Metalcore: Understanding an Underground Music Genre

A Hybrid Style of Music

Steve Goodman
Music has many genres, ranging from Hip-Hop to Classical. An average person knows all the common styles of music, such as Rock, Rap, Country, etc., but what they most likely do not know is that music is taken to a much further extent than these common genres. Styles of music are combined to create new, brilliant mixtures of sounds. An example of this is the pounding genre of Metalcore.

When one first hears the word "Metalcore", words such as "heavy" and "thrashing" come to mind. This is due to the fact that Metalcore is exactly those words. The style of music is a combination consisting of heavy metal and hardcore punk. Metalcore isn't made up of one sole sound, but of a variety ranging from heavy breakdowns to extreme harmonized guitar solos. Breakdowns are known as the part in a song where bands usually slow the tempo of a song down. During a breakdown, the guitarists usually play on open strings to make the sound as low as it can get. Drummers accent the guitars by the use of the double bass pedal, which allows the drummer to use both legs to achieve maximum speed on the bass drum. Harmonized guitar riffs are another aspect stressed by Metalcore. Harmonization is when a note is played together with its counter-note. Usually a lead part is played by one of the guitarists, while another guitarist plays the same part except using the counter-notes of the original riff. This creates a unique sound, and intensifies the song.

The vocalists of Metalcore bands are known to "growl" instead of sing. A growl is a type of low throat-oriented scream, sounding much like a lion's growl. Singing is still included in a lot of Metalcore today. Other Metalcore bands also have screamers that use vocals are known as carcass-like. These high-pitched screams are different from growls in that they are not as throat-oriented, making them higher pitched. Lyrics vary upon many controversial subjects such as religion, faith, and love. Contrary to the common stereotype, Metalcore is not based on Satan. Many of today's Metalcore bands are Christian Metalcore, consisting of lyrics based on the band's faith in God and positivity. Straightedge Metalcore bands also exist, containing lyrics about staying true to one's friends, family, and oneself.

Metalcore recently emerged as a semi-popular genre, gaining publicity through magazines and television, but it's not new to the music industry. The style of music became an official genre around the late 1980s with bands such as Nuclear Assault and Integrity. At first, Metalcore and another underground genre, Crossover Thrash, were believed to be similar, but it was later decided that the two would be categorized differently due to the differences in style. Crossover Thrash is a fast beat, brain pounding combination of thrash metal and punk. Metalcore is different due to its heavier metal style. It was not until after the millennium that Metalcore earned its popularity. Major record companies began noticing these unknown, incredibly amazing bands and became interested in the genre. With the quick growth of Metalcore, bands started experimenting with different instrumental techniques and styles to create new sounds, such as the melodic death metal rooted style popular in Sweden. Today bands such as In Flames, Trivium, and Unearth express this style of Metalcore. Other sub-genres of Metalcore include doom-sounding Deathcore, Emotional Metalcore, and the technically complex, math-oriented Mathcore.

Metalcore's talented bands deserve recognition for their contribution to today's music scene. Without their striving imagination, there would be no future in Music. Today, new groups and bands emerge from all over the world, just to disappoint a crowd of eager ears with the same sound they have been listening to for years. At the rate it's going, Metalcore will continue to astonish fans for generations to come.

Published by Steve Goodman

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  • Metalcore is a hybrid genre combining the sounds of heavy metal and hardcore punk.
  • Metalcore has been around since the late 1980s.
  • Metalcore is slowly gaining recognition in today's music industry.
Although violent sounding, a lot of Metalcore bands base their music on the faith of God rather than demonism.

22 Comments

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  • Marcus 6/11/2010

    to anon on 2/29/2008. You can come on here talk crap about something then not have the balls to put your name down it is not even claiming to be just metal it is mixed with hardcore, hence the name core in it

  • tom's 6/1/2010

    LET'S GO...METALCOR !!!

  • your mom 5/24/2010

    haters queers gtfo go suck lil wayne's 2 incher

  • thewhiteguy 10/1/2008

    I personally think Metalcore is the most organized sounding metal I've ever heard.. Caliban, Dead Man In Reno, Born of Osiris, are good examples..

  • cpt_poopiepants 3/8/2008

    Yes, cos Machine head are a bunch or emos
    P.S. note the sarcasm

  • anon. 2/29/2008

    metalcore and deathcore are made by emo faggots, if you like either of these you are a poser. it did not "come back to destroy nu metal" it IS nu metal, the new nu metal. metalcore is NOT metal.

  • # 12/1/2007

    Anything metal is pretty much the shit

  • murdercore 11/16/2007

    Trust me metalcore haters.. you will like this genre soon , I dnt know why do you hate "metalcore" in my opinion its the thing that stopped the exctintion of metal and rock. Bands like killswitch engage , all that remains, parkway drive, and as I lay dying should be respected!

  • metalheadsister 11/8/2007

    I tend to think of metalcore as the heavier side of screamo, the mix of the lyrical emo style with hardcore punk. I'm not sure if that's "right" but since most genres are obviously subjective and people are going to argue it anyway, that's my opinion.

    And I certainly disagree that "Melodic Death Metal" and metalcore are similar enough to not warrant separate genres. If you don't listen to anything metal-inspired ever, fine, group them together as metal. However, if you listen to some of these bands you should separate them into different genres, as they are different enough that many who listen to melodic death metal would never listen to metalcore.

  • Signus 10/31/2007

    Fuck all, Metalcore rules! Stigmata Bitch!

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