Rock Hits
10 ‘70s Rock Albums That Used To Be Considered Metal

10 ‘70s Rock Albums That Used To Be Considered Metal

Heavy metal did not arrive overnight with a guitar in one hand and a bottle of Jack Daniels in the other. Instead, the genre was pieced together in real time, long before anyone fully agreed on what to call it. In the early to mid-1970s, the term “heavy metal” was used loosely—and more often than not, it was a derogatory label. It was applied to bands that sounded heavier and darker than the blues-based “flower power” rock that dominated the end of the 1960s.

Bands were experimenting in all different directions, pushing the boundaries of what was accepted into something far more intense than anything heard at the time. Listeners and fans did not have the benefit of hindsight. Records that felt heavy in 1971 or 1975 were often labeled as metal simply because there was no other name for them. It wasn’t until much later in the decade, and especially in the 1980s, when bands began amplifying the intensity of these sounds with even more speed and aggression, that the genre solidified into something far more recognizable.

This gray period makes the musical era of the 1970s so interesting to revisit. These albums don’t fully align with what metal has become, but they clearly point toward it. Their influence is undeniable. Looking back now, it is less about whether these records can still be labeled as heavy metal in the year 2026, but rather that they were the first ones to do it.

Long before the genre of heavy metal even had a name, these bands were accidentally building the blueprint for something way heavier than anyone could have ever imagined.