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Topic: Heavy metal umlaut


  
 Heavy metal umlaut - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Finnish hardcore punk band Ümlaut (this use is almost a self-reference).
The Devin Townsend punk parody project Punky Brüster.
Heavy metal umlauts have been parodied in film and fiction.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_metal_umlaut   (2767 words)

  
 Heavy metal music - Psychology Central
Whereas a painting is experienced visually, a symphony experienced audibly, a heavy metal band's "image" and the common theme that binds all their music is expressed in the artwork on the album, the set of the stage, the tone of the lyrics, in addition to the sound of the music.
Thrashcore, crust punk and grindcore all have notable influence from both punk and metal.
The first use of the term "heavy metal" in a song lyric is the words "heavy metal thunder" in the 1968 Steppenwolf song "Born to be Wild" (Walser 1993, p.
http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Metal_(music)   (4736 words)

  
 1980s Band Heavy Metal
Brutal Metal is a reference site for heavy metal music, with bands, cd covers, reviews, audio samples, and an Ebay price guide.
Whitecross released their debut self-titled CD "Whitecross" on Pure Metal in 1987.
rockers should do, if they want the name of their 1980s heavy metal band to remain secret, is to divulge it in a note to...
http://www.whitecrossmusic.com/whitecross/1/1980s-band-heavy-metal.html   (907 words)

  
 Heavy Metal Music Buy Sell Trade! Record Reviews
The heavy metal umlaut is never referred to by the term diaeresis in this usage, Heavy metal umlauts have been parodied in film and fiction.
Whether you are a hardcore collector or just a new music enthusiast, you'll have lots of fun browsing our online stores and record reviews for Heavy Metal music!
Hard Rock and Heavy Metal Radio, video, news, reviews, interviews, cd premieres, chat, and concerts.
http://www.musicbuyselltrade.com/genres/Heavy-Metal.html   (212 words)

  
 Heavy metal - Psychology Central
heavy metal umlaut, the use of an umlaut by musicians involved in heavy metal music
heavy metal music, a style of rock music
Heavy Metal (film), a 1981 animated film based on the magazine, or its sequel Heavy Metal 2000
http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Heavy_metal   (199 words)

  
 Encyclopedia Search
metals In music, a rock music subgenre, see
metal bands such as Motörhead, Mötley Crüe and the Blue Öyster Cult has...
metal is progenitor of the Metal-family (for example,
http://www.encyclopedian.com/search.php?searWords=Heavy   (139 words)

  
 notes from the Navel the "heavy metal umlaut" 
Umlauts are often used in concert with a Blackletter or pseudo-Blackletter typeface in the band logo to give it a more gothic feel.
Many bands have taken to using umlauts and other diacritics, often gratuitously, in their names.
over some of the letters in the names of a heavy metal band — although the names might then sound odd to people who use languages in which umlauts are common, such as German, Turkish or Swedish.
http://homepage.mac.com/littlemissanna78/iblog/C1031280491/E1891353437   (292 words)

  
 Preoccupations: Wikipedia and Heavy Metal
Udell remarks he wasn't surprised to see that go, but it left me wondering about the way the darker side of some bands and music gets treated.
Yet, from the Rolling Stones' darkest days, or Bowie's infamous Nazi salute, to heavy metal — here, surely, is something unglamorous and offensive that needs to be looked at critically and in detail.
Even the plainer statement that 'The Nazi/Hitler theme is glorified by some heavy metal groups' was edited out — 'too strong', in Udell's commentary.
http://www.preoccupations.org/2005/01/wikipedia_and_h.html   (346 words)

  
 O'Reilly Network -- Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
The screencast was well received, and a number of people wrote wondering how I made it.
O'Reilly Network -- Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/network/2005/02/07/primetime.html   (1567 words)

  
 Jon Udell and the Heavy Metal Umlaut Darren Barefoot
Jon Udell and the Heavy Metal Umlaut
You are viewing entry number 2279, last updated on January 24, 2005.
http://www.darrenbarefoot.com/archives/002279.html   (232 words)

  
 DraculaZombieUSA: heavy metal umlaut
Other highlights from my brief journey include: there's a gay heavy metal band/cabaret act Pink Stëël who have two consecutive umlauts; the band Assück; and it's nü-metal and not new-metal.
This is a paragraph of text that could go in the sidebar.
And much of the rest of the return is discussions (e.g.
http://www.draculazombieusa.com/2005/08/heavy-metal-umlaut.html   (125 words)

  
 And Another Thing...: Heavy metal umlaut
Actually I should have saved this for a "Character of the Day", but I found a link on Tim Bray's site, about the Heavy Metal umlaut (or röckdöts).
http://www.twelve71.org/blogs/andy/000716.html   (38 words)

  
 WikiSearch
Looking at the part of the text that discusses why the umlaut might be used, which suggested the umlauts gave the band a Germanic look, Jon investigates what he calls "the collective editorial sensibility of the wiki authors deal with issues of cultural values and cultural relativism".
This is followed by a look at how the document organizes itself over time, with a table of contents that emerged in what was close to its final form in June 2004.
http://www.wikisearch.org/2005/01/heavy-metal-umlaut-movie.htm   (410 words)

  
 Plasticnoodle: Heavy metal umlaut - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Umlauts: signs of wholesome goodness from the '80s.
Heavy metal umlaut Sometimes browsing the encyclopedia can be fun.
Posted by Ted Stevko at March 7, 2005 11:39 PM
http://www.plasticnoodle.com/archives/000554.html   (97 words)

  
 Jonathon Delacour: Coïncidental
However, as the list on Jon’s site (reproduced on the right) indicates, my post has just slipped in to the top ten hits for a Google search on
Creating this animated narration of a document’s evolution was technically challenging, but I think it suggests interesting possibilities.
(Jon didn’t, inexplicably, mention my Diacritical entry, published earlier in the week, before Tim’s or David’s, in which I wrote at length about umlauts, diaereses, macrons, and the Heavy metal umlaut.)
http://weblog.delacour.net/archives/2005/01/concidental.php   (202 words)

  
 umlaut - definition of umlaut by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
umlaut - a diacritical mark (two dots) placed over a vowel in German to indicate a change in sound
A change in a vowel sound caused by partial assimilation especially to a vowel or semivowel occurring in the following syllable.
The diacritic mark (¨) placed over a vowel to indicate an umlaut, especially in German.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/umlaut   (144 words)

  
 Collin vs. Blog: Heavy metal umlaut
Jon talks about the challenge of representing typographically the parodic Spinal Tap "n-umlaut," the speed with which vandalism is erased, and the development of a table of contents once the article itself becomes less manageable as a single document.
The page on the "heavy metal umlaut." As Will notes, it's a chance "to understand the inner workings of the collaborative construction of content revolution that we are watching."
http://wrt-brooke.syr.edu/cgbvb/archives/2005/03/heavy_metal_uml.html   (264 words)

  
 Rocknerd Heavy metal umlaut: the movie
Xenu, spontaneous human combustion, crushing by elephant and — of course — the heavy metal umlaut.
So Jon Udell of Infoworld has created a flash movie of the article's evolution.
http://rocknerd.org/article.pl?sid=05/01/30/0152259   (135 words)

  
 CodingTheWeb.com, Primetime Hypermedia: Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
Primetime Hypermedia: Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
CodingTheWeb.com, Primetime Hypermedia: Heavy Metal Umlaut: The Making of the Movie
Jon Udell explains the process of making a documentary screencast, taking a look at the various screencast genres and examining the potential significance of this medium.
http://www.codingtheweb.com/projects/newslog/archive/173562.htm   (123 words)

  
 LookSmart's Furl - View Item - Jon Udell: Heavy metal umlaut: the movie
LookSmart's Furl - View Item - Jon Udell: Heavy metal umlaut: the movie
http://www.furl.net/item.jsp?id=1768070   (115 words)

  
 Interrupt-Driven: Heavy metal umlaut
In one of todays featured articles wikipedia.org explains the so called "heavy metal umlaut" (link).
Posted by frank at June 27, 2004 04:52 PM
http://www.meerkoetter.org/archives/000021.html   (33 words)

  
 Stumpy Moose - Heavy metal umlaut: the movie
Stumpy Moose - Heavy metal umlaut: the movie
http://www.stumpymoose.com/board/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=3987   (21 words)

  
 Jeff Milner dot Com: Heavy Metal Umlaut and the Wikipedia
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License 2002 &; 2005 Jeff Milner Blog.
http://jeffmilner.com/2005/02/heavy-metal-umlaut-and-wikipedia.htm   (148 words)

  
 Zoinger: February 2005 Archives
As the only book that covers the switch to Firefox, this how-to guide is a must for all those who want to browse faster, more securely, and more efficiently.
Paracelsus Rambles did a little writeup on Jon’s work here.
http://www.zoinger.com/archives/2005/02   (7247 words)

  
 Language Log: Heavy metal umlaut
Along the way, the claim that the n-diaeresis in Spinal Tap, which I do not attempt to reproduce here, is not a character in any known alphabet has been replaced by the claim that it occurs only in Jacaltec (which Udell mispronounces); in the most recent version, "some orthographies of Malagasy" are added.
Posted by Arnold Zwicky at June 27, 2005 11:15 AM
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/002268.html   (206 words)

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