Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Bring Me the Horizon" in Malay language version.
Fronted by a tattooed clothing designer and influenced by death metal, grindcore, and emo, Bring Me the Horizon aren't the average deathcore band.
Over the last 15 years, the U.K. five-piece has been called (deep breath) deathcore, metalcore, electronicore, post-hardcore, screamo, alternative metal, alt-rock, hard-rock and electro-rock.
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(bantuan)|100% different" from "Count Your Blessings" [...] "More rock than metal. It's heavy though, and sounds a lot more fatter and beefier. We've also done some mellower tracks too.
From deathcore to electronica in just over a decade
Bring Me The Horizon has evolved quite a bit from their mid-2000s deathcore beginnings to a much more arena-rock-friendly sound that has done the band quite well.
Sykes is clean, has found a new love and has even sent Bring Me The Horizon in a new, electro pop direction (but based around the solid, familiar metalcore sound, of course).
Yet, the album still includes the trademark elements that have become staples of the group's sound since 2006 – precision guitar riffs, venomously dark lyrics, massive breakdowns and gang vocals destined to be chants at the band's incendiary live shows. [...] We always thought 'why should we stick to the two guitars, drums and bass format? Why can't we have some production stuff brought into it and look at each song as a bigger picture?
Fronted by a tattooed clothing designer and influenced by death metal, grindcore, and emo, Bring Me the Horizon aren't the average deathcore band.
Over the last 15 years, the U.K. five-piece has been called (deep breath) deathcore, metalcore, electronicore, post-hardcore, screamo, alternative metal, alt-rock, hard-rock and electro-rock.
Sykes is clean, has found a new love and has even sent Bring Me The Horizon in a new, electro pop direction (but based around the solid, familiar metalcore sound, of course).
From deathcore to electronica in just over a decade
Bring Me The Horizon has evolved quite a bit from their mid-2000s deathcore beginnings to a much more arena-rock-friendly sound that has done the band quite well.
100% different" from "Count Your Blessings" [...] "More rock than metal. It's heavy though, and sounds a lot more fatter and beefier. We've also done some mellower tracks too.
Yet, the album still includes the trademark elements that have become staples of the group's sound since 2006 – precision guitar riffs, venomously dark lyrics, massive breakdowns and gang vocals destined to be chants at the band's incendiary live shows. [...] We always thought 'why should we stick to the two guitars, drums and bass format? Why can't we have some production stuff brought into it and look at each song as a bigger picture?