Talk:Aborted

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Second Skin in topic Lead

Changes I have made to the section History

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Before I edited the page

On March 28, 2011, de Caluwé announced that mixing and recording for Aborted's seventh studio album, Global Flatline would begin in June.[1] The album is reported to contain fourteen tracks. Global Flatline will be produced by Jacob Hansen, who previously worked with Aborted on 2003's Goremageddon: The Saw and the Carnage Done and 2004's The Haematobic EP.[2] The album contains guest vocals by Julien Truchan of Benighted and Keijo Niinimaa of Rotten Sound.[3]

On June 20, 2011, the band entered Hansen Studios in Denmark with producer Jacob Hansen to record their seventh studio album Global Flatine.[4][5]. On July 9, 2011, it was confirmed that recording for Global Flatline has been completed.[6] Confirmed guest vocalists on the record include Julien Truchan of Benighted[7], Keijo Niinimaa of Rotten Sound,[8] Jason Netherton of Misery Index[9] and Trevor Strnad of The Black Dahlia Murder.[citation needed]

After I edited the page

On March 28, 2011, de Caluwé announced that mixing and recording for Aborted's seventh studio album, Global Flatline would begin in June.[1] The album is reported to contain fifteen tracks.[1][2] Global Flatline will be produced by Jacob Hansen, who previously worked with Aborted on 2003's Goremageddon: The Saw and the Carnage Done and 2004's The Haematobic EP.[1]

On June 20, 2011, the band entered Hansen Studios in Denmark with Jacob Hansen to record Global Flatline.[3][4] On July 9, 2011, it was confirmed that recording for Global Flatline has been completed.[5] Confirmed guest vocalists on the album include Julien Truchan of Benighted,[2][6] Keijo Niinimaa of Rotten Sound[2][7] and Jason Netherton of Misery Index.[8]


And here is the diff. Nite-Sirk (talk) 17:42, 15 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

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This notification is provided by a Bot --CommonsNotificationBot (talk) 20:13, 23 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

Lead

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There has been no discussion on here, despite a slow-motion near-edit war from a whole stream of IPs trying to change "death metal" to "deathgrind". This is basically genre fiddling, but I've put both in the infobox. Regarding the lead, "death metal" is going to be far more easily sourced in reliable sources than "deathgrind". For example, from About.com: [1], [2], [3], [4]. Allmusic mention "deathgrind", "grindcore" and "death metal" in their biog, but "death metal" [5] and [6], and Blabbermouth.net have a whole bunch of refs to "death metal" as well. Blackmetalbaz (talk) 19:16, 12 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

That seems reasonable to me. (non-reliable discourse) Throughout their entire career, they have always been death metal, and early albums had grindcore parts as well (thus deathgrind is worth having in the infobox). But while they lost those grind parts after Goremageddon, they haven't lost the death metal. (end non-reliable discourse) The genres are supported by what you've said, and I agree with keeping the infobox and lead the way they are (unless someone shows up with some reliable sources establishing any new genres...deathcore comes to mind for their later stuff, but again, that will need to be well-sourced). MrMoustacheMM (talk) 05:02, 14 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
You are really bad at identifying genres. The early albums do not have "grindcore parts", that's totally backwards. Early albums are just brutal death metal, later stuff is much more to what one would call "deathgrind". Second Skin (talk) 09:49, 5 January 2023 (UTC)Reply