PDA

View Full Version : Who Really Invented The "Devil's Horn's" Sign?



pooh
02-19-2005, 04:59 PM
Link (http://eddietrunk.com/news/article.php?news_id=1684)

Who Really Invented The "Devil's Horn's" Sign?

According to blabbermouth.net, the following article was originally published by the Ear Candy magazine:

Over the last few years there have been two artists that have claimed to have created the famous heavy metal "devil's horns" hand signal: Ronnie James Dio (Black Sabbath, Rainbow) and Gene Simmons (KISS).

You know the "devil's horns" signal? It is the universal heavy metal sign for "you rock", usually used in unison with the music at heavy metal concerts. Not to get satanical or anything, but the sign is supposed to represent the sign of the beast, with horns represented by the index finger and pinkie raised. If you raise both hands with this sign, the band "really rocks!"

That are two heavy metal rockers from the '70s both laying claim. Ronnie James Dio claimed to have created the gesture before joining Black Sabbath in 1978. Gene Simmons also claims credit, writing in his 2002 autobiography that it was the bass-playing demon of KISS that created the international heavy metal symbol. So, there is no evidence that the symbol was created earlier than the '70s...or is there?!

We have discovered irrefutable photographic evidence that is was none other than Beatle John Lennon that created the famous sign in 1967. Furthermore, it was even used in animation for the Beatles"Yellow Submarine" (just check the original vinyl album cover). These are two photographic images that can be tied down to specific years PRIOR to the '70s.

The photo of Lennon giving the sign http://www.blabbermouth.net/lennon_horns1.jpg appeared in one of the first Beatles pictures in which the band promoted the upcoming "Yellow Submarine" animated movie. Since the Beatles changed appearance often and were one of the most photographed icons of the '60s, it is possible to date the photo between June and October of '67. "Yellow Submarine" was being animated between '67 & '68, so the cartoon image of John flashing the heavy metal sign can also be verified date-wise. Although the film "Yellow Submarine" was released in 1968, the vinyl album (on which one can clearly see Lennon displaying the sign) was not released in the U.S. until 1969. But that is still years before Ronnie James Dio or Gene Simmons!

What other ties does Lennon have to heavy metal? Well, he claimed that the Beatles song, "Ticket To Ride" was "one of the earliest heavy metal records ever made". How fitting that it was Lennon who also created the best-known symbol of heavy metal!

Solid D
02-19-2005, 05:55 PM
The Beatles frequently set the trends in music and style. Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, White Album. A lot of unique stuff, rock-based but with lots of unconventional sounds and instruments.

In the mid-to-late 60s music oozed with Pschodelia with lots of hidden meanings as drugs began to proliferate in society, particularly impacting teens and young adults. The Beatles, Jefferson Airplane, The Doors, Jimi Hendrix, and later Led Zeppelin all pushed the edge to an extreme...each in their own way, with their music. It was different from the protest music, important in it's own right, that was popular. Heavy Metal pushes the edge...making some of the creations in the 60s seem primitive, almost campy...but metal is still an extreme concept.

Today's metal, especially death metal, pushes the line so much...it almost becomes humor and parody to some of its performers.

Where does it go from here? It may be interesting, or disgusting, depending on your point of view in the coming years.

I've never seen an explanation for why John used the sign in the photo but you might be right if you said, "The Devil Made Him Do It".