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Sacramento's Dance Gavin Dance are the architects of swancore — a dizzying fusion of post-hardcore, funk, R&B, and progressive rock built on Will Swan's jazz-infected guitar work and a revolving door of gifted vocalists including Jonny Craig, Kurt Travis, and Tilian Pearson. Their prolific discography, from 'Downtown Battle Mountain' to 'Jackpot Juicer,' showcases a band incapable of writing a predictable song.
Orlando's Dark Divine deliver horror-tinged metalcore that draws from the theatrical playbooks of Motionless in White and Ice Nine Kills, wrapping Halloween-soaked themes in heavy riffs and post-hardcore dynamics. Since signing to Invogue Records in 2022, their debut album 'Deadly Fun' and subsequent tours have established them as rising stars in the scene-meets-scream intersection of modern metal.
Dayseeker have established themselves as the emotional center of modern post-hardcore, crafting devastatingly personal songs from their base in Orange County, California since 2012. Vocalist Rory Rodriguez pours raw vulnerability into every performance, with albums like 'Sleeptalk' and 'Dark Sun' exploring grief, love, and mental health through lush, atmospheric arrangements. Their ability to balance crushing heaviness with moments of breathtaking beauty has earned them crossover appeal beyond the hardcore scene.
Dead Eyes are a Baltimore heavy rock and metalcore band whose recorded identity centers on big melodic hooks, down-tuned impact, and lyrics aimed at resilience under pressure. Early releases such as Stability and singles including "Relapse," "Better Off," "Take Me Too," and "Good Die Young" built a following by balancing modern active-rock polish with heavier post-hardcore and metalcore dynamics. Their debut album Black Hole Heart clarified the formula: clean vocal lines that are direct enough for radio, guitars that keep a low-end bite, and breakdowns or shouted passages placed for emotional emphasis rather than technical show. The band's own presentation leans into community language around the DeadKru, and that suits the songs, which often frame pain, alienation, and recovery as shared experiences. Dead Eyes are not a traditional underground metalcore act; they sit in the current space where metalcore, alternative metal, and streaming-era hard rock overlap. Their strongest material works because the choruses are accessible without removing the grit, and the heavy sections make the emotional stakes feel physical under pressure.
Driveways are a Boston band whose music turns pop punk and post-hardcore into a seasonal language of grief, nostalgia, and restless motion. The group is known for an autumnal identity that goes beyond artwork or release timing: October, Halloween imagery, cold weather, coastal memory, and haunted relationships all recur as emotional architecture. EPs and albums such as Night Terrors, October Forever, Skeptic, Into the Past, Skeletal material, Tempest, and Unseen show a band that can write fast, hooky songs without making them feel lightweight. The vocals are urgent and clear, the guitars often carry a darker edge than standard pop punk, and the drums push the songs forward with enough force to connect to post-hardcore audiences. Driveways fit the punk scope through tempo, touring context, and guitar-driven catharsis, but their identity depends on atmosphere as much as genre. Their best tracks make memory feel like a physical place: a highway at night, a shoreline in bad weather, a house full of old ghosts. That specificity keeps the melodrama grounded.
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.
Drug Church are an Albany, New York post-hardcore band whose music combines punk pressure, grunge-stained guitar hooks, and Patrick Kindlon's dry, cutting vocal perspective. Beginning as a side project in the early 2010s, the band grew into one of the most distinctive names in modern punk-adjacent rock through releases such as Paul Walker, Hit Your Head, Cheer, Hygiene, and Prude. Drug Church fit punk scope through post-hardcore, melodic hardcore, and punk rock, but their appeal also comes from the way they smuggle big alternative-rock choruses into songs that still feel abrasive and suspicious of easy sentiment. The guitars often sound thick and jangling at the same time, the rhythm section keeps a hard forward push, and Kindlon's lyrics turn everyday disappointment into sharply observed scenes. They are not a nostalgia act, though they understand the value of 1990s texture and hardcore economy. Drug Church's best songs feel like walking away from an argument with better lines arriving too late: catchy, annoyed, funny, bruised, and full of motion.
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