Blues rock Ayub Bachchu started his project AB Blues Club around 2007. He said, "A number of our songs are in blues scale, but we usually perform them in a more rock flavor".
Progressive and experimental metal was the most significant and most popular band from the
progressive metal genre In the mid-2000s folk and alternative rock scene, a few
progressive metal bands formed and performed at club shows in Dhaka. The bands were inspired by 1990s heavy metal and 2000s experimental rock. They developed their music out of those two genres; playing heavier riffs, faster basslines and
double bass drumming. Their lyrics typically highlighted anger about social injustice and hypocrisy as well as philosophical songs with softer tones.
Artcell was the band leading the genre and was partially responsible for popularizing it. Their first two studio albums,
Onno Shomoy (2002) and
Oniket Prantor (2006) had a big influence on the country's heavy metal scene in the 2010s. The themes that Artcell used in their songwriting have impacted and changed music. The alternative metal band
Vibe also had a few progressive metal songs in their 2007 album
Chena Jogot. By the end of the decade, Artcell stopped releasing albums, which caused the decline of progressive metal and an increase in the popularity of
symphonic and
experimental metal, both of which are derived from the former. Symphonic and experimental metal of the 2010s was similar to progressive metal, but with more orchestration and keyboards. Successful bands from the genre included
De-illumination,
Warfaze's late 2000s and early 2010s work, Sazzad Arefeen's Angry Machine, Hallucination and Ionic Bond, with the latter two mainly being
melodic death metal bands. Hallucination released their debut full-length album
Krittim Prithibi in 2013, which was the first
Bengali melodic death metal album in Bangladesh. It was also the first album in the country which could be purchased via the
bKash payment system. Later on, this album was also released internationally by Satanic Productions. Later on, Ionic Bond released their debut album
Amavashya Lore, which was widely appreciated by Bangladeshi audiences despite being in English. While rock music was still popular throughout the country, a budding
indie scene started to flourish in smaller concert arenas. Bands like The Crowd, Picket, Embers in Snow, Alfred, Headline, and Attic brought about a change in the sound of rock with English songwriting being a common practice in their music. They strayed away from their hard rock and metal predecessors and ventured into newer and independent music territory. During the early 2010s, the Bangladesh Musical Bands Association (BAMBA) and the Chittagong Musical Bands Association (CMBA) began organizing rock concerts in Chittagong, which brought exposure to local
underground bands. This resulted in the emergence of new rock bands in the city, such as Hemorrhage and Blunderware. Many Bangladeshi progressive metal and experimental metal bands have changed popular rock music. Bands like Karnival and Owned have especially progressed the industry. Karnival released three successful albums, and Owned has published two. Bands such as Messianic Era, Ossrik, Seventh Sign, Jogot, and Attic are also notable. By the end of the decade, there was a resurgence of hard and alternative rock in the country, with bands like Unmaad, the Conclusion, Adverb, and The Perfect Criminals releasing albums.
Possible decline Many critics and musicians have claimed that rock music declined in popularity in Bangladesh during the 2010s. It has partially lost ground to
Bollywood music from neighboring India, which dominates Bangladeshi radio, and
pirated versions are available online for free. Bollywood music also influenced the music of
Dhallywood, which saw the rise of pop singers like
Arfin Rumey,
Hridoy Khan,
Imran Mahmudul and Armaan Alif. Meanwhile, as of the late 2010s underground
hip-hop music has largely replaced rock as the most popular genre among the young. Domestic law has also failed to protect the financial interests of the artists who once led the country's rock music industry. The record industry says that just 10 percent of music in Bangladesh is purchased legally and estimate that music piracy annually costs US$180 million in lost earnings. Increased religiosity, which rejects all things
Western in favor of a traditional lifestyle, has also made rock less popular. Some
Muslims in the country consider rock music a sin. Solo concerts have become less popular, and
RockNation have become popular and sold thousands of tickets. Though losing popularity throughout the 2010s, some rock bands, such as Love Runs Blind, Nagar Baul, Warfaze, Aurthohin, Artcell, Shironamhin and Chirkutt still remain highly popular.
Extreme metal Extreme metal is mainly an underground genre, which became commercially successful in Bangladesh in the late 2000s, when
Powersurge and Mechanix took part in D-Rockstar 2008. In that competition, Powersurge finished in first place and Mechanix in second. They were the most significant bands of the genre in the country, and they introduced
thrash and
groove metal to a wider audience.
Severe Dementia introduced
death metal a few years before them. Death metal vocals are usually delivered as guttural
death growls or high-pitched screaming, complemented by downtuned, highly
distorted guitars and extremely fast
double bass percussion. The genre's bands had no intention of commercial success, as they were all fans of underground extreme metal of the 1980s. These three bands are considered to be the pioneers of Bangladeshi extreme metal, introducing a different style and sound to rock. They were also criticized for the horrific images on their album covers. Other significant extreme metal bands of the decade include Hallucination, Minerva, Dissector, Thrash, Trainwreck and Nafaarmaan. In 2018, Powersurge guitarist Saimum Hasan Nahian urged the organizers of
Wacken Open Air to hold a concert in Bangladesh. The Wacken Metal Battle concert was held in the Russian Cultural Center in Dhaka. Five bands, Karma, Ionic Bond, Torture Goregrinder, Infidel and Trainwreck took part in the competition, with the latter being declared the winner. They also performed at
Bangalore Open Air, where they competed against other metal bands from
Sri Lanka,
Nepal and India. They won entry into Wacken Open Air, the first Bangladeshi band to do so. == See also ==