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Columbus, Ohio's Attack Attack! became the lightning rod of the electronicore movement in the late 2000s, polarizing listeners with their fusion of Auto-Tuned cleans, synth breakdowns, and metalcore heaviness on their debut 'Someday Came Suddenly.' Their crabcore stance became an internet meme, but the band's influence on the intersection of electronic music and metalcore is undeniable.

New Haven, Connecticut's Dreamwake forged a distinctive sound they call 'wavecore,' blending metalcore aggression with synthwave aesthetics and atmospheric production. Formed in 2018 by former members of In Honor Of, the band treats their music as an escape into a flow state, matching crushing breakdowns with shimmering synth layers. Their fusion of '80s-inspired electronic textures with modern metalcore heaviness gives them a unique sonic identity in an increasingly crowded scene.
Denver's Drop Dead, Gorgeous brought progressive melodic metalcore to the mid-2000s scene with lush synth textures and dynamic vocal interplay between Danny Stillman's screams and clean passages. After three albums culminating in 'The Hot N' Heavy' charting on the Billboard 200, the band went on hiatus in 2011 before reemerging with new music over a decade later.

Fame On Fire blend metalcore aggression with pop production, hip-hop cadences, and electronic elements from their base in West Palm Beach, Florida. Vocalist Bryan Kuzniar's ability to shift between rap-influenced verses, screamed choruses, and melodic hooks has earned the band a massive online following and viral cover versions. Their original material on 'LEVELS' and 'WELCOME TO THE CHAOS' proves they're far more than a covers band, delivering a genre-fluid sound built for the streaming era.
I See Stars pioneered the electronicore subgenre from Warren, Michigan, starting in 2006 by fusing post-hardcore screams and metalcore breakdowns with aggressive EDM production. Their albums 'New Demons' and 'Treehouse' pushed the boundaries of how electronic music and heavy guitar could coexist, creating a blueprint that countless bands would follow. The band's ability to make dubstep drops feel as natural as breakdowns set them apart as genuine innovators in the scene.

Tucson, Arizona's Scary Kids Scaring Kids were a vital force in the mid-2000s post-hardcore scene, blending synth-driven electronic elements with aggressive, technically proficient heavy rock and dual vocals. Their 2005 self-titled album on Immortal Records showcased a band with a flair for dramatic composition, shifting between frenzied screams and atmospheric interludes. After disbanding in 2010, their 2022 reunion brought renewed attention to a catalog that anticipated many of the genre-blending trends that would later define modern post-hardcore.

Kansas City's The Browning pioneered a polarizing but distinctive fusion of metalcore, electronic dance music, and deathcore that placed thumping EDM drops alongside crushing breakdowns, creating one of the most divisive sounds in modern heavy music. Frontman Jonny McBee's vision of blending festival-ready electronic production with extreme metal aggression anticipated the electronicore trend by several years. Albums like 'Burn This World' and 'Isolation' showcase a band committed to their genre-demolishing approach regardless of purist objections.

Phoenix, Arizona's The Word Alive emerged from the metalcore scene in the late 2000s with a technically ambitious sound that incorporated post-hardcore dynamics, electronic elements, and Telle Smith's versatile vocal range spanning from guttural screams to soaring cleans. Their debut 'Deceiver' on Fearless Records established them as one of the genre's most promising acts, while subsequent albums showed a band willing to experiment with poppier and more atmospheric territory. Smith's magnetic stage presence and the band's consistent evolution have kept The Word Alive relevant through multiple cycles of the metalcore scene.
Troy, Michigan's We Came As Romans became one of the defining metalcore acts of the early 2010s, blending electronic elements and soaring clean choruses with heavy breakdowns on albums like 'To Plant a Seed' and 'Understanding What We've Grown to Be.' The tragic death of vocalist Kyle Pavone in 2018 shook the metal community, but the band has continued to honor his legacy while pushing forward with new music.
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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.