It seems I listen to European bands more than American. Don't forget our friends to the north. This is a Canadian favorite of mine. \
Nope, they are 100% American, Californian hair metaldokken
I remember when I was in grade school, of course everybody knew of Celine Dion, but Roch Voisine was an important French artist, so we all had to listen to his French pop in French class![]()
In the mid 70's, there was a band out of Germany called "LAKE". I bought their first album as it was promoted on our local FM station.
It was a decent LP but they were short lived here in the states. I supposed they're still around in some form around the world as I did look them up. Does anyone remember them?
Yes, Quebec French is totally different from France French, and it gets even worse with Northern New Brunswick French!In HS, one French teacher was actually a student teacher, but he had studied French language in France. I think he once mentioned that one of his cohorts in the overseas program was French Canadian and that the group would tease her because her accent was distinctive.
But he did bring an LP of some French band called Telephone (OK - looked it up, and it should be "Télélephone"). Don't recall too much of it other than it was more or less garage band loud.
I knew there were horrors in Canadian schools, but not to such extent......Roch Voisine was an important French artist, so we all had to listen to his French pop in French class![]()
Always thought this was an interesting, but understandable approach. Bands from non-English counties producing music in English, despite their domestic audience not being predominantly English. It speaks, perhaps subtly, to the domination that English has on the first world stage.
Nightwish is probably my favourite example:
Lacuna Coil is another example, out of Italy:
KMFDM out of Germany is yet another:
What other examples can you think of off the top of your head?
Because it's rhythm rhymes with stomping... Germans like their industrial music ie Rammstein and electronic/house music like eisenfunk or La Bouche etc
Metal and heavy metal is still quite big in Europe. And there are many concerts going on in the summer. And I mean old fashioned concerts, outside with a huge stage and a big mash pit, not stadium, with everyone sitting, type.That is interesting. It reminds me of another musical oddity.
Since the late 1980s , as the classic rock style music was just about being totally smothered out in the North American regions by the music industry , a strange thing occurred. Many new , real talented (some older ones too) bands ended up making tons of money selling and performing LIVE shows all across Europe. Many in the non-English speaking countries. Lots of them really made it big in Germany and Denmark.
I was reading that in the 2000's (and maybe still) Sweden had the greatest per-capita number of rock/metal bands in the world... and most wrote and sing in English.
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Netherlands
Co-worker is Belgian and French is his native language and he says Quebec French is closer to 1800s France French.Yes, Quebec French is totally different from France French, and it gets even worse with Northern New Brunswick French!
That would make sense, historically speaking, since Quebec French would have evolved totally separately from France French after the settlement in lower Canada.Co-worker is Belgian and French is his native language and he says Quebec French is closer to 1800s France French.