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  1. The new wave of British heavy metal (commonly abbreviated as NWOBHM) was a nationwide musical movement that started in England in the mid-1970s and achieved international attention by the early 1980s.

  2. The term “New Wave of British Heavy Metal” (NWOBHM) was coined by journalist Geoff Barton in the May 1979 issue of the British music newspaper Sounds. This term was not just a label; it was a declaration of the arrival of a new era in heavy metal.

  3. Jun 6, 2024 · As the 1970s hurtled towards its conclusion, a new wave of heavy bands from all corners of the United Kingdom sparked off a grass-roots revolution, rewriting the rule book on how things could be done and giving their more established counterparts a shot in the arm.

    • Dave Everley
    • New Wave of British Heavy Metal music1
    • New Wave of British Heavy Metal music2
    • New Wave of British Heavy Metal music3
    • New Wave of British Heavy Metal music4
    • A Trio of Early Standard Bearers Emerges
    • The New Wave Begins to Crest
    • Revolution's Impact Continues to Reverberate
    • 1,000 Days That Shook The World

    The New Wave of British Heavy Metal reached a tipping point that fateful year, behind a perfect storm of increasing press coverage, thriving regional “scenes” and, perhaps most importantly, key releases such as Iron Maiden’s legendary "Soundhouse Tapes" demo (recorded at and named after Neal Kay’s events), Def Leppard’s eponymous EP and Saxon’s deb...

    This largely independent second wave of artists kept the NWOBHM’s momentum cresting throughout 1981, with a veritable deluge of albums, singles and tours that visited every corner of the U.K. It was called the New Wave of British Heavy Metal for a reason: From Scotland, there was Holocaust; from Northern Ireland, Sweet Savage and from Wales, Persia...

    That's perhaps the greatest legacy of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal: generating a musical butterfly effect that would spawn virtually endless permutations of the heavy metal template over ensuing decades – be that thrash, death, black, doom, power or progressive. Every one of these major sub-genres has roots that clearly trace back to NWOBHM,...

    Strictly speaking, the NWOBHM really only lasted two or three years, a dizzying 1,000 days or so roughly spanning 1979 and 1981. Subsequent bands inevitably either fell into the “inspired by” category, or worse, denomination as a subpar parody. Either way, the dream was over for all but a few, and for some it had actually become some kind of a nigh...

  4. The mid-late 1970s–early 1980s period in the United Kingdom introduced a movement of young musicians, generally identified as the new wave of British heavy metal (often abbreviated as NWOBHM). The movement spawned more than a thousand hard rock and heavy metal bands from all over the UK, which were more or less forcibly identified ...

  5. Apr 24, 2017 · It’s no exaggeration to say that the New Wave of British Heavy Metal saved metal from itself, when it simultaneously replaced and legitimized the efforts of many critically abused ‘70s...

  6. Feb 22, 2022 · Certainly the “New Wave of British Heavy Metal”, for which the acronym stood, was thudding and bludgeoning — and many other things described well in Michael Hann’s entertaining and...