Who is Your “Metal Valkyrie” of 2025? Name your top three Women in Rock and Metal in 2025.

2025 is halfway through! It has been an incredible year for women in music. We’ve had releases from Epica, Halestorm, Evanescence, Spiritbox, Messa, Beyond the Black, Within Temptation, and so many more! There are still so many releases to come, so it’s hard to generate a best of list early on. BUT, I want to know your favorite woman or top three women in Rock and Metal of 2025! VOTE or Comment below!

WATCH Spiritbox Live at Rock Am Ring Pro Audio and Pro Shot

Canadian Metal band Spiritbox is having a hell of a year with the release of their bombastic new album, Tsunami Sea. It has received critical acclaim and millions of streams alike. It is a great album and they’re just an innovative band. So, how do these songs sound live? Well, here’s your chance to find out. They’re one of the best live bands in Modern Metal and use raw vocals, which is a stunning feat in an era of modified vocals and backing tracks. This set is a testament to their raw talent. I prefer them live to on album, because of the pureness of the music without the clutter.

SETLIST:

Fata Morgana

Black Rainbow

Perfect Soul

Jaded

The Void

Secret Garden

Circle With Me

Holy Roller

Sew Me Up

Soft Spine

No Loss, No Love

Ride The Wave

Cellar Door

Mixed by: Josh Gilbert

FOH: Parker Mullinix

“Coda” Novelists Review 2025

Progressive Metalcore entered my diverse music catalog in 2020 during COVID.  I was introduced to Periphery upon suggestion by the one and only Devin Townsend.  Devin had worked with Perriphery’s studio bassist and songwriter Nolly Getgood for the DTP’s Transcenjdence.  Periphery came up on Twitter, and Devin said they were one of the best Prog bands today, if my memory serves me right.  I was immersed in the world of Prog Metalcore, and never looked back.  This led me to discover some of my favorite songs and albums.  Spiritbox’s Eternal Blue entered my radar and utterly took over my listening habits for three months.  I also became a huge fan of ERRA, Volumes, Currents, Make Them Suffer, and eventually the French band Novelists in 2021.  Novelists was a huge discovery for me.  They seemed to stand out, much like Spiritbox, but had this Jazz tone to the guitars and song structure that mentally clicked.  The clean vocals weren’t my favorite in the genre, but the musicianship in Novelists was and is undeniable.  You can imagine that when they debuted “Okapi” in 2024, my love for this band skyrocketed to new heights.  I didn’t expect to love Novelists like this, but they became one of my most played bands of all time.  The addition of Camille Contreras has brought this band to the peak of excellence for me.  There are a lot of bands in the genre, but Novelists dare to be different with Pop genre blending and gorgeous Jazz and Blues guitar solos.

Coda is one of my most anticipated albums in 2025, and also just in my entire life.  After so many years of reviewing albums and having expectations or preconceived notions, I have abandoned it completely.  My bias is turned off.  I aim to experience each album individually without comparison or objectivity.  Coda lends itself to blowing all expectations and ideals about modern music out of the water.  Abandon everything you expect from Novelists.  Abandon everything you think about Modern Metal.  It is part Progressive Metalcore, it’s part Radio Rock, and it’s part Ariana Grande in all the best ways.  Experiencing this album for the first two times while I’m writing this review is one of the most titillating and enlightening experiences I’ve had.  This album isn’t defined by past releases.  It is not defined by genre or comparison.  This album could and should be on any listening or sales chart.  It is heart-wrenching, pulse-pounding, moody, aggressive, and beautiful.  It’s full of catchiness and cool nuances that make it feel sleek and modern, but the vocals are so classic in a ’90s R&B tone.  It’s an eclectic mix of sounds and influences.  It has a Spiritbox feel with the atmospheric airiness and the layered guitar tracks for texture.  But the song structure and vocals are unlike anything I have ever heard in my life.  Coda stands out from any album I have heard, while remaining relevant to the Metal scene.

Coda abandons constructed genres.  Say My Name is a punchy Prog Rock track with light and airy vocals and smooth guitars, definitely a welcome breath to be played on any radio station.  The guitar work on this song is visionary, as well as on every song on Coda.  The title track is a Metalcore-centric piece which fits the classic Novelists sound, but with the most gorgeous soaring vocals they’ve ever had.  This track is genial to me, it just works so well in structure and hooks the listener in.  All For Nothing is more atmospheric, more extreme, from soft to hard.  It shows the incredible range of this band and the expansiveness of Camille’s voice.  Her screams and cleans have exponentially improved and add much-needed dynamics to the record.  Maldición de la Bruja is a Spanish track in your face with sass, attitude, and a Rap breakdown exquisitely delivered by multi-lingual Camille. This song is a surprising gem of heaviness and groove.  In Heaven is a very heartfelt, atmospheric track with a million layers to dissect.  This is such a departure from previous albums.  I have never heard vocals this open or toned in Metal.  The vocals combined with the djenty rhythmic guitar and bass remind me so much of Voyager and Periphery.  This may be one of their best songs to date. Flo and Pierre are two of the best guitarists in Modern Metal, and Coda is a gigantic testament to that.

My favorite track on the album is Sleepless Nights.  The way this song flows is fantastic.  It is one of the most satisfying songs with a build-up.  It feels like the burdens and pain are lifting off your shoulders.  The guitar work is sublime, especially all the tasty bends and runs.  It scratches my brain, but it is also chicken soup for the soul.  It is a perfect blend of a breakup song and Prog and Modern Metal.  The guitar parts are just so addictive on this song, as well as Camille’s impossibly smooth vocals.  The bridge has one of the longest-held pitch-perfect notes I have ever heard in my life.  The build into the solo is one of the finest pieces of music of 2025.  The final chorus opens up, and Camille just belts with pure emotion.  God, I love her voice, and I love this song.  And, I love how it continues with 78 rue to send the theme of ends with the album.  This is smart songwriting.  The album’s closer K.O., sends the message home of being torn into pieces and thrust into the darkest moments of your life, and then trying to come back out of it.  This is another favorite of mine on the record, and it’s just such an emotional track about having to let go.  Novelists do build-ups like no other, and K.O. is such a great example.

Coda is a fantastically personal album from a band that is reinventing itself.  Novelists have come out of their shells.  The purity is as crisp as music gets.  The technicality is mind-blowing.  The song structure keeps you guessing at every turn.  Regardless of genre, this is one of my favorite albums of the year and of the 2020s.  This is a must-hear album for Metal lovers and Pop music lovers alike.  This could be an album that runs people onto completely new music, and that is an incredible feat.  I think Novelists have achieved everything they wanted to do with this album.  It is a treat to hear such diverse and fantastic vocals in Metalcore, which sometimes lacks in vocal range for me.  The band’s technicality is truly like anything I’ve ever heard.  The speed of these musicians while maintaining clarity is unmatched.  It’s not Djent with muddy tones or down-tuned just for the heaviness.  Coda is crisp, clean, heavy, and vastly interesting compared to 99% of everything I’ve heard this year. I love this record and hope people give it a fair chance, as it deserves.

Store: https://www.novelists.store/home

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Three

This installment of the list is eight more albums of the thirty I picked as my all-time favorite Heavy Metal albums.  There may be another part where I talk about the next ten or twenty on my list.  I’m not sure where I’m going to go with list-making.  It hasn’t been as much of a conversation starter as I’d hoped.  But it’ll be a permanent page on the site, so people can go roast or review my taste.  So, please share your favorite albums in the comments, and let me know if you like any of the same ones on my list!  I want to know people’s tastes in Metal records. As it’s probably all different ones from all over the world, I’d like to add more high-quality Metal albums to my “Must listen” list.

So let me know in the comments what Heavy Metal albums I must hear or just what your favorites are!

As with all my posts, this one is subjective.  This list doesn’t aim to categorize “the best albums of Metal” because such a feat is just not feasible to me.  This is based on just my taste.  They’re not even in order by my favorites because what is considered my favorite is highly based on my mood.  I just made a master list and narrowed it down to the 30 that are important to highlight my taste.  It should give readers a better sense of what I listen to regularly and just personal taste.  Let me know about your favorite Metal albums below in the comments, I would love to see if any of these albums resonated with anyone else the same way they did with me.

Part 3

13. Obsolete- Fear Factory (1998)

I remember listening to Fear Factory when I was probably much too young to understand it.  It ranged between fun and scary at times, but I knew I loved it because my brother loved it so unabashedly.  When someone you love experiences a band so tangibly, it’s impossible not to share the joy of it for me.  Fear Factory became a pinnacle band for my brother and me. We’ve been listening to them together for over twenty years.  It’s a band we love unconditionally, no matter how many times they change members. I think they’re one of the most consistently good bands in my repertoire besides Epica.  Every album has tracks that have remained with me for years.  It’s not just industrial speed metal from the depths of “Skynet” created hell.  Fear Factory creates very psychologically deep music.  It challenges every topic of human existence and even places it from the view of an automaton.  This idea, akin to the visionary  Isaac Asimov’s I., Robot, captivates me on a fundamental level.  I grew up reading and watching Sci-Fi that was themed around the transferring of a human consciousness into a machine or even a transference of the soul entirely.  This trope endlessly fascinates me and terrifies others in the new dawn of AI. Fear Factory’s music explored these ideas long before we had half of the technological advances we have now.  It is incredible to realize that a lot of these advances were only fiction then, and that a Metal band was expanding upon them in such a realistic level.

Choosing an album of Fear Factory’s for the list came down to three albums: Obsolete, Digimortal, and Archetype.  I went with Obsolete because of its stunning dynamics between machine-like riffs and gorgeous soaring melodies like on Resurrection and epic ender Timelessness.  When I want to listen to Fear Factory, this is my first choice.  The songwriting on this album is solid and is truly a prime example of what Fear Factory has to offer.  They polished their sound from the previous release.  This makes for clearer and concise tracks.  The clarity is refreshing for an Industrial album of that era.  There was nothing quite like this album, and there still isn’t anything comparable.  Dino Cazares and Burton C Bell are one of my favorite writing duos of all time.  It seems like they came together on this album and made something truly beautiful while not compromising the heaviness.  But Burton wrote the lyrics solely for this record, and I think he proved he is a revolutionary lyricist on his own.  It’s easy to connect with Burton because of the soul he puts into such a cold sci-fi concept and the emotional depth he shows in his vocals.  He may not be the most technically sound singer, but he gives you chills like no other.  He was the first growler/screamer I’d ever heard.  That led me to a lifelong love of dual-sided vocals that accounts for probably half of what I listen to.

The message of each song is more fluent on this record, like Mechanize..They made Fear Factory with a more Metal Radio sense to it, and it turned out brilliantly, I think.  While the personal experiences and memories may contribute heavily to why I love this album, I’d still put it atop the greatest.  The mix Dino contributed to on this record is an audiophile’s dream.  This record sounds good on any format or listening device, but on FLAC quality with Beyerdynamic headphones, it is a true experience.  Obsolete is one of the best-sounding records I have heard, regardless of genre.  The attack on every note and the mid and bass are so punchy, causing for a more engaging sounding record.  The distortion is crisp, not muddy or too low.  The vocals sound like they’re taken right off the board with a perfect amount of reverb.  You know how much I love reverb on a mix.  The engineering is as flawless as it can get for a Metal record.  

Fear Factory is one of the key bands that got me into Metal and is my reason for having such a high standard for emotional and sonic depth.  They’re a part of some of my earliest music memories and my bond with my older brother.  Hopefully, we can see them together in concert one day, even though it’ll never be quite the same without Burton.   That contribution to my brother and I’s bond is invaluable.  I still think my brother should’ve tried out when they were looking for a new vocalist, but I really enjoy Milo’s tribute to Burton and his precise guttural techniques.  

My favorite songs are Shock, Edgecrusher, and Resurrection.

14. Holy Diver- Dio (1981)

Two artists are rarely left off “Best” or “Favorite Metal albums of all time” lists: Iron Maiden and Dio.  They are two quintessential Metal artists who forged the genre.  Often referred to as the “Heavy Metal God”, Ronnie James Dio created an unmatched legacy in the genre.   He is a household name to all that observe Rock and Heavy Metal, and rightfully so.  His contributions to the genre foreshadowed many that came before him.  His stints with Black Sabbath and Rainbow changed Heavy Metal forever and helped create his everlasting legacy.  I don’t need to explain how impactful Ronnie James Dio was on music, it’s a well-known fact that he is the one who made Heavy Metal a movement, a lifestyle, a way of being, and a brotherhood.  Without Dio, my most favorite bands would not sound like they do today.  His solo work is responsible for influencing my collective favorite genre, Power Metal, which combines Heavy Metal and Classical Music and Fantasy themes.  It is impossible to imagine Heavy Metal without Dio.  I didn’t always know of his impact on Metal.  I just thought he was a singer my dad loved when he was in the Air Force.  

Upon delving into the world of Heavy Metal on a more scholarly level, nobody’s name came up more as an influence than Ronnie James Dio.  his presence wasn’t just soaring technically perfect vocals, but storytelling, a light in the dark, and a character of acceptance of the children judged by the “Satanic Panic” in the 1980s.  RJD was a haven for those who didn’t fit in and were ultimately rejected by the over-glorification of Pop music.  That kind of legacy that affects youth first-hand is irreplaceable.  Because of him, Heavy Metal became a comfort to those who didn’t fit in: The Fantasy nerds. The dreamers and the Metalheads rebelled against the radio, Christianity, and anything that wished to make them conform.  That sentiment still stands today with bands that refuse to give into big corporations’ pressuring them to become something they’re not and go against the formulaic standards of radio.  This is a topic I am extremely passionate about and hope to elaborate more in the future.  I didn’t know this sentiment was one Ronnie James Dio stood for, and now I love him even more.

Holy Diver is an iconic album that has stood the test of time.  Still as crisp and innovative today as it was in 1981, the album is a catchy journey against evil forces.  Listening to this album again, I had forgotten how exquisite the writing and guitar work truly are.  The songs are driving forces, flowing fluidly together, and captivate with every word and every riff.  I don’t think I realized how massive the riffs are on Holy Diver.  I forgot how incredible Vivian Campbell’s playing was on this record, a record he didn’t even write.  He was just the session guitarist in the studio and played the subsequent tours and albums after.  He came in and truly brought this album to life with the screaming solos, speedy riffs, and catchy hooks. With a voice larger than life, Ronnie James Dio overshadows his counterparts, but I think Vivian Campbell is the only guitarist whose voice stands up to Dio’s.  Rainbow was an incredible band, too, with the great Ritchie Blackmore and his Proggy Gothic style, but man, there’s something magical about Campbell and Dio on Holy Diver.  The guitars he crafted fit the epic fantasy theme emphatically.  The lineup on this album truly feels like destiny.  I love that Campbell’s guitar solos span a minute or two.  I love that it completely breaks up the music to create a flashy solo into another verse.  I love how assertively 80s this album sounds, whilst keeping Dio’s 70s Rock roots.  It’s soulful, extravagant, hook-oriented, a little Progressive, and rooted in pure Rock.  Every time I hear Caught In The Middle and Don’t Talk To Strangers, I am reminded of how much I cherish this album.  Caught In The Middle is so heartfelt and punchy, a similar inspiring feel to Holy Diver, but more down to Earth.  

This is my favorite album of Ronnie’s vocals, too.  I love pretty much anything he sings.  He could sing a C++ book and still make me want to listen to every word.  He isn’t just a singer, he’s a storyteller.  The words he sings are exquisitely picked, and the notes are deliberate and exact.  He is the height of technical execution, but he blended the storytelling of the 1970s.  His voice could fit any genre, but thank god Ronnie chose Rock and Heavy Metal as his home.  Holy Diver is unarguably one of the greatest vocal performances ever recorded, regardless of genre.  Every song on this album is an epic or a saga, making it timeless and flawless every time I listen to it, which is impressive after four decades.  

I hear this down-to-earth quality echoed in Power Metal albums today, and it makes me emotional to hear the impact this album has on my favorite music. Ronnie’s voice is timeless, and Holy Diver sounds just as revolutionary today as it did in 1981. It’s one thing to experience Dio’s impact grandly, but personally hearing it impact my favorite musicians today just feels like Heavy Metal has come full circle.  And I wish Ronnie was around to hear bands like Unleash The Archers, Lords of The Trident, Seven Kingdoms, and more that echo his down-to-earth, heartfelt music.

My favorite songs are Holy Diver, Rainbow in the Dark, Don’t Talk To Strangers, and Straight Through the Heart.

15. Legacy of Kings-  Hammerfall (1998)

Yet another classic Power Metal album on my list. I’ve been listening to this album since I was just 12 years old.  They are yet another band my older brother introduced me to.  It was long before I knew anything about European Metal or genres.  This was one album I instantly loved, along with Hammerfall’s debut and another classic, Glory To The Brave.  Choosing between these albums for this list was a mighty task, but I had to go with the more anthemic Legacy of Kings.  Hammerfall’s impact on my music taste is right up there with Dio and Iron Maiden.  They have been consistently in my listening rotation longer than any band on this list.  I didn’t realize that fact until delving into my memories associated with this band.  I started listening to them when my family first moved back to Colorado and have never stopped listening to them.  My brother had their first two records in the car for years to come, and many road trips were soundtracked by Hammerfall and other bands on this list.  It’s Joacim Cans’ illustrious voice that keeps me coming back to Hammerfall.  He is unlike anyone I have ever heard and will always be one of my favorite male vocalists.  When I want solid Power Metal with a nostalgic feel, I turn to Dream Evil or Hammerfall.  Hammerfall has been an ever-driving force in the scene and a pinnacle of Power Metal for me.

Legacy of Kings is an experience of historical tales of Templars setting out on their designed quests, 80s Arena sounds, and unbelievably soulful vocals. The album sounds exactly like its name and the cover art.  It is a no filler, no bullshit, battle Metal album with lyrics that will stick in your head forever.  It captures elements of Dio, Iron Maiden, Scorpions, Def Leppard, and Manowar but with the Brotherhood of the Templars at the helm.  I am forever fascinated by the Templars and Crusade history, and Hammerfall brought this to a sonic basis.  It’s a cool thematic concept that instantly transports you to a different time and place.  Legacy of Kings is an album I put on while gaming, walking, or on road trips, as mentioned earlier.  The music is so fast-paced and interesting; it speeds any task up exponentially and makes it a more enjoyable experience.  This would be a perfect soundtrack to a miniseries about the Templars, I can just envision the story line and characters with momentous battles every time I listen to it.  I may even write an inspired book series one day, in hopes I can capture some of the magic in this album.  I love the theme, the guitar tone, the drums, the level of reverb, and the clarity of the vocals.  There’s just not an album like Legacy of Kings, and I don’t think there ever will be.  While I dislike the use of the word “masterpiece” and find it way overused. I would use it to describe this album in a heartbeat.  

What sold me on Hammerfall is their ability to write epic, long, high BPM songs and then drop an absolutely heart-wrenching ballad.  Songs like Glory to The Brave, The Fallen One, Second to None, and Remember Yesterday are unbelievably amazing.  The songwriting throughout their albums is masterful, but to me, the ability to write great ballads is a prime example of a great band.  The Fallen One, being one of my favorite ballads, ends Legacy of Kings in a forlorn way that makes me want to restart the album immediately.  Joacim Cans over a Classical Piano part is simply gorgeous and is a must hear concept.  This singer is incomparable.  Seeing Hammerfall live and experiencing Joacim’s voice in person was indescribable.  He doesn’t miss.  He doesn’t waver.  He is one of the strongest vocalists I’ve ever heard, and Legacy of Kings is a peak example of his unbridled talent. 

I can’t imagine my life without ever hearing Hammerfall, and I will continue to listen to them as long as I can hear (Seeing Sonata Arctica or Unleash the Archers again might just do my ears in).

My favorite songs are The Fallen One, Legacy of Kings, Remember Yesterday.

16. The Congregation- Leprous (2015)

This is one of the most unique albums on the list, I think.  When I first discovered Leprous in 2018, it was difficult to dissect what I was hearing.  Leprous is a listening experience that simply cannot be described.  They’re an eclectic, avant-garde sound that can’t be categorized.  It’s Metal, it’s Prog, it’s Trip Hop, it’s Symphonic, tastes of Meshuggah, it’s a little Broadway Musical; It’s Leprous, the only Leprous.  There’s nothing like this band in my 31 years of music listening.  Everything they do challenges genre, the usual notation and chord progression, and the typical range of music.  The talent in this band is incomparable.  Their music is weird but in a good way.  They create some of the strangest mind-bending soundscapes that are so visceral.  No matter what they create, you can always expect an album that takes many listens to digest and sink your teeth into the meaning of.  I think Leprous creates a piece of deeper music.  This isn’t just music for the sake of making sound or a shock factor, it’s exclusively meaningful.  This band gives 110% on every single song, performance, and album.  You can hear the immense effort they put into every detail and every note.  A band that works intricately and organically in the dawn of AI, copy and paste, and overproduced music cannot go unnoticed by me.   They uniquely blend Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Devin Townsend, Tool, and Meshuggah chugs to create music more than worthy of a lifetime-achievement award.  Leprous has created an innovative sound that has been immensely influential in everything that I create and made a new standard for Progressive Metal that isn’t just “Djenty” guitars.

The Congregation is an album that sums up their dark, moody, intense, and progressive-oriented sounds whilst combining singer Einar Solberg’s love of Massive Attack.   This creates a sound that captures me instantly.  I also love Massive Attack and Trip Hop since I was introduced to the genre on The Matrix Reloaded Soundtrack in 2003.  This album could be taken right out of that Soundtrack.  So, there’s a nostalgic element to it as well as a fresh take for me.  The Congregation is full of mind-bending sounds, beautiful and haunting melodies, and exquisite drum-work.  This was the first album they’d done with drummer Baard Kolstad.  You can hear the enormous impact he had on the band.  His drum beats melded with Tor’s funky off-time guitar riffs.  This album is a time signature nightmare, and I love it.  It’s completely unpredictable.  The Price, Third Law,  and Moon highlight the beast that is Baard on drums.  He is one of the hardest-hitting drummers.  The attack he puts into every beat grabs your attention immediately.  You have no idea where the song structure is going to go next.  It’s like improvisational Jazz put into Heavy Metal, and I think it’s utterly brilliant.  I love the drum work on this album, but the vocals are what put Leprous on the map for me.  

Einar Solberg’s vocal performance on The Congregation defies all boundaries of male vocals and genre constraints.  He has the most beautiful voice I’ve ever heard in male vocals.  He can move mountains with his voice, even in a whisper falsetto.  His unbridled vocal power carries every song in an emotional gut-wrenching journey that is irreplicable.  Songs like Rewind, The Flood, and the absolute soul-bursting Slave illustrate his immense range and explosive vocals.  The dynamics he shows are unlike anything I have ever heard.  It’s as though he is the love child of Devin Townsend, Ihsahn, Colm Wilkinson, and Daniel Tompkins.  He is one of my favorite vocalists of all time, and The Congregation is the opus for me.  His performance on The Flood is a top favorite of all time for me.  The emotional impact this song has is everlasting.  It is a cry for help when no one is listening, a release of unimaginable pain into the void, and the clouds inevitably parting on the constant storm life torments us with.  I’ve created art pieces to try to capture how deeply The Flood and other songs off the album impacted me, but it’ll never be enough to truly iterate the supreme catharsis this album bestows.

Leprous is an all-time favorite artist of mine and will remain forever on this list with The Congregation.

My favorite songs: The Flood, Third Law, and Moon

17. Eternal Blue- Spiritbox (2021)

I know I’ve talked about this band before, and everyone’s probably getting tired of hearing about them.  However, leaving them off this list is not an option.  Spiritbox is one of my all-time favorite bands.  They reignited my love for Metalcore whilst introducing me to a new genre that would become one of most listened to: Progressive Metalcore.  This genre has been vitally important to my mental health and musical journey.  Not only did it provide Spiritbox, a band that got me inspired to pick up drums again, but it also gave me Periphery, Whitechapel, ERRA, Novelists, Jinjer, and most especially Ankor.  This band not only gave me some of my most personal connections with music, but they also gave me other bands I would connect with even deeper.  They opened a window to a whole new world of music for me, and I found new parts of myself scattered within the same genre bubble.  I discovered the band with their massive breakout single Holy Roller, and I admit it took a long time to grow on me.  The other singles from Eternal Blue emphatically won me over to the immense talent of vocalist/lyricist Courtney LaPlante and guitarist/writer/producer Mike Stringer.  Like Burton and Dino, they’re one of my favorite writing duos of all time.  Spiritbox’s writing is superb.  It is easy to hear why they’re one of the biggest Metal bands on the planet because Eternal Blue is perfectly crafted.  I think this band deserves every amount of the hype they receive.

Eternal Blue is a beautiful and tragic journey through COVID isolation, depression, nightmares and night terrors, self-hatred, and fighting societal pressures of conformity. This album’s lyrical content sounds exactly like 2020-2021 was for me.  It was fast, a blur of emotion constantly changing, and a calm amongst the storm.  It’s a devastatingly heavy album in both instrumentation and emotional continuity.  Each track flows together, but no two tracks sound the same.  Somehow, it’s all in an idea bubble and sounds like the same theme, but it is completely different.  It’s a crazy feat in songwriting to achieve that continuity without repeating or following the same formula.  I think it’s because of the shifting in dynamics and wall-of-sound production.  It immerses you in a vibe, for lack of a better word, and keeps you there for days, much like Courtney’s described nightmares that inspired this album.  I love immersive, deep, huge sounding records, and this is a best effort in a decade.  It exists in the same space in my mind and heart as Strapping Young Lad records.  There’s brutality, airiness, relief, gigantic guitars, and soulfulness in complete desperation.  This album emotionally wrecked me for months, but in a good way.  It took me out of my comfort zone while giving me a haven amongst the chaos.

Songs like The Summit, Secret Garden, and Halcyon are lighter and a breath of fresh air amongst a stale, isolated lifestyle during COVID-19 times.  These are tracks I would often go to sleep to or practice musical meditation to.  There’s something profoundly spiritual about this record for me.  It’s a cleansing of the spirit, which isn’t surprising considering the name of the band.  Eternal Blue surprised me with how deeply it impacted me.  I didn’t expect such a heavy guitar record with djent tropes to be so cathartic and emotional.  I think Courtney’s vocals give their music that relatable quality.  You can hear every word she says and clearly understand how it makes her feel.  That emotional resonance is what makes this band special.  A lot of singers are fantastic at singing and conveying a story or emotion because that is the job of a vocalist to audily convey the meanings of the song.  What Courtney does is another level of crushingly soul-bearing vocals that dig into you and stay there for a long time.

 A powerful quote about pain inspiring art is, “Great art comes from great pain,” which comes from Tortured Artists by Christopher Zara.  I think Spiritbox resembles this message in a good way. Spiritbox’s impact on music is unarguably profound, but the emotional connection they’ve made with their fans, including me, is rarely talked about or honored.  Spiritbox allows a haven for the anger, pain, and self-doubt we all may deal with throughout our lives.  That is such a beautiful kind of catharsis. 

My favorite songs are: We Live In A Strange World, The Summit, and Constance.

18. Victims of A Modern Age- Star One (2010)

I was already in love with European Metal early on because of Hammerfall and Within Temptation.  Epica is the band that hooked me on Euro Metal and the pursuit of finding more Symphonic Metal and Death Metal.  But, Arjen Lucassen and his many Prog projects were also a huge influence to my quest of the Euro Metal discovery.  It became a passion to pick out each contributing artist from Arjen’s projects and deep dive into their subsequent bands and albums.  It was like the “Six Degrees of Separation” but with incredible Metal.  Once my brother and I went down this rabbit hole (Star One pun), we discovered many of our favorite artists of all time.  I feel like we should write an extensive thank-you letter to the streaming service, Pandora.  This service exposed us to most of the European artists we know and love today.  They had the best collection of this kind of underground Metal we could access in America in the 2000s and 2010s.  I fear to think what my life would be like without this music, especially without Arjen Lucassen.  I remember my brother and I freaking out and “fangirling” to Victims of A Modern Age and all of Arjen’s discography together in his living room.  It was a liberating experience that I think strengthened our bond even more and made me the metalhead that I am today.

Victims of a Modern Age is a nerdfest of Progressive Metal and geeky themes like The Matrix, Planet of the Apes, A Clockwork Orange, and Blade Runner.  Arjen is heavily inspired by Sci-Fi to create Space Metal through project Star One.  I have loved Sci-Fi series, books, and TV Series since I was young enough to sit and read or watch them.  This love of sci-fi combined with Metal is such a personal niche.  Especially since opening bombastic hook track Digital Rain is based on my favorite movie series of all time, The Matrix.  This is, in my opinion, one of his best works because of its more band-like feel with Dan Swano, Damian Wilson, Russel Allen, Floor Jansen, Ed Warby, Peter Vink, and Joost Van De Broek.  It was a lot easier to perform live shows and put together solid Metal records.  This album is evidence that progressive metal doesn’t need 50 musicians and 5000 notes in a measure to be good.  This album is hook-laden, anthemic, and bombastic.  It is unapologetically nerdy and cheesy, and I love it immensely.  Arjen Lucassen’s music writing is some of the best of our modern times, and his ability to compile the absolute best singers and musicians is a stroke of brilliance.  Victims of A Modern Age is an album I wish I wrote and created.  It is a Metal ode to Sci-Fi in the biggest way ever achieved, with some of the greatest vocalists of all time to tell the story.  

The performances on this record are unbelievable.  The first time I’d ever heard Russel Allen was on this album, and it blew me away more than 99% of singers I’d ever heard.  It also introduced me to the mighty Floor Jansen, and that forever changed my life.  I didn’t know women sang Power Metal, so when I heard her powerful vocals stand up to Russel and Damian Wilson, it had me hooked for life.  Hearing Floor for the first time forever changed my view of female vocals and sent me to loving After Foreer, then Revamp, and then Nightwish.  Arjen getting Floor Jansen heard on a larger scale in 2010 is probably one of the most significant moments in music for me.  I think his loaded projects lead to a lot of discoveries for a lot of metalheads.  Because of Ayreon and Star One, many of these artists have gone on to bigger projects and collaborations.  I have no idea how Arjen does it, but he keeps crafting the best progressive music this generation has to offer, with the absolute best lineups.  If I could ever achieve one percent of what he has, I’d be happy with my music career.  The man is an absolute genius and wizard, and just knows how to bring the best out of the best musicians.

Victims of A Modern Age is yet another transformative release in my  Metal History.  It inspired me to plunge into the world of Metal head first and soak up Euro Metal like my life depended on it.  Through this discovery, I found bands like Threshold, Adrenaline Mob, Porcupine Tree, After Forever, Stream of Passion, Symphony X, Between the Buried and Me, and so many other artists that impacted my taste in music writing.  I think Arjen is a great writer, musician, collaborator, producer, and all-around nice guy.  I don’t believe he gets the worldwide recognition, sales, or credit he deserves for being such a consistent contributor to music.

My favorite songs; Digital Rain, Cassandra Complex, 24 Hours

19. Audio Secrecy- Stone Sour (2010)

Of all the albums on this list, this might be the most influential to me personally.  Devin Townsend, Brittney Slayes, Amy Lee, Joacim Cans, Simone Simons, and more top my favorite singers of all time list.  But, before I dived into the Progressive and Power world, it was Corey Taylor who topped my list.  The range, diversity, emotional diction, and character in Corey’s vocals made him stand out for me.   Corey Taylor’s unique style is still unlike anything I have ever heard.  Many have been inspired and replicate the style of rap, Metal gutturals, and soaring anthemic cleans that could organize a thousand people.  His power is unbelievable to me.  Even to this day, his live performances are staggeringly good.  His vocals with Stone Sour are somehow different altogether.  They’re softer, more nuanced, and more thought out to give a tonal quality.  This makes Stone Sour stand out, blending the 60s and 70s with the Alternative Rock and Metal of the 2000s.  I’ve been listening to Stone Sour since 2007 or so.  I’ve always loved Jim Root’s guitar playing.  Roy Mayorga is also a very underrated drummer.  But, when Audio Secrecy came out, it changed my entire world as a music listener.  This album was going to be on my list of “Favorite Rock Albums of all time”, but the drums and chugging guitars made this album fit Metal a little bit more to me.  It’s just one of my favorites, regardless of genre.

I was listening to Turbo and Sirius XM recently, and Brent /Smith from Shinedown told the story of singing Guns N’ Roses’s Appetite For Destruction every Friday night in his garage as a kid.  That’s how he got his start as a Rock vocalist.  I related to that story because when Audio Secrecy came out, I practiced singing through it at least twenty times a week.  It came out in September, and I think I was still practicing it the next October 2011.  This strengthened my voice immensely and gave me so much confidence overall.  While I’ve never sung in public or front of a band, at least I know I could sing some of those songs in a bad imitation.  Those are the memories you hold onto forever with albums.  When music makes you feel like you’re at your best, it leaves a permanent imprint on the deepest parts of you.  That’s a powerful connection that makes music a unique experience.  Regardless of whether I ever become a singer or not, I’ll always remember what album made me feel like I could be a rock star.

Audio Secrecy is sonically perfect; Stone Sour at their absolute apex of writing and song construction.  This record is so well mastered, so well composed and engineered, it sounds like a late 1970s release.  It sounds uncompressed, unfiltered, and so open and airy.  It’s a massive-sounding album that combines Arena Rock with Deftones-inspired riffs and melodic vocals.  It is hard-hitting.  Every song is an attack.  Every one of Roy’s hits punches you in the chest.  The driving explosive choruses hook you in.  Mayorga’s cataclysmic drumming on this record captivates me every time I listen to it.  The bass line on Say You’ll Haunt Me would make Paul McCartney cry, it’s so damn good and smooth. The ballads cool off the tension, especially the power ballad Hesitate which is among my favorite songs of all time.  The vocals are utterly perfect on every song, but I think Heisitate and Imperfect are two of Corey’s best clean performances of his entire career.  This is undeniably the most relatable album in Stone Sour’s catalog, and I think that’s what makes it so beautiful.  Corey put his whole heart into this album, as Slipknot had just lost bassist Paul Gray.  Corey’s life has been full of loss, pain, and making it out by the skin of his teeth, and those parts of him are bare on Audio Secrecy.  This accentuates the deep connection fans like me have made with him.  It is Stone Sour’s best album, and I don’t think it will ever be replicated in the slightest.

Audio Secrecy is a once-in-a-generation album, and I will always remember it as my favorite album to sing along to.  Seeing this album played almost entirely live was a highlight of my life that I’ll never forget.

My Favorite songs are: Digital (Did YouTell), Hesitate, Threadbare

20. All Hope Is Gone- Slipknot (2008)

Slipknot is one of my favorite bands of all time.  Slipknot is what originally got me into Heavy Metal when I was 12 to 14 years old.  Maybe it’s cliche at this point because Slipknot is one of the biggest metal bands of all time, but their impact is undeniable.  They’ve inspired countless artists and young metalheads, exposing them to a whole new world of American Death Metal and Metalcore.  I heard Slipknot as a kid because my brother and one of his friends were into Metal and shared albums, but it was probably too much for me at eight years old.  I can imagine that, as sensitive as I was, the masks and the aggression would’ve freaked me out.  But, as I got older, this aggressive music became essential to me.  As a typical American teenager, Slipknot was heavy in my rotation long before the era of streaming.  Though, I did have Youtube, and I would religiously watch Slipknot’s videos and attempt to decipher the visual subtleties Shawn Crahan hid in every video.  Every aspect of Slipknot was endlessly fascinating to me.  The fact that they hid their identities for so long, the horror-themed music videos, and all the strange sounds they used in their music were captivating and confusing at the same time.  

All Hope Is Gone is an indescribable album of aggressive sound, piercing screams and DJ effects, and incredibly heavy drums.  This is undoubtedly one of the best drum albums in Metal.  Joey Jordison blended Progressive and Death Metal influences with solid Rock beats to complete the almost tribal backbone of Slipknot.  He is a household name all over the world for his incomparable contributions to the world of Metal drumming.  This album is my favorite of all his works, despite it being slightly lighter and more radio-friendly than others in the Slipknot arsenal.  I also think this has some of the best guitar work of any Slipknot record.  It sounds like Jim Root and Mick Thomson at their best to me.  The mix of melodic hooks and depth with the pummeling speed riffs is something we don’t hear often in American Metal.  The riffs remind me of early In Flames and At the Gates on this album, which, to me, is an upgrade in pedigree.  There’s a musical depth to this album that intrigues me more than most Metal albums ever released.  In some respects, it is so European and Death Metal oriented, and then there are anthemic sing-song parts in between.  It’s a unique and eclectic mix that was very surprising for 2008.  It sounds like this album could’ve been released in 2024, but on the other hand, it could’ve been an early 90s Thrash record.  It’s hard for me to pin it down, and that’s what Slipknot always goes for.  That’s what I love about them; they literally don’t sound like anyone or anything else, and they don’t try to be anything but themselves.

Slipknot creates some of the most unique Metal ever released with a staggering amount of influences and different musicians.  I love bands who dare to be different, don’t aim to create radio rock, and are eclectic.  Slipknot manages to be strange as hell and yet sell millions of records.  This proves the idea of “mainstream” is an elitist construct of misinformation and old-fashioned thinking.  Nothing Slipknot does is conforming to the radio or record company conglomerates, yet Sulfur, Before I Forget, Dead Memories, and Duality are some of the most played Metal tracks on the air.  I love that they’ve flipped off all the doubters and all the elitists and stayed true to their chaotic and angry roots after all this time.  While they’ve stayed true to this vacuum pretty much the whole time, besides recent release The End So Far (seriously, what the fuck was that album?), I think All Hope is Gone is going to remain my favorite Slipknot album of all time.

While I’ve moved on from Slipknot to completely different music, I will always love the nostalgia of hearing them on the radio.  They are still a band my mom and I share every once in a while, and I will never forget the surprise of my mom loving Slipknot and everything Corey Taylor.  I hope to see them together one day.

My Favorite songs are; Dead Memories, Snuff, Butcher’s Hook, Sulfur

There it is, my top 20 favorite Heavy Metal albums of all time! What are your favorites? Did you like or dislike any of the albums I listed? Start a conversation in the comments below!

Happy International Women’s Day! Here’s Ten Women Killing It Right Now

This blog is dedicated to all women in Rock and Metal, the trailblazers, and the young guns. This is my number one passion in life to discover and share the amazing women in Heavy Music that endlessly inspire me and millions of people around the world. It’s hard to narrow it down to only 10, because diversity has skyrocketed in the past decade, but I decided to highlight my favorites!

Who are you favorite women in Rock and Metal! Let me know in the comments below!

Lzzy Hale

Lead singer of the long grinding band, Halestorm, she defies all glass ceilings in Rock and Metal with her immensely powerful voice and her impossibly difficult screams. She has become a household name for many, earning a Grammy, fronting legendary Hair Metal band Skid Row, and collaborating with notables Corey Taylor, I Prevail, Lindsey Stirling, The Hu, Avatar, and many many more. She is one of the most prolific women in Rock and Metal, and will no doubt earn a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Courtney LaPlante

The legendary LaPlante got her start with cult classic Iwrestledabearonce for a short stint where she shocked people with her immensely raw screams. She now fronts the worldwide phenomenon, Spiritbox, who are known for their bipolar mix of beautiful melodies and brutal breakdowns. She is one of the most versatile vocalists I have ever seen and always surprises with her seemingly impossible low gutturals. She defies any genre boundaries and everything I knew about female vocals. Her reputation and recognition is hard earned and no doubt Spiritbox will gain continued success throughout their careers.

The Warning

This Mexican Rock trio comprised of three dynamic sisters have been working to make a name for themselves for ten years. They’ve created some of the best Rock in the last four decades with their uncompromising rawness and unapologetic Hard Rock riffs with massive hooks. They are one of my favorite bands of all-time. They’re rebelling against the mainstream, formulaic, AI, autotuned laden Radio Rock and reprising ideals of the 1970s with instrument proficiency and explosive chemistry. These are some of most talented musicians I’ve ever heard. They never miss. If you haven’t heard them yet, get ready to get hooked.

Jessie Williams

Gaining the spot as my favorite band as of right now, Ankor has created some of the most unique blends of music since 2003. Joining the band in 2014, she immediately impacted the dynamics and range of Ankor, who were originally a Power Metal band in the limited market or Catalonia, Spain. They switched their style to an edgy Alternative Metal with EDM, Japanese, and Evanescence styles. They are one of the most innovative bands I have heard in a long time. Jessie’s range is absolutely explosive with fry screams, gutturals, rapping, operatic, and high soaring vocals. Shoganai, the first part of their Mini album, is a stunning and surprising mix of extremes. I was instantly impressed by Jessie and now she is one of my favorite vocalists in just a short week of being introduced to Ankor.

Fabienne Erni

One of the most diverse and incomparable vocalists, Fabienne is among my favorite vocalists. She has a unique Alpine style that is perfect for Folk Metal band Eluveitie. She’s made a name in her Alternative and Symphonic Metal band Illumishade, which has created some of the most beautiful music I have ever heard. Her range is crazy with almost Broadway-power, being one of the loudest vocalists on this list I’ve ever heard.

Sabrina Cruz

Power Metal vocalist Sabrina Cruz brings attitude, flashiness, and crazy high vocals that mirrors the charm of the 1980s while giving modern soulful twists and twang. Seven Kingdoms is among my favorite bands of all time. They deliver a blue collar American Power Metal with nostalgic sounds and raw talent. Their music is full of heartfelt messages and they’ve created such a supportive fanbase whom fund all their ventures without a big label or producer. I absolutely love this band and cannot recommend them enough. I have no idea why they’re not more well-known, because they deserve a lot more recognition.

Krista Shipperbottom

Fronting one of the best opening bands I’ve ever seen, Krista Shipperbottom delivers Death Growls and high-pitched screams that captivate you on the first note. She is an unbelievably good live vocalist with immense volume, power, and dynamics that match the thrilling speeds of Lutharo’s speed-metal prowess. Seeing this band open for Seven Kingdoms was one of my highlights of 2024 and their album Chasing Euphoria ended up on my favorite releases. Krista’s voice impressed me immensely, mirroring Alissa White Gluz of Arch Enemy in brutality. You’re not going to believe the amount of sound that comes out of her. It is truly mesmerizing.

Brittney Slayes

A name I mention often on this site, Brittney fronts the warriors of the frozen north Unleash the Archers She is one of the greatest singers I have ever heard in my life. She reminds me of the great Heavy Metal vocalists of the 1980s, while adding her signature Power Metal screams at dog whistle pitch and incredible diction. Brittney’s talent is one of a kind, and puts her among the likes of Bruce Dickinson, Ronnie James Dio, and Joacim Cans for me. I love her voice and her story writing emphatically and will be a fan for life. I have no idea why she is not a household name among Floor Jansen, Lzzy Hale, and Ann Wilson, but maybe me endlessly sending praise will expose more people to this amazing vocalist and truly kind human being.

Tatiana Shmayluk

I think Tatiana’s reputation proceeds her and doesn’t need mentioning, but I simply can’t leave her off a list of my favorite vocalists. Her brutality and deep gutturals never cease to amaze me. I had never heard female gutturals so low in my entire life. She defies everything I knew about screaming/growling and mixes it with a Jazzy style and pitch perfect intonation. She is on her own level, especially with their latest release Duel which is truly a fantastic album. Nobody sounds like Tatiana, and no one ever will.

Camille Contreras

A new comer in the Metal scene, Camille has lent her soulful vocals to Prog Metalcore band Novelists and begun a new era for the band increasing their visibility and dynamics immensely. She is one of my favorite vocalists right now. She blends Pop, Jazz, and fry screams to create a gut-wrenching sound that is unlike anything I’ve heard in the genre of Metalcore. Her tonal quality puts her above 99% of Metal vocalists right now for me. She has one of the most beautiful tones I have ever heard, adding warmth and depth to a cold and mechanical genre inundated with male vocalists I couldn’t pick out from a lineup. She’s going to take Novelists to the top of the genre touring with heavy hitters such as Tesseract. I cannot wait for the first full album with her at the helm. Coda out May 9th, 2025

Who are your favorite Women in music?

Tsunami Sea: Spiritbox’s Boldest Album Yet

March 7th, 2025

Today is a great day for Spiritbox fans. They have unleashed their brand new album Tsunami Sea, their most bombastic and genre bending venture yet. This album is a combination of their crushing riffs, heart-wrenching vocals, and industrial sounds that combine Nu-Metal nostalgia and Modern Metal at its finest. Tsunami Sea is everything you love about Spiritbox, magnified by a thousand suns. They are a band that doesn’t miss because of their uncompromising concept of defying all expectations, Ironically, you simply can’t put them in a box. Eternal Blue is one of my to 40 albums ever made, so I had incredibly high expectations coming into Tsunami Sea. However, it is impossible and unfair to compare albums, as they’re entirely separate in every way. Tsunami Sea is a monument of brutality that stands entirely on its own. It is extreme. The spectrum and enormity of this album is staggering. I’ve only heard this level of extremity a few times in my life, and I love it. Spiritbox are experts at absolutely pummeling you with riffs, then soothing your soul to a meditative state with beautiful clear vocals and smooth rhythms. Tsunami Sea expands on this concept and does it expertly with wall-of-sound production. To say this is a special album is an understatement. It is dedicated entirely to the late and great Spiritbox bassist Bill Burr wo unexpectedly passed away last July. This tribute is gut-wrenching and so beautiful to all who knew Bill and how much he contributed to the Metal community.

Tsunami Sea is the rawest Spiritbox album yet. It is a lot to take in upon the first couple listens. This is going to be a slowburner for the rest of the month for me. This release feels like a long time coming after listening to Eternal Blue approximately 500 times since it came out. It is everything I expected, but so much more. I feel like adding Josh Gilbert to the lineup was a brilliant idea. The bass and backing vocals add so much to this record. He and Courtney have great harmonies and chemistry, which adds texture and depth that is vastly different from Eternal Blue. I think Zev Rose is a bit quieter on this record, but still adds some groove that breaks up the brutality of the seemingly endless layers of guitars. I prefer the guitar sounds on Eternal Blue, just because there were more layers of melodic harmony that added heart and atmosphere to the album. But, if this album is a personification of anger and pain, the instrumentation, lyrics, level of distortion, and truly inhuman growls amplify the theme perfectly. The highlight is really Courtney LaPlante’s vocals and storytelling on this album. It’s like she’s narrating the struggles they’ve been through in such a fluent way. It just hits so hard, it lingers for hours after you listen to it. She is a once-in-a-generation vocalist with unbridled power and shock factor that will last her entire career. Tsunami Sea is Courtney LaPlante at her apex.

Overall, this is a great Modern Metal record. This style of Music is not usually my thing nor area of expertise, but Spiritbox are the pinnacle of this new wave of Progressive Metalcore/Deathcore. They’ve brought brutality to the mainstream and crossed-genres of fans from every walk of life. Tsunami Sea shows the impact and the pure power of this band to absolutely captivate with their sonic presence. I love this band and I am so far really impressed with Tsunami Sea.

My favorite songs so far: Ride The Wave, Perfect Soul, Tsunami Sea, A Haven With Two Faces

Check out Tsunami Sea:

https://palechord.com/blogs/news/spiritbox-tsunami-sea-out-now

The Fear of Fear Spiritbox Review

The Fear of Fear Spiritbox album 2023

Spiritbox are one of the most talked about bands of the 2020s with breakout hit “Holy Roller” dominating the charts and looping on the radio into a dizzily huge successful album “Eternal Blue”. Love them or hate them, this band is a force of nature in Progressive Metalcore. Guitarist/Composer/Produce Mike Stringer stands out in a crowd of copy/paste guitarists of the genre. To say he is brilliant would be a vast understatement. His counterpart and huge ranged powerhouse, Courtney LaPlante has also been a unique diamond in the rough of radio saturated Metalcore. She is one of my most favorite vocalists, and also the most surprising dichotomous voices. Her ability to switch voicings is rare, because you’re hard pressed to find anyone smoother and more emotive. Spiritbox is a brutal barreling train derailment of sound with a massive wall of sound, Mike occasionally maxing out the stored memory in Pro Tools. If you came to Spiritbox with Eternal Blue, you know the complexity and ginormous layers they can produce. But, don’t expect The Fear of Fear to be a follow-up to Eternal Blue… This band is set on busting expectations, genres, and complacency.

The Fear of Fear is a lyrical journey through battles with mental health, isolation, and dissociation. It is not like Eternal Blue as it doesn’t flow or necessarily fit together. There is no two tracks that sound alike, but it is reminiscent of very early Spiritbox demos and Singles. There are melodic tones that seem so familiar and imperative to the identity of Spiritbox, but very new and fresh. If you’re not familiar with pre-Eternal Blue singles, this may be a complete surprise to you. “Cellar Door” may be their heaviest track yet, an absolute sonic assault on the senses that hits you wave after wave. Courtney’s range on this is unbelievably low and sure to impress the most brutal of Death Metal fans. “Jaded” is a rhythmic complex track with catchy vocal and bass lines with a very Metalcore feel to it. It is so nice to hear bass in Progressive Metalcore again. “Too Close/ Too Late” is extremely atmospheric and haunting with basic structure and even pacing, a breath of fresh air after two pummeling tracks. “Angel Eyes” is such an interesting track that reminds me of the intensity of “The Beauty of Suffering” from the self titled. “Ultraviolet” is a electronic undertones, groovy drum back beats, and high pitched sweet vocals, and it is unlike anything the band has done before. “The Void” is one of my favorite tracks of the year with an extremely catchy chorus and difficult long held notes. They really used the whole band’s collective range on these six tracks and I feel like they challenged themselves as well as the fans’ ideas of the band.

The Fear of Fear is as if they went back to the beginning of the band, took what they liked from the Singles and Self Titled and remixed them fit their current mental state and then threw in new out-of-the-box ideas to reinvent themselves. It’s a pretty large contrast from Eternal Blue, which I like that they didn’t just recycle those feelings and sounds. I like the throwback to the original haunting sounds we got in the Self-Titled. People who didn’t like Eternal Blue but like Spiritbox are going to love this record. I love most of the tracks and it’ll definitely take more listens to take it all in. I think a couple tracks might be a little weak on their own and also don’t fit together, but there are standouts that you could repeat for days on end. The band certainly didn’t lose the addictive quality to their sound and have really rooted themselves in the aspects you expect; Atmosphere, layers, and airy vocals on top of brutality. Overall, it’s a great release and I think a very smart progression for them to draw in so many kinds of fans. I wish it was as long as Eternal Blue, so I had something to really sink in to. It feels like another Singles Collection rather than an album, but it definitely won’t get stale after many listens due to the variety of styles and familiar sounds. Spiritbox continue to surprise, amaze, and captivate me with every release, and this might be their most advantageous release yet.

Spiritbox group photo 2023

Links:

https://spiritbox.com/

Spiritbox are a Progressive Metalcore band from Victoria, BC, Canada formed in 2016

The band is:

Courtney LaPlante: Vocals

Mike Stringer: Producer, Guitarist, Programmer, Backing Vocals, Writer

Zev Rose: Drums

Josh Gilbert: Bass, Backing vocals

Metalcore: The Best Genre in 2022?

4/13/2022

10 minute read

    Metalcore is often a genre overlooked by the elitists.  Often the genre is associated with more “Emo” themes.  That is simply a misnomer.  Metalcore is arguably the most diverse of all subgenres.  It is a broad subgenre with millions of possibilities; some bands have a Metal version of Punk Hardcore, some Extreme Metal with Meshuggah-Esque breakdowns.  I was originally a naysayer of the subgenre.  I expected whiny, high-pitched, off-key screams, and generic guitar riffs stolen from Killswitch Engage and All That Remains.  Those derivative instances may exist, but the juggernauts of the new wave of Metalcore are reinventing the wheel.  I became educated in Metalcore really fast upon my first listen of “Circle With Me” by budding Vancouver Island Progressive Metalcore band, Spiritbox.  From there, my glass house of elitism was shattered forever.

    Spiritbox’s Eternal Blue is the album that changed Metalcore forever but seemingly came out of nowhere.  Between lineup changes and the pandemic, Spiritbox didn’t necessarily start successfully.  They were unable to tour, put the new album together in the studio on the original timeline, and were forced to find a drummer remotely.  The strife this band faced was formidable, but they turned it into something immensely positive.  Eternal Blue is a true example of “pain turned into art”.  It is a masterful record.  It is beautiful, angry, tragic, and devastatingly good.  It’s not what I expected; Holy Roller was a track that threw me off.  It’s dense, abrasive, and completely heavy.  It took me months to appreciate it.   Once I heard Circle With Me, however, I immediately understood why this band went viral.  Now, I can’t stop listening to Eternal Blue. The dramatic, sometimes bipolar, djent down-tuned chugging riffs to beautiful intricate melodies grabs every fiber of my being.  I crave their sound to the point of obsession, and I think this album did the same thing to everyone who’s heard it.  

There’s a wide spectrum of sound in Spiritbox that I’ve never heard before.  It’s an assault of layers upon layers.  Mike Stringer is known for maxing out the session data in Protools with these layers: Specifically on the beautifully heart-wrenching Alzheimer’s inspired track, Constance.  This is the emotionally heaviest song I’ve heard in nearly fifteen years (Devin’s Deadhead takes the crown for me there).  His musical composition is the most interesting I’ve heard since Devin Townsend.  The way he aligns heavy guitars or melodic shredding with Courtney’s vocals is nothing short of visionary.  Many bands have attempted this sonic chemistry, but Mike and Courtney have a cornerstone on the chemistry that I don’t think will ever be matched.  This is why Eternal Blue is one of the greatest Metal records of all time and has brought Metalcore back to the forefront.

Once I became obsessed with Spiritbox, I went on to find other bands that shared a pension for Progressive Metalcore.  Below is a list of bands that add to why I think Metalcore is the best subgenre in 2021 and 2022.

https://spiritbox.com/


Architects

    This may seem like an obvious name drop, as Architects have been dropping some of the best records in modern Metal for the last ten years.  They write relatable, coarse, heavy, and melodic tracks with excellent breakdowns.  They sit at the more aggressive end of Metalcore, with screaming and down-tuned guitars while staying accessible.  The band has been millions of fans’ entry into the extensive world of Metalcore.  Tracks like Minesweeper, Day in Day Out, and Doomsday are blisteringly heavy and coarse with newer addition Sam Carter’s style.  His screams and cleans are drastically different from each other, to an almost bipolar level.  Their music is catchy, but not repetitive or derivative.  It truly sticks in your mind; Whether it’s a riff or a vocal hook, Architects becomes addictive just as well as Spiritbox.  Josh Middleton, another newer addition officially joining in 2017, is a driving force on lead guitars.  Coming from Progressive Metalcore powerhouse Sylosis, Josh has made his imprint on Architects’ riffs.  I think the band has gained success due to the innovation of Sam and Josh’s contribution and unique styles.  At least, I’ve enjoyed the band more since Middleton began riffing for them.

    For Those Who Wish To Exist is the latest from Architects. Released at the height of Covid on February 26th, 2021, this is one of the most poignant records of the decade.  In my opinion, this record is a momentous record for all of music.  The album is one of the heaviest records to climb the US Billboard charts in my lifetime.  It got the recognition and credit it deserved for tracks like Black Lungs, Animals, and Dead Butterflies all frequenting successful Satellite radio.  This record is not what I consider radio-friendly, but it is deeply relatable and tragically accurate for Covid-19’/s terrorist reign on the world.  It captures the loss, the loneliness, the falling to addiction, and the rage for stupidity amongst the human race.  I unequivocally love this record and find it to be the highlight of Architects’ career.

https://architectsofficial.com/

ERRA

    Talk about underrated bands that seemingly come out of nowhere; the Progressive Metalcore scientists Erra hit me like a god damned truck.  These guys put out harsh rap vocal lines over smooth clean choruses, right before obliterating breakdowns.  Jesse Cash on vocals and guitars has written some of my absolute favorite riffs of all time.  Dancing between Killswitch, Tool, and Meshuggah’s off-beat chugging, it’s a savory ride of guitar flavors that I am always impressed by.  It’s impossible to get bored of Erra’s irregular and entropic music.  It switches between fast down-tuned riffs, atmospheric interludes, and catchy vocals over blast beats.  There’s also melodic shredding underneath the chunky riffs; a contrast I absolutely love.  Cash and company compose songs with such deliberation and care so it flows through you like a symphony.  I appreciate the music, but the lyrics are even more of a reason to listen to Erra.  They eloquently talk about death, astronomy, psychology, neurology, societal issues with technological advancement, mythology, and mental health.  Their storytelling and emotional transparency are what sets this band apart from all other Metalcore bands for me.

Erra, the self-titled record, is an astounding mix in a plethora of titillating ways.  It’s grinding, blue-collar chuggy, and then refined and technical, and then warm and heartfelt.  It’s surprisingly heavy, but the dynamics and smooth changes are what make it an essential Metalcore album.  Snowblood opens with speed and breakdown shreds, continuing into equally disjointed Gungrave with an absolutely devastating breakdown at the end, and then it breaks and surprises into Melodic DivisionaryHouse of Glass is where the Prog shines through and captures me more than the Metalcore aspects.  There’s a blinding ode to Tool in this song that is mouthwatering and unexpected.  There’s a break in the music and this perfect off-time riff pre-verse that blows my mind every time I hear it.  I won’t spoil the rest of the easter eggs in this brilliant record, but it’s a must-listen all the way through.

Essential Tracks: Snowblood, Vanish Canvas ft. Courtney LaPlante, Monolith

https://www.erraband.com/

Periphery

    I doubt there’s a Modern Metal fan in America that hasn’t heard of Periphery, but just in case you need an incentive to listen to Prog Metalcore juggernauts Periphery, I’ll spell it out for you.  Washington D.C may not be progressive these days, but at least it has birthed one of the greats of Progressive Metalcore.  I have yet to see a band in the genre with more lineup changes, which is off-putting for me.  It can cause inconsistencies and identity confusion, making the music derivative.  Not with these guys.  They are a band who have only improved with changes and time.  The current lineup is a perfect medley of styles, technical ability, and some of the best musical chemistry I’ve ever seen.  Periphery IV: Hail Stan is an album for the ages that went nearly viral.  It is one of the highest-ranking Progressive Metalcore albums of the century, and rightly so.

    While Spencer Sotelo’s vocals took a while for me to warm up to, it was their live videos that grabbed my attention. While some male vocalists in the upper register lose tonal quality and pitch control in a live setting, Spencer is an absolute rock.  I am baffled by the lack of reaction videos to Spencer’s live and in-studio performances. His range and steadiness in infinite style changes and emotional dynamics are unbelievable.  This is demonstrated best in the song Reptile, one of the craziest songs I have ever heard.  His ability to keep up with the virtuoso composition while staying very current is unprecedented.  He makes me angry.  He makes me smile.  And, he even makes me teary.  Lune is one of the most beautiful vocal performances I have heard and destroys me every time I hear it.

    Are three guitarists too many?  Ask yourself that, and then listen to Misha Mansoor, Mark Holcomb, and Jake Bowen.  Three very distinctive and different guitarists that ebb and flow and layer over one another flawlessly.  The guitar riffs dance over Matt Halpern’s metronomic and catchy beats.  Halpern has a pension for creating a perfect and effortless pocket, most evident in songs like It’s Only Smiles, Marigold, and Flatline.  This band is one of the most talented bands I’ve ever heard, without being cheesy and neoclassical.  Three technical shredding and beautifully melodic, atop a hell of an inventive drummer, underneath one of the most diverse vocalists I’ve ever heard; it’s a recipe for brilliance.   This recipe is profoundly shown in Satellites, a song of their career, in my opinion.  Not a fan of Metalcore?  Listen to these guys, and you’ll be hooked for life.

  Essential Tracks: Marigold, Satellites,  Reptile, It’s Only Smiles, Alpha

http://periphery.net/

Monuments


    On the heavier side of Metalcore, Monuments brings it hard and groovy.  These guys have a lot of similarities to Periphery, but a completely different feel to the music.  As a drum nerd, Monuments fills a need that no other band on this list can; a flair for flam.  The use of flam on the snare adds urgency and a unique flavor to the music.  Mike Malyan has an unexampled take on Metalcore drumming; it’s more of a Punk or Post Rock style that shows exceptional technicality.  He can also blast well.  The whole band is a quartet of sleepers.   You’d never expect the caliber of a technical ability underneath the catchiness and softness of some radio-friendly tracks.  Monuments is an interesting mix of styles.  I had never truly listened to them until researching for this article, but they have piqued my interest.  While they can be blistering and grinding heavy, they can also be almost sweetly melodic.  The mix is crazy, but it works on every song I’ve heard so far.

    I’ve found that most singular vocalists in Metalcore have bipolar styles. Howard Jones from KSE days had his unique belt and soaring vocals to supreme gutturals and harmonic screams.  M Shadows of Avenged Sevenfold is another upper-level example of the range in Metalcore.  Andy Cizek, the new addition in 2019 after the sad and unexpected departure of Chris Barretto, is a powerhouse of melodic and rhythmic texture.  Andy has a hell of an upper range.  It may not be for everyone, as it leans towards a twangy side of cleans, but I appreciate his quick switch from high twang to almost gutturals. 

 Despite the heaviness and melodic twang vocals, I believe Monuments is a great introduction to Metalcore for people that usually listen to Punk or Rock, which is really what Metalcore is all about.  It’s a transition between old hardcore and Modern Metal.  Bands like Monuments could bring Metal back to the forefront where it belongs; Celebrated and appreciated.  Their new album, In Stasis, drops tomorrow April 14th, and I highly recommend checking it out.

Essential Tracks: False Providence, Cardinal Red, Animus, Stygian Blue

Veil of Maya

    A Deathcore band turned Metalcore, Chicago quartet Veil of Maya, have created their own style of Metal.   If Periphery and Lorna Shore had an atmospheric baby, this band would be the maniacal product.  Some tracks such as newer Viscera, Mikasa, and Members-Only remind me of European bands like The Unguided and Amaranthe.  There are electronic and atmospheric aspects underneath yelling Punk vocals, and then full-on breakdowns with rhythmic screaming.  The tracks are pretty chaotic and may be hard to follow at times.  This is not your entry-level Metalcore band and is not necessarily my style, but there’s a lot to appreciate with Veil of Maya.  Definitely check out Spanish beat-based Danger featuring legendary guitarist Jeff Loomis.  

Essential Tracks: Doublespeak, Viscera, Outsider

Wage War

    Wage War, the breakout band on Sirius XM Octane, is the quintessential mix of Hardcore and Melodic Metal band that illustrates Modern Metalcore at its height.  They have a wide range of tracks that show what they’re capable of.  Some songs echo A Day To Remember, some echo Killswitch Engage’s new era, and some echo the heavy breakdowns of Spiritbox.  Where technicality may be forefront in the others on this list, Wage War is more brutal and Slipknot with their heaviness.  They have no regard for song structure on songs like Stitch.  It’s just all-out brutality and searingly slow breakdowns with strings flapping against fretboards, and I love it.  

While most of the hit songs are not my desired flavor of Metalcore, deeper cuts are insanely tasty.  Yet another American band, hailing from Ocala, Florida, is bringing Metalcore back to the masses.  Wage War has already scored a tour with Three Days Grace in July.  It’s a huge billing for them and will hopefully gain them even more respect amongst American Metalheads.

Essential Tracks: Take The Fight, Circle the Drain, Relapse, Surrounded

http://wagewarband.com/

Any Given Day

    One day whilst browsing Youtube for good covers, I stumbled upon a rugby-player-looking big-necked dude in a black suit beautifully singing Diamonds by Rihanna.  I almost closed the browser, until that scream and riffing hit, and my jaw unhinged.  German Hardcore/Melodic Metalcore band Any Given Day went viral with this shockingly beautiful but heavy cover, and I fell in love with Dennis Diehl’s smooth delivery.  This huge man has the sweetest and smoothest clean vocal I’ve heard since Howard Jones but has wicked gutturals rarely heard in Metalcore.  His voice is stunning, mesmerizing on songs like Apocalypse, Home is Where the Heart Is, and Farewell.  While very heavy and containing many breakdowns, they are one of the more melodic bands along with Spiritbox on this list.

    This band is not a one-trick pony or formulaic, no two songs sound similar to me.  It’s a very diverse and emotionally ranged catalog.  They have breakdowns, rapping grunting vocals, and down-tuned guitars that echo the Hardcore veins of the band.  The Melodic parts are echoing Killswitch Engage, Trivium, and heartful songs from All That Remains.  Any Given Day incorporates guitar layering instead of Electronic effects for atmosphere, and that is something I appreciate.  I love their flavor of Metalcore and hope they gain more popularity in the states for a North American tour billing.

Essential Tracks; Arise Ft. Matt Heafy of Trivium, Home Is Where the Heart is, Savior

https://arising-empire.com/artists/any-given-day

Honorable Mentions:

Northlane

Northlane – Carbonized [Official Music Video]

Conquer Divide

Conquer Divide – “Atonement” (Official Audio)

Bad Omens

BAD OMENS – THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND (Official Music Video)

More Metalcore: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_metalcore_bands