Track Of The Day - The Revolution Edition
The one true highlight of Eighteen Visions' debut is quite awesome and underrated despite its two major problems; 1. It's untitled. 2. It's split into 8 tracks.
Until the Ink Runs Out shows Eighteen Visions at their absolute greatest and heaviest, with highlights such as this masterpiece of a metalcore song:
Eighteen Visions' "Best of" offering made many songs from earlier releases better than the originals, and this is my favorite one of those re-recordings:
The best track of Vanity for me where the singing, soloing, riffing, and lyrics all reach their very peak:
The heavy verses and anthemic choruses continue to stir up highlights like this one in Eighteen Visions' raging comeback album:
Eighteen Visions' 1996 is one of the best cover albums I've heard in metalcore. Here's a highlight from the metalcore/hardcore covers side:
And here's a highlight from the hard rock/alt-metal covers side:
I can jam out to this vicious banger that works much better than everything else in this mediocre attempt at death/metalcore by the band that would later become the heroes of epic deathcore:
The second Lorna Shore EP Bone Kingdom severed the band's ties with metalcore for just pure technical deathcore in killer tracks like this one:
Maleficium is one of the most brutal releases by Lorna Shore, hinting at the sound they would be known for, with this perfect relentless opener:
My metalcore band discovery journey continues with these two melodic bands:
As with that other Jeris Johnson song I've shared in this thread, expect an epic blend of power metal, melodic metalcore, and... Greensleeves:
This thrashy metalcore instrumental is the only one in the Loded Diper album of that style and the only one of the dialogue-sampled instrumentals I really enjoy:
Nu metal-infused metalcore/hardcore from Philadelphia:
The awesome new Make Them Suffer album ends with the best the band has to offer, from both the vocalists and the impressive instrumentalists that help run the machine:
The opening track of this symphonic deathcore offering blends the genre with a more epic brutal take on the Finnish melodeath of Insomnium and Omnium Gatherum:
An epic extreme highlight in which technical deathcore practically combines with symphonic power metal guitarwork. If the clean vocals were higher and more operatic, this band would've beaten Dragoncorpse in that game.
An amazing highlight to please metalcore fans who have been following Imminence in the 10 years since this album's release:
The epitome of epic ambient metalcore:
The perfect summary of all the band had to offer in their 4th album:
An epic piece of majestic symphonic metalcore:
Lots of speed and destruction from the music and vocals, with a fun anthemic chorus: