Four Def Leppard songs were on the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100.[36]

Glam metal bands continued their run of commercial success in 1987 with Mötley Crüe releasing Girls, Girls, Girls, White Lion releasing Pride, and Def Leppard releasing Hysteria producing a hard rock record of seven hit singles.[19] Another of the greatest successes of the era was Guns N' Roses, originally formed from a fusion of bands L.A. Guns and Hollywood Rose, who released the best-selling début of all time, Appetite for Destruction. With a "grittier" and "rawer" sound than most glam metal, incorporating elements of punk and blues, Appetite For Destruction produced three top 10 hits, including the number one "Sweet Child O' Mine".[37] In the wake of Guns N' Roses commercial success, other similarly rawer glam metal bands began to gain popularity like L.A. Guns and Faster Pussycat. Critics eventually termed this style sleaze rock or sleaze metal to differentiate it from the perceived increasing commerciality of other glam metal bands.[38][39] Such was the dominance of the style that Californian hardcore punk band T.S.O.L. moved towards a glam metal sound in this period.[40][41]

In the last years of the decade the most notable successes were New Jersey (1988) by Bon Jovi,[42] OU812 (1988) by Van Halen,[18] while Open Up and Say... Ahh! (1988) by Poison, spawned number one hit single "Every Rose Has Its Thorn", and eventually sold eight million copies worldwide.[33][43] Britny Fox from Philadelphia[44] and Winger from New York[45] released their eponymous débuts in 1988. In 1989 Mötley Crüe produced their most commercially successful album, the multi-platinum number one Dr. Feelgood.[46] In the same year eponymous débuts included Danger Danger from New York,[47] Dangerous Toys from Austin, Texas, who provided more of a Southern rock tone to the genre,[48] Enuff Z'Nuff from Chicago who provided an element of psychedelia to their sound and visual style, and Tora Tora from Memphis, Tennessee, who incorporated elements of blues rock into their music. L.A. débuts included Warrant with Dirty Rotten Filthy Stinking Rich (1989),[49] and Skid Row with their eponymous album (1989), which reached number six in the Billboard 200, but they were to be one of the last major bands that emerged in the glam metal era.[50]

Glam metal entered the 1990s as one of the major commercial genres of popular music, but such success would not continue for long; in 1990, débuts for Slaughter, from Las Vegas with Stick It to Ya[51] and FireHouse, from North Carolina, with their eponymous album reached number 18 and number 21 on the Billboard 200 respectively, but it would be the peak of their commercial achievement. Y&T released their last album "Ten" before the band on went on hiatus a few years. [52]

Decline (1991–1997)

The 1988 film The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years captured the Los Angeles scene of successful and aspiring bands. It also highlighted the excesses of glam metal, particularly the scene in which W.A.S.P. guitarist Chris Holmes was interviewed while drinking vodka on a floating chair in a swimming pool as his mother watched. As a result, it has been seen as helping to create a backlash against the genre.[53][54] In the early 1990s glam metal's popularity rapidly declined after nearly a decade of success. Successful bands lost members that were key to their songwriting and/or live performances, such as Mötley Crue's frontman Vince Neil, Poison guitarist C.C. DeVille, Def Leppard guitarist Steve Clark and Guns N' Roses guitarist Izzy Stradlin. Several music writers and musicians began to deride glam metal acts as "hair farmers",[55][56] hinting at the soon-to-be-popularized term "hair metal". Another reason for the decline in popularity of the style may have been the declining popularity of the power ballad. While its use, especially after a hard-rocking anthem, was initially a successful formula, in the early 1990s audiences lost interest in this approach.[8][57]

One significant factor in the decline was the rise of grunge music from Seattle, with bands including Nirvana, Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden. This was particularly obvious after the success of Nirvana's Nevermind (1991), which combined elements of hardcore punk and heavy metal into a dirty sound that made use of heavy guitar distortion, fuzz and feedback, along with darker lyrical themes, a stripped-down aesthetic and a complete rejection of the glam metal visual style and performance.[14][58] Many major labels felt they had been caught off-guard by the surprise success of grunge and began turning over their personnel in favor of younger staffers more versed in the new scene. As MTV shifted its attention to the new style, glam metal bands found themselves relegated increasingly to late night airplay, and Headbangers Ball was cancelled at the end of 1994,[27] while KNAC went over to Spanish programming.[28] Given glam metal's lack of a major format presence on radio, bands were left without a clear way to reach their audience. Other (earlier Hollywood) alternative rock bands like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Jane's Addiction also helped supplant the popularity of the genre.[59]

Some artists tried to alter their sound, while others struggled on with their original format.[14] In 1995, Van Halen released Balance, a multi-platinum seller that would be the band's last with Sammy Hagar on vocals. In 1996, David Lee Roth returned briefly and his replacement, former Extreme singer Gary Cherone, left the band soon after the release of the commercially unsuccessful 1998 album Van Halen III. Van Halen would not tour or record again until 2004.[18] Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers' 1992 debut album Generation Terrorists featured a glam metal sound.[60] The album reached No. 1 in the UK Rock Chart,[61] but failed to chart in the United States.[62]

Meanwhile, Guns N' Roses' classic-lineup was whittled away throughout the decade. Drummer Steven Adler was fired in 1990, guitarist Izzy Stradlin left in late 1991 after recording Use Your Illusion I and II with the band. Tensions between the other band members and lead singer Axl Rose continued after the release of the 1993 punk rock covers album "The Spaghetti Incident?". Guitarist Slash left in 1996, followed by bassist Duff McKagan in 1998. Axl Rose, the only remaining member from the classic lineup at that point, worked with several lineups of the band to record Chinese Democracy – an album that would take over ten years to complete.[37]

Revivals and nostalgia festivals (1997–present)

 
The Darkness performing in Sydney, Australia in 2004

During the late 1990s and 2000s, glam metal began to have a revival. Some established acts who had managed to weather the storm enjoyed renewed popularity, others reformed and new bands emerged to emulate the glam metal style. Bon Jovi were still able to achieve a commercial hit with "It's My Life" (2000).[42] They branched into country music with a version of their 2005 song "Who Says You Can't Go Home", which reached No. 1 on the Hot Country Singles chart in 2006 and the rock/country album Lost Highway which reached No. 1 in 2007. In 2009, Bon Jovi released The Circle, which marked a return to their hard rock sound and reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200.[42] Mötley Crüe reunited with Vince Neil to record the 1997 album Generation Swine[46] and Poison reunited with guitarist C.C. DeVille in 1999, producing the mostly live Power to the People (2000);[33] both bands began to tour extensively. There were reunions and subsequent tours from Van Halen (with Hagar in 2004 and then Roth in 2007).[18] The long-awaited Guns N' Roses album Chinese Democracy was finally released in 2008, but only went platinum in the US, produced no hit singles, and failed to come close to the success of the band's late 1980s and early 1990s material.[63] Europe's "Final Countdown" enjoyed a new lease of popularity as the millennium drew to a close and the band reformed.[64] Other acts to reform included Ratt,[65] Britny Fox,[66] Stryper (annually),[32] and Skid Row.[50]

 
The Rocklahoma festival held in Pryor, Oklahoma in 2008

Beginning in 1999, Monster Ballads, a series of compilation albums that feature popular power ballads, usually from the glam metal genre, capitalized on the nostalgia, with the first volume going platinum.[67] The VH1 sponsored Rock Never Stops Tour, beginning in 1998, has seen many glam metal bands take to the stage again, including on the inaugural tour: Warrant, Slaughter, Quiet Riot, FireHouse, and L.A. Guns. Slaughter also took part in the 1999 version with Ted Nugent, Night Ranger, and Quiet Riot.[68] Poison and Cinderella toured together in 2000 and 2002, and in 2005 Cinderella headlined the Rock Never Stops Tour, with support from Ratt, Quiet Riot, and FireHouse.[34] In 2007 the four-day-long Rocklahoma festival held in Oklahoma included glam metal bands Poison, Ratt and Twisted Sister.[69] Warrant and Cinderella co-headlined the festival in 2008.[70] Nostalgia for the genre was evidenced in the production of the glam metal themed musical Rock of Ages, which ran in Los Angeles in 2006[71] and in New York in 2008.[72] It was made into a film released in 2012.[73]

The Darkness's Permission to Land (2003), described as an "eerily realistic simulation of '80s metal and '70s glam",[74] topped the UK charts, going quintuple platinum. One Way Ticket to Hell... and Back (2005) reached number 11. The band broke up in 2006, but reunited in 2011, releasing the album Hot Cakes the following year.

In the mid-to late 2000s, there was a minor sleaze rock revival with groups like Hinder and Buckcherry.[75] The latter's breakthrough album 15 (2006) went platinum in the U.S. and spawned the single "Sorry" (2007), which made the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100.[76] Additionally, a subset of scene bands embraced elements of glam metal. This began with Blessed by a Broken Heart and subsequently popularised by the success of Black Veil Brides, Escape the Fate and Falling in Reverse.[77] Avenged Sevenfold's 2005 album City of Evil also promoted a similar influence, seeing the band depart from their metalcore sound in favour of one indebted to glam metal.[78] At the same time, in Sweden there was a sleaze metal movement attempting to revive the genre, with bands including Vains of Jenna,[79] Crashdïet[80] and H.E.A.T,[81] as well as the Finnish band Reckless Love.[82]

Los Angeles band Steel Panther managed to gain a following by playing 1980s style glam metal.[83]

See also

Citations

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Works cited

  • Price, Simon (1999). Everything (A Book About Manic Street Preachers). London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0-7535-0139-2.

General bibliography

  • Auslander, P., Performing Glam Rock: Gender and Theatricality in Popular Music (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2006), ISBN 0-7546-4057-4.
  • Batchelor, R., and Stoddart, S., The 1980s (London: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007), ISBN 0-313-33000-X.
  • Bogdanov, V., Woodstra, C., and Erlewine, S. T., All Music Guide to Rock: The Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), ISBN 0-87930-653-X.
  • Bukszpan, D., The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal (London: Barnes & Noble Publishing, 2003), ISBN 0-7607-4218-9.
  • Chapman, A., and Silber, L., Rock to Riches: Build Your Business the Rock & Roll Way (Capital Books, 2008), ISBN 1-933102-65-9.
  • Danville, E., and Mott, C., The Official Heavy Metal Book of Lists (Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press, 2009), ISBN 0-87930-983-0.
  • Davis, S., Watch You Bleed: The Saga of Guns N' Roses (New York: Gotham Books, 2008), ISBN 978-1-59240-377-6.
  • Hurd, M. G., Women Directors and their Films (London: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007), ISBN 0-275-98578-4.
  • Macdonald, B., Harrington, J., and Dimery, R., Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (London: Quintet, 2006), ISBN 0-7893-1371-5.
  • Moore, R., Sells Like Teen Spirit: Music, Youth Culture, and Social Crisis (New York: New York University Press, 2009), ISBN 0-8147-5748-0.
  • Nicholls, D., The Cambridge History of American Music (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), ISBN 0-521-45429-8.
  • Smith, C., 101 Albums that Changed Popular Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), ISBN 0-19-537371-5.
  • Walser, R., Running with the Devil: Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal Music (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1993), ISBN 0-8195-6260-2.
  • Weinstein, D., Heavy Metal: The Music and Its Culture (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2000), ISBN 0-306-80970-2.
  • Weinstein, D., "Rock critics need bad music", in C. Washburne and M. Derno, eds, Bad Music: the Music we Love to Hate (London: Routledge, 2004), ISBN 0-415-94366-3.
  • Yfantis, V., "Power Ballads And The Stories Behind", (Athens: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2021), ISBN 1546723404.

glam, metal, also, known, hair, metal, metal, subgenre, heavy, metal, that, features, influenced, hooks, guitar, riffs, upbeat, rock, anthems, slow, power, ballads, borrows, heavily, from, fashion, image, 1970s, glam, rock, other, nameshair, metal, metalstylis. Glam metal also known as hair metal or pop metal is a subgenre of heavy metal that features pop influenced hooks and guitar riffs upbeat rock anthems and slow power ballads It borrows heavily from the fashion and image of 1970s glam rock Glam metalOther namesHair metal pop metalStylistic originsHeavy metal hard rock pop pop rock arena rock glam punk 1 2 3 Cultural originsLate 1970s and early 1980s Los Angeles and New York CityRegional scenesAustralia United States United Kingdom Europe Ireland Sweden Norway Finland Japan Hong KongOther topicsMake up power metal power pop arena rock scene subculture visual keiEarly glam metal evolved directly from the glam rock movement of the 1970s as visual elements taken from acts such as T Rex the New York Dolls and David Bowie and to a lesser extent the punk and new wave movements taking place concurrently in New York City were fused with the decidedly more heavy metal leaning and theatrical acts such as Alice Cooper and Kiss The first examples of this fusion began appearing in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the United States particularly on the Los Angeles Sunset Strip music scene Early glam metal bands include Motley Crue Hanoi Rocks Ratt Quiet Riot Twisted Sister Bon Jovi and Dokken Glam metal achieved significant commercial success from approximately 1983 to 1991 bringing to prominence bands such as Poison Skid Row Cinderella and Warrant From a strictly visual perspective glam metal is defined by flashy and tight fitting clothing makeup and an overall androgynous aesthetic in which the traditional denim amp leather aspect of heavy metal culture is replaced by spandex lace and usually heavy use of bright colours Glam metal suffered a decline in popularity in the early mid 1990s as the grunge and alternative phenomena revolutionized hard rock and fans tastes moved toward a more natural and stripped down aesthetic and a rejection of the glam metal visual style During this period many of the most successful acts of the genre s 1980s pinnacle suddenly found themselves facing disbandment as their audiences moved in another direction Glam metal has experienced a resurgence since the late 1990s with successful reunion tours of many popular acts from the genre s 1980s heyday as well as the emergence of new predominantly European bands including the Darkness Crashdiet Reckless Love and American band Steel Panther Contents 1 Characteristics fashion and terminology 2 History 2 1 Predecessors 2 2 Mainstream success 1981 1991 2 2 1 First wave 1981 1986 2 2 2 Second wave 1986 1991 2 3 Decline 1991 1997 2 4 Revivals and nostalgia festivals 1997 present 3 See also 4 Citations 4 1 Works cited 5 General bibliographyCharacteristics fashion and terminology EditMusically glam metal combines a traditional heavy metal sound with elements of hard rock and punk rock 4 adding pop influenced catchy hooks and guitar riffs 5 6 Like other heavy metal songs of the 1980s most notably thrash metal songs they often feature shred guitar solos 7 They also include extensive use of harmonies particularly in the characteristic power ballads slow emotional songs that gradually build to a strong finale 8 These were among the most commercially successful singles in the genre and opened it up to a wider audience that would otherwise not have been attracted to traditional heavy metal Lyrical themes often deal with love and lust with songs often directed at a particular woman 9 Aesthetically glam metal draws heavily on the glam rock or glitter rock of the 1970s 10 often with very long backcombed hair use of hair spray use of make up gaudy clothing and accessories chiefly consisting of tight denim or leather jeans spandex and headbands 11 The visual aspects of glam metal appealed to music television producers particularly MTV whose establishment coincided with the rise of the genre 12 Glam metal performers became infamous for their debauched lifestyles of drugs strippers and late night parties which were widely covered in the tabloid press 13 Sociologist Deena Weinstein points to the large number of terms used to describe more commercial forms of heavy metal which she groups together as lite metal These include beside glam metal melodic metal false metal poodle bands nerf metal pop metal or metal pop the last of which was coined by critic Philip Bashe in 1983 to describe bands such as Van Halen and Def Leppard 9 AllMusic employs the umbrella term pop metal which refers to the whole pop tinted hard rock and heavy metal scene of the 1980s including Def Leppard Bon Jovi and Europe and locates hair metal as a late 1980s variation of pop metal characterized by flashy clothing and heavy makeup influenced by glam rock as embodied by Poison and Motley Crue 14 Use of the derogatory term hair metal started in the early 1990s as grunge gained popularity at the expense of 1980s metal 14 In the definitive metal family tree of his documentary Metal A Headbanger s Journey anthropologist Sam Dunn differentiates pop metal which includes bands like Def Leppard Europe and Whitesnake from glam metal bands such as Motley Crue and Poison 15 History EditPredecessors Edit The New York Dolls in 1973 Their visual style influenced the look of many 1980s era glam metal groups Music journalist Stephen Davis claims the influences of the style can be traced back to acts like Kiss Boston Cheap Trick and the New York Dolls 3 Kiss and to a lesser extent Alice Cooper were major influences on the genre 16 Finnish band Hanoi Rocks heavily influenced themselves by the New York Dolls have been credited with setting a blueprint for the look of hair metal 17 Van Halen has been seen as highly influential on the movement emerging in 1978 from the Los Angeles music scene on Sunset Strip with a sound based around the lead guitar skills of Eddie Van Halen He popularized a playing technique of two handed hammer ons and pull offs called tapping showcased on the song Eruption from the album Van Halen 4 This sound and lead singer David Lee Roth s stage antics would be highly influential on glam metal 18 Def Leppard often categorized with the New Wave of British heavy metal released their second album High n Dry in 1981 mixing glam rock with heavy metal and helping to define the sound of hard rock for the decade 19 Mainstream success 1981 1991 Edit First wave 1981 1986 Edit In the early 1980s bands from across the United States began to move towards what would become the glam metal sound In 1981 Motley Crue from Los Angeles released their first album Too Fast for Love Dokken also from Los Angeles released their first album Breaking the Chains and Kix from western Maryland released their first album Kix In 1982 Night Ranger from San Francisco released their initial album Dawn Patrol which reached the top 40 in the United States 20 Quiet Riot was one of the first glam metal bands to achieve mainstream success 1983 was the breakout year for heavy metal Quiet Riot s Metal Health was the first heavy metal album to reach number one in the Billboard charts Quiet Riot success paved the way for many heavy metal acts glam and otherwise as the decade progressed 21 That same year saw a larger wave of heavy metal albums achieve previously unheard of commercial success with Motley Crue releasing its second album Shout at the Devil Def Leppard releasing its third album Pyromania and Kiss releasing Lick It Up Def Leppard s Pyromania later certified 10 platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA reached number two on the Billboard 200 The singles Foolin Photograph and Rock of Ages helped by the emergence of MTV reached the Top 40 19 22 23 Pyromania s style was widely emulated particularly by the emerging Californian scene 6 However remarked Leppard s Joe Elliott I don t know how anybody could confuse us with that lot We weren t even around when all those so called glam bands came up We were in fuckin Holland making Hysteria While they were out banging chicks or whatever we were looking at windmills and playing pool on a table without any pockets We were as far away from LA as any band could be 24 The most active glam metal scene was starting to appear in clubs on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles including The Trip the Whisky a Go Go and the Starwood These clubs began to avoid booking punk rock bands because of fears of violence and began booking many metal bands usually on a pay to play basis thus creating a vibrant scene for hard rock music 4 25 An increasing number of metal bands were able to produce debut albums in 1984 including Ratt from Los Angeles with its breakthrough album Out of the Cellar Bon Jovi from New Jersey with its debut Bon Jovi Great White with Great White Black n Blue from Portland Oregon with Black n Blue Autograph with its first album Sign In Please and W A S P with its self titled debut album All these bands played a part in developing the overall look and sound of glam metal during the early 1980s 4 In 1985 many more commercially successful glam metal albums began to appear Motley Crue released Theatre of Pain Ratt s second album Invasion of Your Privacy Dokken s third album Under Lock and Key Stryper s first release Soldiers Under Command Bon Jovi s second release 7800 Fahrenheit and Autograph s second album That s The Stuff Los Angeles continued to foster the most important scene around the Sunset Strip with groups like London which had originally formed as a glam rock band in the 1970s and had seen future members of Motley Crue Cinderella and Guns N Roses pass through its ranks finally releasing their debut album Non Stop Rock in 1985 as well 26 Second wave 1986 1991 Edit By the mid late 1980s glam metal had begun to become a major mainstream success in America with many of these bands music videos appearing on heavy rotation on MTV often at the top of MTV s daily dial countdown and some of the bands appeared on the channel s shows such as Headbangers Ball which became one of the most popular programs with over 1 3 million views a week 12 27 The groups also received heavy rotation on radio stations such as KNAC in Los Angeles 28 1986 was a significant year for glam metal music as one of the most commercially significant releases of the era was put out by Bon Jovi with Slippery When Wet which mixed metal with a pop sensibility and spent a total of eight weeks at the top of the Billboard 200 album chart selling over 12 million copies in the United States It became the first hard rock album to spawn three top ten singles two of which reached number one 29 The album has been credited with widening the audience for the genre particularly by appealing to women as well as the traditional male dominated audience and opening the door to MTV and commercial success for other bands at the end of the decade 30 The Swedish band Europe released the anthemic album The Final Countdown which reached the top ten in several countries including the U S and while the title single reached number one in 26 countries 31 Stryper made their mainstream breakthrough in 1986 with the release of their platinum album To Hell with the Devil and brought Christian lyrics to their hard rock music style and glam metal looks 32 Two Pennsylvania bands with Harrisburg s Poison and Philadelphia s Cinderella released multi platinum debut albums respectively Look What the Cat Dragged In and Night Songs in 1986 33 34 Van Halen released 5150 their first album with Sammy Hagar on lead vocals which was number one in the U S for three weeks and sold over six million copies 18 Additionally some established hard rock and heavy metal bands of the era such as Scorpions Whitesnake Dio Aerosmith Kiss Alice Cooper Ozzy Osbourne Judas Priest Saxon and Accept began incorporating hair metal elements into their sounds and images as the genre s popularity skyrocketed in 1985 1986 35 Four Def Leppard songs were on the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 36 Glam metal bands continued their run of commercial success in 1987 with Motley Crue releasing Girls Girls Girls White Lion releasing Pride and Def Leppard releasing Hysteria producing a hard rock record of seven hit singles 19 Another of the greatest successes of the era was Guns N Roses originally formed from a fusion of bands L A Guns and Hollywood Rose who released the best selling debut of all time Appetite for Destruction With a grittier and rawer sound than most glam metal incorporating elements of punk and blues Appetite For Destruction produced three top 10 hits including the number one Sweet Child O Mine 37 In the wake of Guns N Roses commercial success other similarly rawer glam metal bands began to gain popularity like L A Guns and Faster Pussycat Critics eventually termed this style sleaze rock or sleaze metal to differentiate it from the perceived increasing commerciality of other glam metal bands 38 39 Such was the dominance of the style that Californian hardcore punk band T S O L moved towards a glam metal sound in this period 40 41 In the last years of the decade the most notable successes were New Jersey 1988 by Bon Jovi 42 OU812 1988 by Van Halen 18 while Open Up and Say Ahh 1988 by Poison spawned number one hit single Every Rose Has Its Thorn and eventually sold eight million copies worldwide 33 43 Britny Fox from Philadelphia 44 and Winger from New York 45 released their eponymous debuts in 1988 In 1989 Motley Crue produced their most commercially successful album the multi platinum number one Dr Feelgood 46 In the same year eponymous debuts included Danger Danger from New York 47 Dangerous Toys from Austin Texas who provided more of a Southern rock tone to the genre 48 Enuff Z Nuff from Chicago who provided an element of psychedelia to their sound and visual style and Tora Tora from Memphis Tennessee who incorporated elements of blues rock into their music L A debuts included Warrant with Dirty Rotten Filthy Stinking Rich 1989 49 and Skid Row with their eponymous album 1989 which reached number six in the Billboard 200 but they were to be one of the last major bands that emerged in the glam metal era 50 Glam metal entered the 1990s as one of the major commercial genres of popular music but such success would not continue for long in 1990 debuts for Slaughter from Las Vegas with Stick It to Ya 51 and FireHouse from North Carolina with their eponymous album reached number 18 and number 21 on the Billboard 200 respectively but it would be the peak of their commercial achievement Y amp T released their last album Ten before the band on went on hiatus a few years 52 Decline 1991 1997 Edit The 1988 film The Decline of Western Civilization Part II The Metal Years captured the Los Angeles scene of successful and aspiring bands It also highlighted the excesses of glam metal particularly the scene in which W A S P guitarist Chris Holmes was interviewed while drinking vodka on a floating chair in a swimming pool as his mother watched As a result it has been seen as helping to create a backlash against the genre 53 54 In the early 1990s glam metal s popularity rapidly declined after nearly a decade of success Successful bands lost members that were key to their songwriting and or live performances such as Motley Crue s frontman Vince Neil Poison guitarist C C DeVille Def Leppard guitarist Steve Clark and Guns N Roses guitarist Izzy Stradlin Several music writers and musicians began to deride glam metal acts as hair farmers 55 56 hinting at the soon to be popularized term hair metal Another reason for the decline in popularity of the style may have been the declining popularity of the power ballad While its use especially after a hard rocking anthem was initially a successful formula in the early 1990s audiences lost interest in this approach 8 57 One significant factor in the decline was the rise of grunge music from Seattle with bands including Nirvana Alice in Chains Pearl Jam and Soundgarden This was particularly obvious after the success of Nirvana s Nevermind 1991 which combined elements of hardcore punk and heavy metal into a dirty sound that made use of heavy guitar distortion fuzz and feedback along with darker lyrical themes a stripped down aesthetic and a complete rejection of the glam metal visual style and performance 14 58 Many major labels felt they had been caught off guard by the surprise success of grunge and began turning over their personnel in favor of younger staffers more versed in the new scene As MTV shifted its attention to the new style glam metal bands found themselves relegated increasingly to late night airplay and Headbangers Ball was cancelled at the end of 1994 27 while KNAC went over to Spanish programming 28 Given glam metal s lack of a major format presence on radio bands were left without a clear way to reach their audience Other earlier Hollywood alternative rock bands like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Jane s Addiction also helped supplant the popularity of the genre 59 Some artists tried to alter their sound while others struggled on with their original format 14 In 1995 Van Halen released Balance a multi platinum seller that would be the band s last with Sammy Hagar on vocals In 1996 David Lee Roth returned briefly and his replacement former Extreme singer Gary Cherone left the band soon after the release of the commercially unsuccessful 1998 album Van Halen III Van Halen would not tour or record again until 2004 18 Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers 1992 debut album Generation Terrorists featured a glam metal sound 60 The album reached No 1 in the UK Rock Chart 61 but failed to chart in the United States 62 Meanwhile Guns N Roses classic lineup was whittled away throughout the decade Drummer Steven Adler was fired in 1990 guitarist Izzy Stradlin left in late 1991 after recording Use Your Illusion I and II with the band Tensions between the other band members and lead singer Axl Rose continued after the release of the 1993 punk rock covers album The Spaghetti Incident Guitarist Slash left in 1996 followed by bassist Duff McKagan in 1998 Axl Rose the only remaining member from the classic lineup at that point worked with several lineups of the band to record Chinese Democracy an album that would take over ten years to complete 37 Revivals and nostalgia festivals 1997 present Edit The Darkness performing in Sydney Australia in 2004 During the late 1990s and 2000s glam metal began to have a revival Some established acts who had managed to weather the storm enjoyed renewed popularity others reformed and new bands emerged to emulate the glam metal style Bon Jovi were still able to achieve a commercial hit with It s My Life 2000 42 They branched into country music with a version of their 2005 song Who Says You Can t Go Home which reached No 1 on the Hot Country Singles chart in 2006 and the rock country album Lost Highway which reached No 1 in 2007 In 2009 Bon Jovi released The Circle which marked a return to their hard rock sound and reached No 1 on the Billboard 200 42 Motley Crue reunited with Vince Neil to record the 1997 album Generation Swine 46 and Poison reunited with guitarist C C DeVille in 1999 producing the mostly live Power to the People 2000 33 both bands began to tour extensively There were reunions and subsequent tours from Van Halen with Hagar in 2004 and then Roth in 2007 18 The long awaited Guns N Roses album Chinese Democracy was finally released in 2008 but only went platinum in the US produced no hit singles and failed to come close to the success of the band s late 1980s and early 1990s material 63 Europe s Final Countdown enjoyed a new lease of popularity as the millennium drew to a close and the band reformed 64 Other acts to reform included Ratt 65 Britny Fox 66 Stryper annually 32 and Skid Row 50 The Rocklahoma festival held in Pryor Oklahoma in 2008 Beginning in 1999 Monster Ballads a series of compilation albums that feature popular power ballads usually from the glam metal genre capitalized on the nostalgia with the first volume going platinum 67 The VH1 sponsored Rock Never Stops Tour beginning in 1998 has seen many glam metal bands take to the stage again including on the inaugural tour Warrant Slaughter Quiet Riot FireHouse and L A Guns Slaughter also took part in the 1999 version with Ted Nugent Night Ranger and Quiet Riot 68 Poison and Cinderella toured together in 2000 and 2002 and in 2005 Cinderella headlined the Rock Never Stops Tour with support from Ratt Quiet Riot and FireHouse 34 In 2007 the four day long Rocklahoma festival held in Oklahoma included glam metal bands Poison Ratt and Twisted Sister 69 Warrant and Cinderella co headlined the festival in 2008 70 Nostalgia for the genre was evidenced in the production of the glam metal themed musical Rock of Ages which ran in Los Angeles in 2006 71 and in New York in 2008 72 It was made into a film released in 2012 73 The Darkness s Permission to Land 2003 described as an eerily realistic simulation of 80s metal and 70s glam 74 topped the UK charts going quintuple platinum One Way Ticket to Hell and Back 2005 reached number 11 The band broke up in 2006 but reunited in 2011 releasing the album Hot Cakes the following year In the mid to late 2000s there was a minor sleaze rock revival with groups like Hinder and Buckcherry 75 The latter s breakthrough album 15 2006 went platinum in the U S and spawned the single Sorry 2007 which made the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 76 Additionally a subset of scene bands embraced elements of glam metal This began with Blessed by a Broken Heart and subsequently popularised by the success of Black Veil Brides Escape the Fate and Falling in Reverse 77 Avenged Sevenfold s 2005 album City of Evil also promoted a similar influence seeing the band depart from their metalcore sound in favour of one indebted to glam metal 78 At the same time in Sweden there was a sleaze metal movement attempting to revive the genre with bands including Vains of Jenna 79 Crashdiet 80 and H E A T 81 as well as the Finnish band Reckless Love 82 Los Angeles band Steel Panther managed to gain a following by playing 1980s style glam metal 83 See also EditList of glam metal albums and songs List of glam metal bands and artistsCitations Edit D Bukszpan The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal New York City NY Barnes and Noble 2003 ISBN 0 7607 4218 9 p 85 N Strauss The Dirt Confessions of the World s Most Notorious Rock Band a b S Davis Watch You Bleed The Saga of Guns N Roses New York NY Gotham Books 2008 ISBN 978 1 59240 377 6 p 30 a b c d R Moore Sells Like Teen Spirit Music Youth Culture and Social Crisis New York NY New York University Press 2009 ISBN 0 8147 5748 0 pp 105 6 Pop Metal AllMusic Archived from the original on 5 February 2012 a b C Smith 101 Albums that Changed Popular Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 0 19 537371 5 pp 160 2 D Bukszpan The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal London Barnes amp Noble Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 7607 4218 9 p 63 a b G T Pillsbury Damage Incorporated Metallica and the Production of Musical Identity New York NY CRC Press 2006 ISBN 0 415 97374 0 p 45 a b D Weinstein Heavy Metal The Music and Its Culture Cambridge MA Da Capo Press 2000 ISBN 0 306 80970 2 pp 45 47 P Auslander Performing Glam Rock Gender and Theatricality in Popular Music Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press 2006 ISBN 0 7546 4057 4 p 232 D Bukszpan The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal London Barnes amp Noble Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 7607 4218 9 p 60 a b R Walser Running with the Devil Power Gender and Madness in Heavy Metal Music Middletown CT Wesleyan University Press 1993 ISBN 0 8195 6260 2 p 13 R Batchelor and S Stoddart The 1980s London Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 ISBN 0 313 33000 X p 121 a b c d Hair metal AllMusic Retrieved November 2014 Metal A Headbanger s Journey DVD ASIN B000FS9OZY 2005 I Ellis Soft Skull Press Soft Skull Press 2008 ISBN 1593762062 B Macdonald J Harrington and R Dimery Albums You Must Hear Before You Die London Quintet 2006 ISBN 0 7893 1371 5 p 508 a b c d e S T Erlewine and G Prato Van Halen AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 a b c V Bogdanov C Woodstra and S T Erlewine All Music Guide to Rock the Definitive Guide to Rock Pop and Soul Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books 3rd edn 2002 ISBN 0 87930 653 X pp 293 94 Night Ranger Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved 5 December 2020 E Rivadavia Quiet Riot AllMusic Retrieved 7 July 2010 American album certifications Def Leppard Pyromania RIAA Retrieved 17 November 2011 Pyromania Def Leppard AllMusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 McIntyre Ken December 2015 Hello America Classic Rock p 50 A Chapman and L Silber Rock to Riches Build Your Business the Rock amp Roll Way Capital Books 2008 ISBN 1 933102 65 9 p 151 D Stone London AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 a b C Marshall Where do all the Videos Go Billboard vol 113 No 25 June 23 2001 ISSN 0006 2510 p 32 a b M Moses and D Kaye What did you do in the war daddy Billboard vol 111 no 23 5 June 1999 ISSN 0006 2510 p 82 L Flick Bon Jovi bounce back from tragedy Billboard 28 September 2002 vol 114 No 39 ISSN 0006 2510 p 81 D Nicholls The Cambridge History of American Music Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 45429 8 p 378 RIAA Gold amp Platinum RIAA Archived from the original on 8 September 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2008 a b G Prato Stryper AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 a b c B Weber Poison AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 a b W Ruhlmann Cinderella AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 Huey Steve Judas Priest Turbo AllMusic Retrieved 11 October 2015 Def Leppard Chart history Billboard a b S T Erlewine and G Prato Guns N Roses AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 Harrison Thomas 2011 Music of the 1980s Santa Barbara Calif Greenwood p 52 ISBN 9780313365997 Retrieved 9 April 2023 While Poison was writing and acting in a glamorous manner to hide the seedy underbelly of the Hollywood scene the dirtier parts of the scene were beginning to take over Poison s place in the mainstream Guns N Roses lacked the glam songwriting and makeup of Poison Because of their heavier use of the blues tonality chord progressions became more chromatic stylistically more in the vein of the Rolling Stones and Aerosmith and not Kiss as Poison s songs were The Stones were a raw band and music was seen as polished in Hollywood earlier in the decade This new thread of hard rock became known as sleaze rock led by Guns N Roses Guns N Roses was the best example of a complementary two guitar sleaze hard rock band in the 1980s other groups who emerged from the Hollywood scene during this period include Faster Pussycat and L A Guns who followed a similar approach Pattillo Alice The best sleaze metal bands as chosen by Davey Suicide Metal Hammer Retrieved 9 April 2023 B Torreano TSOL AllMusic Retrieved 7 July 2010 Garry Sharpe Young New Wave of American Heavy Metal New Plymouth New Zealand Zonda 2005 ISBN 0 9582684 0 1 p 302 a b c S T Erlewine Bon Jovi AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 Poison Artist information Billboard Retrieved 18 June 2012 J Ulrey Britny Fox AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 S T Erlewine Winger AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 a b V Bogdanov C Woodstra and S T Erlewine All Music Guide to Rock the Definitive Guide to Rock Pop and Soul Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books 3rd edn 2002 ISBN 0 87930 653 X pp 767 8 G Prato Danger Danger AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 G Prato Dangerous Toys AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 S T Erlewine Warrant AllMusic Retrieved 20 June 2010 a b B Weber Skid Row AllMusic Retrieved 10 July 2010 S Huey Slaughter AllMusic Retrieved 18 June 2010 S T Erlewine Firehouse AllMusic Retrieved 6 July 2010 E Danville and C Mott The Official Heavy Metal Book of Lists Fayetteville AR University of Arkansas Press 2009 ISBN 0 87930 983 0 p 16 M G Hurd Women Directors and their Films London Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 ISBN 0 275 98578 4 p 79 D Thompson March 1994 I Slept With Soundgarden and Other Chilling Confessions Alternative Press Retrieved 8 December 2006 Magnuson Ann February 1992 SUB ZEP Spin Retrieved 8 December 2006 C Aaron Don t fight the power Spin vol 17 No 11 Nov 2001 ISSN 0886 3032 p 90 Grunge AllMusic Retrieved 18 June 2010 R Moore Sells Like Teen Spirit Music Youth Culture and Social Crisis New York NY New York University Press 2009 ISBN 0 8147 5748 0 p 117 Kravitz Kayley 30 January 2015 Archiving Pain Richey Edwards disappeared 20 years ago but his genius with the Manics lives on Vanyaland Retrieved 14 May 2019 Price 1999 p 79 Price 1999 p 92 Guns N Roses Gold and Platinum Database Search Recording Industry Association of America Archived from the original on 8 September 2015 Retrieved 25 November 2009 Rock group Europe plan comeback BBC Home 3 October 2003 S T Erlewine and G Prato Ratt AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 Britny Fox NME Artists Retrieved 10 July 2010 C Marshall From big hair and power ballads to Polish metal every song has its niche Billboard vol 112 no 26 24 June 2000 ISSN 0006 2510 p 42 80s Rock Never Stops On Tour Billboard Retrieved 10 July 2010 Peters Mitchell Hair Metal Mania Strikes Again at Rocklahoma Billboard Retrieved 12 March 2008 Hair Bands Unite in Oklahoma nbc5i com Retrieved 12 March 2008 Laura Bell Bundy Stars in Rock of Ages Tuner in LA Jan 26 Feb 18 BroadwayWorld com 30 November 2005 W McBride Photo Coverage ROCK OF AGES Meets the Press BroadwayWorld com 4 March 2009 Rock of Ages Internet Movie Database Retrieved 23 June 2012 H Phares The Darkness Permission to Land AllMusic Retrieved 11 June 2007 Diltz Henry June 2007 Heard Any Good Rock Star Stories Lately 59 Hinder Buckcherry and Avenged Sevenfold are working hard to conjure the spirit of Sunset Strip sleaze a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help J Ankeny Buckcherry AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 Stewart Ethan 25 May 2021 From Hardcore to Harajuku the Origins of Scene Subculture PopMatters Archived from the original on 25 May 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2021 Hill Stephen Every Avenged Sevenfold album ranked from worst to best Metal Hammer Retrieved 9 April 2023 M Brown Vains of Jenna AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 K Ross Hoffman Crashdiet AllMusic Retrieved 11 February 2012 A Eremenko H E A T AllMusic Retrieved 2 May 2010 Groupies Tattoos and Glam Rock How Helsinki is the Sunset Strip of Europe Vice Retrieved 27 June 2018 M Brown Steel Panther AllMusic Retrieved 19 June 2010 Works cited Edit Price Simon 1999 Everything A Book About Manic Street Preachers London Virgin Books ISBN 0 7535 0139 2 General bibliography EditAuslander P Performing Glam Rock Gender and Theatricality in Popular Music Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press 2006 ISBN 0 7546 4057 4 Batchelor R and Stoddart S The 1980s London Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 ISBN 0 313 33000 X Bogdanov V Woodstra C and Erlewine S T All Music Guide to Rock The Definitive Guide to Rock Pop and Soul Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books 3rd edn 2002 ISBN 0 87930 653 X Bukszpan D The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal London Barnes amp Noble Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 7607 4218 9 Chapman A and Silber L Rock to Riches Build Your Business the Rock amp Roll Way Capital Books 2008 ISBN 1 933102 65 9 Danville E and Mott C The Official Heavy Metal Book of Lists Fayetteville AR University of Arkansas Press 2009 ISBN 0 87930 983 0 Davis S Watch You Bleed The Saga of Guns N Roses New York Gotham Books 2008 ISBN 978 1 59240 377 6 Hurd M G Women Directors and their Films London Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 ISBN 0 275 98578 4 Macdonald B Harrington J and Dimery R Albums You Must Hear Before You Die London Quintet 2006 ISBN 0 7893 1371 5 Moore R Sells Like Teen Spirit Music Youth Culture and Social Crisis New York New York University Press 2009 ISBN 0 8147 5748 0 Nicholls D The Cambridge History of American Music Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 45429 8 Smith C 101 Albums that Changed Popular Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 0 19 537371 5 Walser R Running with the Devil Power Gender and Madness in Heavy Metal Music Middletown CT Wesleyan University Press 1993 ISBN 0 8195 6260 2 Weinstein D Heavy Metal The Music and Its Culture Cambridge MA Da Capo Press 2000 ISBN 0 306 80970 2 Weinstein D Rock critics need bad music in C Washburne and M Derno eds Bad Music the Music we Love to Hate London Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 94366 3 Yfantis V Power Ballads And The Stories Behind Athens CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 2021 ISBN 1546723404 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glam metal amp oldid 1150644517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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