Impending Doom if you are looking for a very heavy sound. Or August Burns Red if you want it more high pitched screaming but not the annoying kind of high pitched. But i like With Blood Comes Cleansing the best because they go from low screaming to high.
A better question would be: what band isn't Christian metalcore?
Improved:Underoath is a Metal-Core band, or known as Christian Screamo.Sadly the drummer Aaron left the band.Yes Underoath is a posthardocre/Screamo/metalcore band and the members are is also a Christian band.
Their policy is that the band has to be more Metal than "core" in order to be listed. Personally, I think it's a pretty fair policy, although fans of those bands obviously don't like it much.
Well these are Christian rock bands: Paramore and Flyleaf. Another Christian emo band is ravish... myspace.com/ravishrocks or at facebook.com/ravishrocks
well, the emergence of the "core" bands (metalcore, post hardcore, etc.) and the rise of Alternative Rock (Mumford and sons, Imagine Dragons). Also, with the internet more and more small bands are getting discovered and the recognition they deserve. New technology are allowing bands to get more creative with their sound and many bands are experimenting with electronics in their music. Rock and Roll is still very much alive.
It depends on what you mean by hardcore.If you mean metalcore, there are tons of Christian bands, such as: Norma Jean, Living Sacrifice, Beloved, Demon Hunter, As I Lay Dying, August Burns Red, As cities burn, Becoming the Archetype, Haste the day, Mortal treason, Soulembraced, Training for Utopia, the Chariot, Underøath, The Devil Wears Parada, I Am Terrified, Agraceful, Chasing Victory, Confide, or Here I Come Falling.If you mean hardcore punk, check out Good Clean Fun, Stretch Arm Strong, and xLooking Forwardx.If you mean hardcore house/techno, check out DJ Flubbel, D-Morphian, DJ Sower and Matthew J. Bentley. NB: especially the CD "Christian Hardcore" a house CD released in oktober 2010. (For sale at audiobits.nl or flubbel.com).There are not many hardcore punk bands who identify themselves as Christian bands (though the members may be Christians), but there is a huge scene of straight edge bands, who sing uplifting music about living a positive and drug-free lifestyle. These themes may appeal to fans of Christian music even if the band is not necessarily a Christian band.
Most of what gets passed off as Metalcore nowadays really isn't. But, even in the 80s, with bands such as Carnivore and SOD, they were typically more Hardcore than Metal. Metalcore was created as a means of classing bands which blended elements of the two, but weren't able to be grouped into existing categories. These bands would typically cross over Hardcore with Thrash (which itself was a result of the blending of Hardcore Punk and Heavy Metal).
Improved:Underoath is a Metal-Core band, or known as Christian Screamo.Sadly the drummer Aaron left the band.Yes Underoath is a posthardocre/Screamo/metalcore band and the members are is also a Christian band.
Their policy is that the band has to be more Metal than "core" in order to be listed. Personally, I think it's a pretty fair policy, although fans of those bands obviously don't like it much.
Well these are Christian rock bands: Paramore and Flyleaf. Another Christian emo band is ravish... myspace.com/ravishrocks or at facebook.com/ravishrocks
Depends on what era you're talking about. Metalcore was a term which has been around since the 1980s, although the bands it described are more often now referred to as 'crossover' bands. They were bands which played a blend of Metal and Hardcore Punk, but not to the point where they were considered Thrash bands, and there would typically be distinct segments of Hardcore Punk and distinct segments of Thrash or Speed Metal. Some examples include Carnivore, S.O.D., and Cro-Mags.In its current form, Metalcore is supposed to be a similar principle, but, in reality, most of the bands currently described as Metalcore have little to nothing about them which is actually any form of Metal, and play a style which is exclusively a spinoff of Hardcore Punk (or derivatives of Hardcore Punk).
Metalcore, and not anymore, after Waking The Fallen, they stopped screaming, and the first Metalcore song they've written since then is God Hates Us.
It all comes from hardcore. Punk split off into a few different genres after its inception in the mid-late 70s. One of these was hardcore, seen as being more pure and loyal to the core aesthetics of the movement - hence the name hardcore. Over the years, metal bands from many different metal subgenres took on hardcore influences, hence sludgecore, deathcore, grindcore, metalcore... although applecore is really only Lawnmower Deth taking the p's
well, the emergence of the "core" bands (metalcore, post hardcore, etc.) and the rise of Alternative Rock (Mumford and sons, Imagine Dragons). Also, with the internet more and more small bands are getting discovered and the recognition they deserve. New technology are allowing bands to get more creative with their sound and many bands are experimenting with electronics in their music. Rock and Roll is still very much alive.
It depends on what you mean by hardcore.If you mean metalcore, there are tons of Christian bands, such as: Norma Jean, Living Sacrifice, Beloved, Demon Hunter, As I Lay Dying, August Burns Red, As cities burn, Becoming the Archetype, Haste the day, Mortal treason, Soulembraced, Training for Utopia, the Chariot, Underøath, The Devil Wears Parada, I Am Terrified, Agraceful, Chasing Victory, Confide, or Here I Come Falling.If you mean hardcore punk, check out Good Clean Fun, Stretch Arm Strong, and xLooking Forwardx.If you mean hardcore house/techno, check out DJ Flubbel, D-Morphian, DJ Sower and Matthew J. Bentley. NB: especially the CD "Christian Hardcore" a house CD released in oktober 2010. (For sale at audiobits.nl or flubbel.com).There are not many hardcore punk bands who identify themselves as Christian bands (though the members may be Christians), but there is a huge scene of straight edge bands, who sing uplifting music about living a positive and drug-free lifestyle. These themes may appeal to fans of Christian music even if the band is not necessarily a Christian band.
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Gore-core is a subgenre of extreme metal that combines elements of death metal and grindcore, often featuring lyrics and themes centered around gore, violence, and horror. It is characterized by its ultra-fast and aggressive sound, guttural vocals, and intense blast beats.
10 years