![]() 6: Possessedįlorida may have been a fertile breeding ground for death metal in the late 80s and early 90s, but the genre originated in San Francisco’s Bay Area with Possessed. Its producer, Scott Burns, was the master of the death metal sound of the day. Their debut album, Effigy Of The Forgotten, was recorded in Morrisound Studios – the Tampa, Florida, mecca for death metal. They reformed in 2007.įrom Long Island, New York, Suffocation spearheaded the death metal movement into the 90s. However, tensions between band and label led to the group’s demise before the album was released. Their fourth album, Heartwork, was released in 1993 and caught the attention of Columbia/Sony. With roots in grindcore, Liverpool’s Carcass hit on a more death metal sound with their second album, Symphonies Of Sickness, in 1989. Their seminal album, Slaughter Of The Soul, was nominated for a Swedish Grammy in 1995, while its lead track, ‘Blinded By Fear’, enjoyed heavy rotation on MTV’s Headbangers Ball. Sweden’s At The Gates took death metal in a more accessible direction in the early 90s, pioneering a distinct “Gothenburg sound”. Nergal faced criminal charges for tearing up a Bible in 2007, while Behemoth are forbidden from playing shows in Poznan. Though frontman Nergal would prefer his band to not be pigeonholed, Poland’s Behemoth have navigated toward a more death-metal sound from their roots in black metal. At odds with the gory themes of earlier death metal bands, however, they deliver themes of spirituality and environmentalism, inspired by the scenic beauty surrounding their hometown of Bayonne. 11: Gojiraįrench metallers Gojira have put a progressive spin on the death metal genre and updated it for the 21st Century. ![]() Mainman Karl Sanders leads a seemingly revolving-door line-up of supporting musicians, and yet has consistently delivered brutal technical death metal since 1993. Hailing from Greenville, North Carolina, Nile bring Middle Eastern mysticism to death metal with themes inspired by Ancient Egypt. They made an impression on other genre greats such as Deicide, Gorefest, Cannibal Corpse and Entombed, with their second album, Mental Funeral, cited as being particularly influential. 13: Autopsyįormed in the Bay Area of California, Autopsy were hugely influential in taking death metal to its doomy depths. ![]() Having run the gamut from heavy metal, through thrash and speed metal before settling on a death metal sound, they were once described to Queens Of The Stone Age’s Josh Homme as “the Eagles of death metal”. Polish metallers Vader formed in 1983, and yet only released their debut album, The Ultimate Incantation, nine years later. Their Norse-influenced metal remains a favourite of heavy music fans across the world. They eventually caught the attention of the mainstream media with the release of their seventh album, Twilight Of The Thunder God, in 2008. These melodic death metallers formed in Tumba, Sweden, in 1992 from the ashes of Scum. Perhaps one of the most enduring bands from the death metal scene, they released eight albums over 18 years, but finally disbanded after the sudden death of drummer Martin Kearns in 2015. 16: Bolt ThrowerĬoventry, UK’s Bolt Thrower gained attention from legendary Radio 1 DJ John Peel when he received a copy of their second demo. It’s best exemplified on the 1993 classic Wolverine Blues, and is a sound that has been drawn from in recent years by the likes of Black Breath and Trap Them. Incorporating garage rock influences into their sound, Stockholm, Sweden’s Entombed pioneered a death metal subgenre that came to be known as death’n’roll. Formed in 2006 and pulling from the likes of Decapitated, Gojira and Behemoth, their extreme deathcore is a hit in their homeland and has taken them on tours around the world, proving death metal is alive and kicking. 20: Thy Art Is MurderĪs relative new kids on the death metal block, it’s perhaps unsurprising that Sydney, Australia’s Thy Art Is Murder are influenced by the modern genre. ![]() While you’re reading, listen to our Best Death Metal Bands playlist here. So, with their distorted, down-tuned guitars, blast beats and guttural growls, we present the 20 best death metal bands. Fusing the black metal of Venom, the thrash of Slayer and the extreme metal of Celtic Frost with the street attitude of punk and gore-horror imagery, death metal continues to grow from its 80s birth. But whether it’s technical death metal, blackened death metal, melodic death metal or deathcore, its base elements remain the same. Death metal, like many genres, has made some dramatic shifts in sound over the decades – so much so that even its pioneers have been reclassified into numerous subgenres.
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