Blues One of the first known
R&B songs to utilize screaming vocals is
Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "
I Put a Spell on You" (1956). Commenting on
Tina Turner's "
A Fool in Love" (1960),
Juggy Murray said, "All of those blues singers sounded like dirt. Tina sounded like screaming dirt. It was a funky sound."
Heavy metal While occasional screaming has been used for effect in
heavy metal since the genre's dawn in the late 1960s, with singers such as
Robert Plant,
Ian Gillan and
Rob Halford employing the technique frequently, screaming as a normal method of lyrical delivery first came to prominence in heavy metal as part of the
thrash metal movement of the 1980s. Thrash metal was influenced both by heavy metal and by
hardcore punk, the latter of which often incorporated shouted vocals. Musicologist
Robert Walser noted, "The punk influence shows up in the music's fast
tempos and frenetic aggressiveness and in critical or
sarcastic lyrics delivered in a menacing growl." Natalie Purcell notes, "Although the vast majority of death metal bands use very low, beast-like, almost indiscernible growls as vocals, many also have high and screechy or
operatic vocals, or simply deep and forcefully sung vocals." Music sociologist
Deena Weinstein noted of death metal, "Vocalists in this style have a distinctive sound, growling and snarling rather than singing the words. Making ample use of the voice distortion box, they sound as if they had gargled with
hydrochloric acid."
Ian Christe noted a progressively more forceful enunciation of metal vocals, from heavy metal to thrash metal to death metal: A particular style known as "pig squealing" has been used by
deathcore bands such as
Job for a Cowboy and
Despised Icon.
Hardcore and punk rock Yelling and shouting vocals are common in a type of
punk rock known as
hardcore. Early punk was distinguished by a general tendency to eschew traditional singing techniques in favor of a more direct, harsh style which accentuated meaning rather than beauty. The logical extension of this aesthetic is shouting, and in hardcore punk, vocals are usually shouted in a frenetic manner similar to rapping or
football chants, often accompanied by "gang vocals" in which a group of people shout along with the vocalist. This style is very common in punk rock, most prominently
Oi!,
street punk and hardcore punk. ==Health concerns==