Among Bring Me the Horizon's earliest influences were American metalcore bands like The Dillinger Escape Plan, Every Time I Die, Norma Jean, Skycamefalling and Poison the Well;[1][5][65] and genres death metal, grindcore, and emo have been cited by Allmusic writer Steward Mason.[66] However, as their sound developed the band started to take influences from progressive rock, post-rock, dubstep and electronica.[67][65] Their expansion on influences grew to the point in which Sykes declared "we're a metal band who listen to everything but metal".[citation needed] Bring Me the Horizon has been playing mainly within the genres metalcore[68][69][70] and- though they have since moved on from the genre-[citation needed] they were considered deathcore.[66][71][72] Deathcore is a fusion genre that combines metalcore, hardcore punk and death metal.[73][1] Across their career they have also been said to play within the genres hardcore punk,[74] technical metal[74] and emo.[67]
Bring Me the Horizon have attempted to grow and change with each album, as they believe each album should be different.[16] Raziq Rauf, when writing for Drowned In Sound, Described Count Your Blessings as possessing "Norma Jean-style thunderous riffs mixed with some dastardly sludgy doom moments and more breakdowns than your dad’s old Nissan Sunny."[10] Suicide Season was described by Metal Hammer as a "creative, critical and commercial success" for the band[67] as they started to adopt a more eclectic style,[73] with its "crushingly heavy party deathcore".[2] Leading up to its release Sykes described it as "100% different to Count Your Blessings" and that the album sounds "more rock than metal".[75] Bring Me The Horizon became rejecting of their debut album Count Your Blessings and considered Suicide Season as their "Year Zero[...] [their] wipe-the-slate-clean time".[76]
Bring Me the Horizon then moved even further away from deathcore in their third album There Is a Hell, with the incorporation of electronica, classical music and pop into their metalcore style.[77] This required more ambitious production feats, such as using a full choir, a synthesised orchestra and glitched out vocals and breakdowns (that were also toned down, favouring quiet atmospheric passages in song breaks).[74][78] For the writing of Sempiternal, the band pooled far broader influences such as post-rock acts like This Will Destroy You and Explosions In The Sky[79] and from pop music.[80]
Among Bring Me the Horizon's earliest influences were American metalcore bands like The Dillinger Escape Plan, Every Time I Die, Norma Jean, Skycamefalling and Poison the Well;[1][5][65] and genres death metal, grindcore, and emo have been cited by Allmusic writer Steward Mason.[66] However, as their sound developed the band started to take influences from progressive rock, post-rock, dubstep and electronica.[67][65] Their expansion on influences grew to the point in which Sykes declared "we're a metal band who listen to everything but metal".[citation needed] Bring Me the Horizon has been playing mainly within the genres metalcore[68][69][70] and- though they have since moved on from the genre-[citation needed] they were considered deathcore.[66][71][72] Deathcore is a fusion genre that combines metalcore, hardcore punk and death metal.[73][1] Across their career they have also been said to play within the genres hardcore punk,[74] technical metal[74] and emo.[67]
Bring Me the Horizon have attempted to grow and change with each album, as they believe each album should be different.[16] Raziq Rauf, when writing for Drowned In Sound, Described Count Your Blessings as possessing "Norma Jean-style thunderous riffs mixed with some dastardly sludgy doom moments and more breakdowns than your dad’s old Nissan Sunny."[10] Suicide Season was described by Metal Hammer as a "creative, critical and commercial success" for the band[67] as they started to adopt a more eclectic style,[73] with its "crushingly heavy party deathcore".[2] Leading up to its release Sykes described it as "100% different to Count Your Blessings" and that the album sounds "more rock than metal".[75] Bring Me The Horizon became rejecting of their debut album Count Your Blessings and considered Suicide Season as their "Year Zero[...] [their] wipe-the-slate-clean time".[76]
Bring Me the Horizon then moved even further away from deathcore in their third album There Is a Hell, with the incorporation of electronica, classical music and pop into their metalcore style.[77] This required more ambitious production feats, such as using a full choir, a synthesised orchestra and glitched out vocals and breakdowns (that were also toned down, favouring quiet atmospheric passages in song breaks).[74][78] For the writing of Sempiternal, the band pooled far broader influences such as post-rock acts like This Will Destroy You and Explosions In The Sky[79] and from pop music.[80]
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