Emergence and early history (early to mid–1980s) in 1989 of
PossessedEnglish extreme metal band
Venom, from
Newcastle, crystallized the elements of what later became known as
thrash metal, death metal and
black metal, with their first two albums
Welcome to Hell and
Black Metal, released in late 1981 and 1982, respectively. Their dark, blistering sound, harsh vocals, and
macabre, proudly Satanic imagery proved a major inspiration for extreme metal bands. Another highly influential band,
Slayer, formed in 1981. Although the band was a thrash metal act, Slayer's music was more violent than their thrash contemporaries
Metallica,
Megadeth, and
Anthrax. Their breakneck speed and instrumental prowess combined with lyrics about death, violence, war, and Satanism won Slayer a cult following. According to Mike McPadden,
Hell Awaits, Slayer's second album, "largely invent[ed] much of the sound and fury that would evolve into death metal." According to
AllMusic, their third album
Reign in Blood inspired the entire death metal genre. It had a big impact on genre leaders such as
Death,
Obituary, and
Morbid Angel. While attributed as having a Slayer influence, current and former members of the band had actually cited Venom and
Motörhead, as well as early work by
Exodus, as the main influences on their sound. Although the group had released only two studio albums and an EP in their formative years, they have been described by music journalists and musicians as either being "monumental" in developing the death metal style, or as being the first death metal band.
Earache Records noted that "the likes of Trey Azagthoth and Morbid Angel based what they were doing in their formative years on the Possessed blueprint laid down on the legendary
Seven Churches recording. Possessed arguably did more to further the cause of 'Death Metal' than any of the early acts on the scene back in the mid-late 80's." (1967–2001) of
Death, during a 1992 tour in Scotland in support of the album
Human. During the same period as the dawn of Possessed, a second influential metal band was formed in Orlando, Florida. Originally called Mantas, Death was formed in 1983 by
Chuck Schuldiner,
Kam Lee, and
Rick Rozz. Inspired by the
Brandon, Florida act
Nasty Savage, they took the sound of Nasty Savage and deepened it. In 1984, they released their first demo entitled
Death by Metal, followed by several more. The tapes circulated through the tape trader world, quickly establishing the band's name. With Death guitarist Schuldiner adopting vocal duties, the band made a major impact in the emerging
Florida death metal scene. The fast minor-key riffs and solos were complemented with fast drumming, creating a style that would catch on in tape trading circles. Schuldiner has been credited by AllMusic's Eduardo Rivadavia for being widely recognized as the "Father of Death Metal". Death's 1987 debut release,
Scream Bloody Gore, has been described by About.com's Chad Bowar as being the "evolution from thrash metal to death metal", and "the first true death metal record" by the
San Francisco Chronicle. In an Interview Jeff Becerra talked about the discussions of being the creator of the genre, saying that Schuldiner cited Possessed as a massive influence, and Death were even called "Possessed clones" early on. Along with Possessed and Death, other pioneers of death metal in the United States include
Macabre,
Master,
Massacre,
Immolation,
Cannibal Corpse,
Obituary, and
Post Mortem.
Growing popularity (late 1980s to late 1990s) By 1989, many bands had been signed by eager record labels wanting to cash in on the subgenre, including Florida's
Obituary,
Morbid Angel and
Deicide. This collective of death metal bands hailing from Florida are often labeled as "
Florida death metal". Morbid Angel pushed the genre's limits both musically and lyrically, with the release of their debut album
Altars of Madness in 1989. The album "redefined what it meant to be heavy while influencing an upcoming class of brutal death metal." According to Jason Birchmeier of
AllMusic, "
Venom and
Slayer redefined the extent to which a metal band could align itself with all things evil during the beginning of the decade, but Morbid Angel made these two groups sound like
children's music." Following the original death metal innovators, new subgenres began to develop the end of the decade, such as
melodic death metal. Death released their fourth album
Human in 1991, which has become a hallmark in
technical death metal. Death's founder Schuldiner helped push the boundaries of the genre with uncompromising speed and technical virtuosity, combining intricate rhythm guitar work with complex arrangements and emotive guitar solos. drummer
Steve Asheim Earache Records,
Relativity Records and Roadrunner Records became the genre's most important labels, with Earache releasing albums by
Carcass,
Napalm Death,
Morbid Angel, and
Entombed, and
Roadrunner releasing albums by Obituary and
Pestilence. Although these labels had not been death metal labels, they initially became the genre's flagship labels at the beginning of the 1990s. In addition to these, other labels formed as well, such as
Nuclear Blast,
Century Media, and
Peaceville. Many of these labels would go on to achieve successes in other genres of metal throughout the 1990s. In September 1990, Death's manager
Eric Greif held one of the first North American death metal festivals,
Day of Death, in
Milwaukee suburb
Waukesha, Wisconsin, and featured 26 bands including Autopsy,
Broken Hope, Hellwitch, Obliveon, Revenant, Viogression, Immolation,
Atheist, and
Cynic. Death metal's popularity achieved its initial peak during 1992–1993, with some bands such as Morbid Angel and Cannibal Corpse enjoying mild commercial success. However, the genre as a whole never broke into the mainstream. The genre's mounting popularity may have been partly responsible for a strong rivalry between
Norwegian black metal and
Swedish death metal scenes.
Fenriz of
Darkthrone has noted that Norwegian black metal musicians were "fed up with the whole death metal scene" at the time. According to Joel McIver of
Metal Hammer, "Many metalheads were fixated on the new wave of black metal emanating from Scandinavia, the UK and the US. Just as grunge had killed glam back in 1991, a new movement of corpsepainted bands was making the death metal scene look tedious, or worse, obsolete. Only the best would survive." Consequently, death metal diversified in the
1990s, spawning a variety of subgenres that maintain cult followings to the present day.
Later history (2000–present) has performed with death metal bands
Cannibal Corpse,
Deicide and
Six Feet Under.|300x300px In the
2000s, a number of bands in the
hardcore punk scene, including
Black Breath and
Trap Them began to incorporate elements of death metal into their sound. This was followed by a wave of bands expanding upon the death-doom style of
Incantation while incorporating elements of
ambient music, including
Dead Congregation and
Necros Christos. One of the earliest groups in this wave was
Horrendous, who formed in 2009, who along with
Tomb Mold took a progressive take the genre. In a 2022 article by
MetalSucks writer Christopher Krovatin stated "Right now, as a music journalist, all I hear about is death metal." In the UK, this movement became the "New Wave of British Death Metal", fronted by Mortuary Spawn, Vacuous and Celestial Sanctuary, this name being coined by Tom Cronin, of Celestial Sanctuary, in order to separate these hardcore-indebted bands from the country's prior movements. The earliest bands in this wave were Cruciamentum and Grave Miasma. A large part of the New Wave of Old School Death Metal was death metal bands who originated from the hardcore scene, some of which merge elements of hardcore into their style.
Xibalba and
Fuming Mouth were two of the earliest groups, with the wave being solidified by
Gatecreeper,
200 Stab Wounds, Creeping Death,
Sanguisugabogg and Kruelty.
Venom Prison came from this scene and gained particular attention for their confrontation of what
Kerrang! called death metal's "misogyny problem", by instead writing "rape-revenge narrative[s]". Their lead vocalist Larissa Stupar was described by the publication as "metal's most important - and uncompromising - voice". ==Characteristics==