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New York's Dangerous Thing knit technical death metal's surgical precision to hardcore's raw intensity, producing music with both intellectual and visceral impact. Founded in 2020, they occupy a volatile, unpredictable space between cerebral and confrontational.

Atlanta's Darkening sharpen technical death metal to a surgical edge, weaving fretboard gymnastics through a framework of relentless brutality since 2015. Their precision-first approach reflects the exacting standards of Georgia's steadily growing extreme metal underground.

Raleigh's Datura named themselves after the toxic nightshade and deliver on the promise — a poisonous hybrid of thrash, death, and doom metal that has been mutating through North Carolina's underground since 2019.

Oklahoma City's Datura push technical death metal into stranger territory with an avant-garde streak that refuses to color inside genre lines, bringing genuine compositional weirdness to a city with a scrappy extreme metal tradition.

Technical death metal from Montclair, New Jersey, Davola have been constructing intricate walls of precision brutality since 2009. Their music rewards close listening, with labyrinthine song structures built on a foundation of uncompromising violence.

Lafayette, Indiana's Dawn of Dementia apply surgical technical death metal precision to music that never loses sight of raw impact. Active since 2012, they sit comfortably in the tradition of Midwest bands that quietly outwork their coastal peers.

Salem, Oregon's Dead Thrall make technical death metal that prioritizes precision without losing ferocity, building dense, interlocking riff structures that unfold with surgical intent. Formed in 2022, they bring a welcome complexity to the Pacific Northwest's extreme scene.

Knoxville, Tennessee's Death Etiquette bring technical death metal's surgical precision to a Southern rock city that rarely produces extreme metal of this caliber. Since 2022 the band has developed a complex, intricate approach where riff arrangements feel more like puzzles than conventional song structures.

Mount Laurel's Death Portrait blend melodic sensibility with technical death metal's intricacy, constructing precise yet emotionally charged compositions. Since 2021, they've been one of New Jersey's most promising acts in the extreme metal underground.

Cincinnati's Deathless have been sharpening a direct, aggressive thrash metal approach since 2019 — fast, undecorated, and built on the blue-collar Midwest work ethic that tends to produce bands with real staying power.

Midwest-based Decrescent have charted a fascinating arc since 2018 — beginning in the angular complexity of technical death metal before pivoting toward black metal's more atmospheric, elusive darkness. Both phases are united by a relentless drive toward extremity.

Crown Point, Indiana's Decrypt have been merging technical death metal's precision with grindcore's ferocity since 2002, making them one of the longer-running acts in the region's extreme underground. Two decades in, the attack has only sharpened.

Boston's Deer Hollow are one of the more technically uncompromising acts in the city's extreme metal scene, locking technical death and black metal into dissonant, labyrinthine attacks since 2016.

Bellingham, Washington's Defenestrator have spent a decade since their 2015 formation refining a technical death metal approach that prizes precision and complexity over simple aggression. The Pacific Northwest's isolation seems to feed their introspective tendencies, threading labyrinthine riff structures through punishing rhythmic frameworks.

Los Angeles' Defile have been in the brutal technical death metal trenches since 2001, building a reputation for savage precision in one of America's most competitive metal cities. Their brutal-technical fusion demands both physical brutality and compositional rigor, a combination few bands sustain for over two decades.
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US Metal Index indexes hundreds of US heavy metal bands across every subgenre — death metal, black metal, thrash metal, doom metal, heavy metal, progressive metal, and more. Browse heavy metal bands by genre, city, or country.
Yes — browse US death metal bands in our index. Filter by genre to find death metal, technical death metal, and melodic death metal bands. We also index black metal, thrash metal, doom metal, and all heavy metal bands.
Use the genre filter to browse US black metal bands. We index black metal, atmospheric black metal, and related subgenres alongside death metal, thrash metal, doom metal, and all heavy metal bands.
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US Metal Index is an index of US heavy metal bands — death metal, black metal, thrash metal, doom metal, metalcore, hardcore punk, and all heavy music. Browse bands by genre, find metal concerts near you, and discover the US metal scene.