beau99 wrote:Oh, and they're not goth.
GhostontheNet wrote:Sure, they say the band never was a gothic band, but then, half of the original founders of gothic rock say their bands are not gothic bands (i.e. The Sisters of Mercy, Siouxsie and the Banshees, etc.).
Ark wrote:It has been a while since I tossed Origin in and gave it a listen. I will have to know to see what all the talk is about. Why do you guys like Origin more then Fallen? As I said, it has been a while since I listened to it...but if I recall...Origin was just a stripped down sounding album. (Which may be why some of you prefer it) I like the polished sound that Fallen had. But I am curious, why the love for Origin?
GhostontheNet wrote:Sure, they say the band never was a gothic band, but then, half of the original founders of gothic rock say their bands are not gothic bands (i.e. The Sisters of Mercy, Siouxsie and the Banshees, etc.).
beau99 wrote:But THEY'RE NOT GOTH.
Amy Lee hates goth music and doesn't like being called 'goth'. Deal with it.
Now, my own conjecture is that in spite of this, the purpose of the "We're not gothic" is generated by a refusal to be connected with "the scene", particularly with its very intense taboo on going mainstream and making the musical compromises needed to go mainstream, which is the greatest blasphemy to the underground - indeed, a good number of goths despise Evanescence for this reason.
Beau99 wrote:Disagree if you wish, but what I'm saying is true.
Wikipedia wrote:Although usually categorized as rock, Evanescence does not easily fit into any one rock subcategory. The band are sometimes labeled by media sources as, and take influences from, gothic metal, alternative rock, nu metal, piano rock, arena rock, and wagnerian rock (the latter especially in the group's videos).
ikimasu wrote:This I agree with. It seems that slapping the "gothic" label on something automatically alienates it from norms. I suppose that in this sense, it does matter.
So the real question is: what makes you part of a group?
When you claim to be a part of it or when that group claims that you are a part of it? (although the goths who hate them probably wouldn't make claims to them)
Regardless, I'm sure that we can all agree that they they have, at the very least, been severely influenced by the goth culture. That makes me wonder if they admit to it....
It is between them and God, but I am aware of strong evidence, namely very early evidence that they do in fact hold Christian beliefs. So too, Yeshua called us to testify to being his when called upon concerning him, with their handling of the situation failing quite dismally in this, which is vastly more important than the question of goth/nongoth and undergrund vs. mainstream. By the way, from my vantage point as a broadcaster of Gothic and Industrial music including the works of Christians, such lyrical honesty is quite typical in these forms.Warrior 4 Jesus wrote:I don't know. Maybe they are goth, maybe not. I'm not really fussed I just enjoy them.
As for whether they are Christian or not, its between them and God. But I definetly get strong Christian meaning and honest spiritual lyrics from Origin and Fallen. (Need more Christian music that honest).
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