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nostupidquestions·No Stupid QuestionsbyAdmiral Patrick

Is there a genre of music that's death metal without the screaming vocals?

Like, I love thrash/death/heavy metal music, but I could mostly do without the vocals. Is there a genre of music (or specific bands) I should look for?

I'm a big fan of Arcturus, Children of Bodom, etc, but I prefer the instrumentals way more than the singing.

So, is there a specific genre for that?

Edit: Imagine Silent Night, Bodom Night but without lyrics. It's not that I dislike the vocals; would just appreciate the track more without them. It's like they're just in the way of what I want to hear.

Edit 2: Thanks, everyone. I have heard of Animals as Leaders but am not super familiar with them. Will definitely check them out as well as the other recommendations.

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discuss.tchncs.de

Just to be clear; are you wanting heavy metal music that's only instrumental? Or are you wanting heavy metal music where the vocalist doesn't sound like a small angry demon with a cold that just got karate chopped in the throat?

55
lemmy.world

For instrumental music with no vocals, try: Wide Eyes, Invent Animate (their instrumental versions), Modern Day Babylon, I Built the Sky. These aren't quite Death Metal, but they have really complex guitar and drum pieces.

For with vocals: Sea in the Sky, Ignea, Unleash The Archers, Corelia (also has instrumental version of their 1 album)

34

OP might want to play around with everynoise.com.

For Wide Eyes it lists one of their genres as instrumental djent, then they offer a sample of each artist that is also tagged with that genre.

It can help explore a niche further or discover adjacent niches.

5
Mac
mander.xyz

You might like some of Haken's heavier stuff. They're primarily prog but they go hard, too.
Try the album Vector and the album Virus.

From Virus i recommend you try the song Prosthetic
and the song Messiah complex V: Ectobius Rex
From Vector I recommend you try the song Puzzle Box
and the song Veil

Their new album Fauna is really good and has a good mix of different styles which includes heavy elements as well.

Come back if you like them I will recommend more!

🤘 Haken! 🤘

 

It's also okay if you don't like prog, i recognize it's too different for some. lol

25

Haken (pronounced "hay-kin") is fucking awesome. They have a pretty wide range of sound too so most people who like metal I think would enjoy their songs.

5
lemmy.zip

So you just want instrumental? Check out Buckethead.

22

Ok, you got my upvote because I love some Buckethead but....

this is a deep well, you and I know it. Please give OP (and me) the "death metal without the screaming" album(s), if you know the titles. I know I have heard two at least that fit this bill exactly but haven't found them yet. I have been searching tonight but you start listening to Buckethead and there goes the time.

12
lemmy.world

Power metal is more traditional metal but with clean vocals (no growls). Bands include DragonForce, Angra, Helloween, Stratovarius

There's also progressive metal, where the emphasis is more on the intricate instrumentals, so some banda don't do growls. It is usually less heavier than traditional metal. Bands include Dream Theatre, Liquid Tension Experiment, Symphony X, Tessaract, Haken, frost*, Porcupine Tree

17

Rhapsody's Holy Thunderforce is just so damn entertaining.

And Helloween's Eagle Fly Free is pretty high on my list.

5

I don't know where the Hu falls in this but don't leave them out

5
lemmy.zip

Maybe try symphonic metal. Bands like nightwish, within temptation maybe?

16

I was thinking this as well, add in some bands (album suggestions in parens) like epica (holographic principle), kamelot (epica/black halo), Symphony x (divine wings of tragedy), and even a band like battle beast (circus of doom) or unleash the archers (apex) and i think op will have a good time

2

Give a listen to Testament! IMO the music is thrash so heavy it borders death metal, and the singer ventures into growling only occasionally. My gateway drug into Testament was their Titans of Creation album.

11

I mostly listen to death-doom rather than strict death metal, but there's a fair bit of that out there. My two faves in the genre:

Draconian has clean female vocals alongside growled male.

Swallow the Sun has a wide range of vocal styles, but getting increasingly cleaner pretty much every album (along with clean female vocals on a lot of tracks).

Again, this is death-doom so a lot of the stuff will be a little slower-tempo than straight death.

9
lemm.ee

So there's a lot of ways you can go with this. You can definitely find instrumentals of death metal bands, but you can also try something new.

Haggard is one of the best in symphonic metal, and while there's still a stitch singer, imo they're MUCH easier to understand.

Native Howl has slayer played by some country boys on banjo and guitar. They also do a bunch of their own stuff that sounds pretty wild. "Thrash grass" is one of their better albums and pretty accurately describes their flavor of fusion (thrash metal played in the style of bluegrass)

Older Arch Emeny stuff is also quite good, and having a pretty lady growling at me is a novel experience. Angela gossow also shows up in metalocalypse so that's instant bonus points

Dethklok does pretty well at straddling the line between melodic/symphonic/death metal, and if you like the metal without Nathan explosion you can check out Brandon Small's other stuff where he isn't growling like a cartoon character.

Last but certainly not least is The Lord Weird Slough Feg. Exquisite technical metal wrapped up in an 80s/90s power metal package. I simp for Slough Feg wherever I can because it's EXCELLENT metal that doesn't get nearly enough recognition

8

Slough Feg fuckin rules! Slough Feg Radio has a ton of really good shit to check out.

2
lemmy.world

You might like a lot of stuff by The Sword.

Example

There are vocals but they are smooth and crisp rather than the xtreme death metal habit of trying to eat the mic.

8

I am also not a fan of super growly vocals. There's a lot of stuff I love musically but the vocals put me right off. I'd listen to bands like Opeth and Beyond the Buried and Me more often if the growls weren't present.

If you're looking for metal with cleaner singing, I second the suggestions for Unleash the Archers and Nightwish. I can also recommend Blind Guardian, though the singer's voice is polarizing. One of my favorite metal singers is John Bush from Armored Saint. He also did a few albums with Anthrax in the 90s.

For instrumentals, I can't recommend much aside from guitar virtuosos like Steve Vai. Occasionally bands will release instrumental versions of their songs as B-sides, bonus discs, etc. Might be worth checking into.

8
lemmy.world

Elder

Dvne

Bossk

Keygen Church

Julie Christmas

Cult of Luna

Sgàile

Nightwish

Skiltron

Glorryhammer

Creeper

No real death in that list though - the vocals are part of the genre

8

Not a metalhead, but I do enjoy Bongripper from time to time. Mostly instrumental stoner metal.

7

Animals as Leaders, Thessa, Pomegranate Tiger, Myth of I, and Fractalize are great ones.

Stoort Neer and Vildjharta both have some really good instrumental albums.

Gore., Monolord, '68, and The Damned Things are all a little less heavy than what you might be looking for, but they are all great and have mostly clean vocals.

Polyphia and Chon are also both incredible but probably fall a little closer to something other than Metal.

7
lemmy.world

I forget which one, but one of the Between the buried and me albums has an instrumental release. Honestly, all of their albums I recommend regardless because the musicianship is excellent.

Scale the summit is more along the lines of prog metal but purely instrumental (I think).

Protest the hero is prog metal that has a near minimal amount of death growl (still some).

Animals as leaders which has been mentioned by several people.

Exivious is decent, I'm like 90percent sure they're instrumental.

There's a Japanese band called té, which is way more prog rock but you might like that.

Death, despite being one of the progenitors of death metal, is less intense on the death metal growl vocals. To me, early death metal in general is a bit different sounding than modern death metal. Regardless, Death has a pure instrumental song called Voice of the soul which is part acoustic. It's probably one of the most acoustically beautiful songs written in the genre.

7

You just made me remember The Coma Machine.

One day I'll figure out the meaning of the song. Real banger, but still don't have a full picture. One day.

2

It probably wouldn't fit your thrash and death metal tastes, but sludge metal and doom metal are a lot less likely to have screaming or annoying vocals in them. I personally really don't like screaming even though I like metal, haha.

Otherwise, acoustic metal is where you want to land. It can be hard to find in my experience, though.

6

The change of pace between death and doom metal may be a bit jarring for OP, but do love me some Avatarium.

1
Sir_Kevinreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Didn't know poppy was still around. She's interesting but I can't help but think that song would have been better without her.

0
loutrreply
sh.itjust.works

Didn't know poppy was still around.

She's actually growing in popularity, opening for and collaborating with major bands. She's booked on a lot of metal festivals as well.

3

I think the main rift in that song is pretty awesome. Would be great to have a sample of just that.

1
lemmy.world

Check out a band called Pelican, especially their early stuff. It's not exactly what you're looking for but it might scratch that itch a little

5

Fuck yeah. I’m ashamed to say I’d kinda forgotten about them, so thanks for reminding me. Midnight and Mescaline is an absolute banger, as a recommendation for a gateway track

1
lemmy.world

Katatonia.. Devin Townsend.. Hangman's Chair.. Pallbearer

I guess these aren't really death metal. But they all crush, IMHO.

(I ain't got much else.. I've grown to love the growl!)

5

First one is def interesting, but a little too chip tune for my taste (still cool though). Definitely liking the second one. Will check out some more of them. Thanks.

1
lemmy.world

I was the same when I first started listening to bodom. Just give it time and you'll like the vocals just as much :)

You can find instrumentals in the meantime, absolutely. (Or even fan covers on YouTube and the like)

4

You can try some middle bands like Norma Jean. They have some harder songs but also other songs where the vocalist sings more than yells

1

Try out Ashenspire, their album Hostile Architecture was my album of the year in 2022. They aren't death metal per se, but they are heavy as shit. Best description is prog metal jazz infusion with spoken word poetry.

3
lemmy.world

Anthrax
Haven’t listened to them much in years but I used to like their album, The Sound of White Noise. Singer can be a bit gruff but doesn’t quite scream like I think you are talking about.

3

Given OP's question I would suggest Worship Music as a starting Anthrax album.

2

I felt the same way as you initially when I got into the genre, but Between the Buried and Me made me develop and appreciation for growling vocals. They've got a lot of really intricate and technical guitar work, which is what made me keep listening.

For (mostly) entirely instrumental track, animals as leaders is good, and I absolutely love Polyphia (they play at different times signatures for an interesting sound), and Power Glove is amazing if you like metal covers of video game music.

As for genres, look into symphonic and progressive metal bands, they might be more your style.

3

Instrumental metal is what you'd search to get where you want to be. There's plenty of bands that don't have vocals at all, and even more that do instrumental tracks here and there.

Thing is, you'll run into a pretty broad range of styles under that heading since a lot of sub genres are defined by vocals and/or lyrical content. But instrumental is a sub genre of its own. It just gets defined by the lack of vocals rather than any distinct sound like the way thrash is going to have that "thrashy" vibe.

Edit: Animals as Leaders is pretty much the go to recommendation for instrumental metal. They run closer to prog than death, but so do most instrument only bands.

3

There's a fair few that straddle the line between death growls and clean vocals. Check out Agalloch, Insomnium, Words of Farewell, and Before the Dawn. There's also of course Amon Amarth, still gorwly but usually clear enough to understand.

I'd start looking up "melodic death metal" that's a good place to start for what you're looking for.

3

thisi might be a bit of a stretch but the harder Nu Skool Breaks stuff might fit.

Break-core is also nice and noisy but might be a bit too detailed and less rocky.

2