10 Metal Albums That Survived The Grunge Era

April 20, 2009 by Scott  

Flotsam and Jetsam Quattro The early to mid 1990’s delivered a harsh blow the heavy metal. Grunge overshadowed heavy metal but thankfully did us all a favor by killing the glam-rock era. While a lot of metal bands continued to release solid metal albums, they still had grunge to deal with in both marketing and touring.

I was in my mid teens, working as a dishwasher during the time. My coworkers were all in to the grunge thing and were neo-hippies to boot. We had a prep room where we would prep food and had a cd player in there to listen to music while we worked. I would often get ridiculed for my music and get the typical “Kill your mother, kill your father!” mocking when they walked in to the prep room while I was working. I would either turn it up louder or change it to something a little heavier, darker or evil sounding. I didn’t mind grunge so much, but disliked a lot of people that listened to it for their total lack of having an open mind. Most of them were in to it because it was the popular thing at the time.

During that time you had to already be an established band or release an album of epic proportion in order to survive. Even the ones that struggled or didn’t pull through during that era still live in our hearts. The bands on this list were the ones that survived by releasing truly amazing work and deserve the recognition. I know I’ve missed a load of albums that deserve to be on a list of this sort, but keep in mind it’s just “10 Metal Albums” and not a “Top 10″ list.

Flotsam and Jetsam Quattro Flotsam And Jetsam: Cuatro. Released in 1992, Flotsam And Jetsam were a radio hit band and had already been on the scene for almost 10 years when Cuatro was released. Their fourth album and their fourth bass player, Cuatro took a slight step away from their the thrash metal roots. Often overlooked and forgotten about, Cuatro was and still is a great album.

AnthraxSoundOfWhiteNoise Anthrax: The Sound Of White Noise: (1993) Anthrax’s first album with, in my opinion their best singer, John Bush previously of Armored Saint, The Sound Of White Noise had so many killer songs on it. Beginning with Potter’s Field, Only, Room For One More, Packaged Rebellion, the list goes on until the end.

Iron Maiden Fear Of The DarkIron Maiden: Fear OF the Dark. Released in 1992, Fear Of The Dark is never considered one of Maiden’s best albums but it’s not their worst. Sure it may not be a classic like most of the 80’s albums, but it was one of their best of the 90’s and has plenty of great tunes on it. This was also Bruce Dickenson’s last album before his return to the band in 1999.

Death Individual Death: Individual Thought Patterns. Death’s 3rd release in the 90’s came in 1993 with Individual Thought Patterns. I bigger, cleaner sounding album than any one before it. ITP was my first taste of exceptionally technical death metal. If there is one subgenre of a subgenre you could label Death as, it would be Progressive Death Metal. Chuck Schuldiner always raised the bar a little higher with each album, but Individual thought patterns took it up a few notches.

Carcass Heartwork Carcass: Heartwork. In 1993 Carcass were criticized by a lot of long time fans as breaking away from the grindcore sound and heading in more of a death metal direction. You can actually hear that transition in Necrotism, but regardless of what specific sound direction Heartwork took, the sound was amazingly clean, fast and ferocious. Still quite underground and unrecognized by the outside world, their Heartwork video put them on the map all around the world.

Entombed Wolverine Blues Entombed: Wolverine Blues. Another album criticized by their fans due to a lesser death metal feel and more of a “Death N’ Roll” sound to it, Wolverine Blues was still a great album. It may not have been fast but it was still heavy as all hell and punchy enough to be a classic. The title track and others such as Hollowman, Full Of Hell and Out Of Hand, you can’t go wrong with this album.

suffocation Pierced from within Suffocation: Pierced From Within: Suffocation released their last album for a long time in 1995. Pierced from within was the best sounding album of their first 3. The production was cleaner and Roadrunner Records was taking off like a bat out of hell. Unfortunately this was almost the end of Suffocation as touring as a death metal band at this time was barely livable income. 9 years later the legacy would begin again.

fear factory sould of a new machine Fear Factory: Soul Of A New Machine. Before Nu-Metal actually had a name there were bands like NIN and Fear Factory releasing albums in the early 90’s. I don’t think it was until Korn’s self titled release that people started to truly hate what was to become a monster mainstream metal genre. Soul Of A New Machine was just considered a new metal band with their first major label release. Not an album that catapulted them in to the nu-metal world like Demanufacture, but a great album.

Helmet Meantime Helmet: Meantime. Helmet’s 1992 release introduced a slightly different sound to the metal scene. Coming out of NYC, The post hardcore band still brought a slight hardcore sound to them with stop-and-go riffs that were heavy enough to be called metal and a sound that was still raw enough to keep them out of the mainstream. Most people can only name one song from Helmet, that being Unsung.

chaos ad Sepultura: Chaos A.D. Another band that was raising the bar with every release was Sepultura. With a consistently small change of sound to each album, Sepultura released, arguably their best album with Chaos A.D. in 1993. This was also a turning point as we saw more down-tuning that ultimately lead to Roots, the worst album of the Cavalera, Sepultura era.

Metal never died during the grunge era and it was never mainstream. Hair metal/glam rock was sort of mainstream, but the metal we love with the ferocity, controversy and darkness was still well underground. If anything Grunge did us a favor by decimating glam and weeding out the bands that weren’t quite good enough to make it. Sadly there were some bands that were good enough but fell to the mass-marketing of grunge. No big label wanted to sign another metal band when grunge was the money maker. Lucky for a lot of metal bands there was still the independent labels like Roadrunner, Metal Blade and Nuclear Blast that knew that grunge was only a fad and believed in their metal bands and fans. Every genre has it’s fads and trends, but sooner or later they die or fade away and the true warriors and torch bearers of that genre keep marching strong. The rest end up on VH1 classics…

(all images: Amazon.com)

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Comments

12 Responses to “10 Metal Albums That Survived The Grunge Era”
  1. giles says:

    I really never thought of Fear Factory as nu-metal. i guess i can kind of see it though

  2. Scott says:

    I didn’t either but in the late 90’s it seemed that any band with down-tuned guitars and no solos were called nu-metal. PLus they did that whole remanufacture thing.

  3. Martin says:

    I remember few of these albums, early 90’s i was still in school and most kids were into grunge or just rock, but i had i little group of buddies still listening to Metallica, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest and Megadeth old cassettes, but also digging some of this new albums from Sepultura, Pantera, Cannibal Corpse, Morbid Angel and few others i can’t remember right now.

  4. zombie says:

    Friends, Metal music without guitar solos…tell me whole heartedly …is it a Metal Music ?

  5. Scott says:

    Some of it was done right and if properly arranged, yes, it can be considered metal. Let me also remind you that an iconic song in metal contains no solo at all….Breaking The Law. That song does not have any traditional solo in it, or anything that could really be considered a solo.

  6. c-g says:

    ok ok ok, we have to admit grunge had a few good things, and you know, deep inside of you, you still remember lyrics from “ten” & “nevermind” albums

    but we have to thanks all those labels who supported real metal, Chaos A.D. is still one of my favorites albums

  7. c-g says:

    ok ok ok, we have to admit grunge had a few good things, and you know, deep inside of you, you still remember lyrics from “ten” & “nevermind” albums

    we have to thanks all those labels who supported real metal, Chaos A.D. is still one of my favorites albums and hope, no matter what metal bands prevail as crocoaches do woaaaahahahahaha

  8. Scott says:

    I still own Nevermind and I just bought the new Legacy edition of Ten. You can not really deny the impact that those two albums had. Never said that I hated grunge music.

  9. Zack B says:

    To be honest I loved the grunge era. I grew up in the 90’s. My father grew up in 60’s and 70’s and typically made me listen to early rock which I enjoyed. I degrade many 80’s bands typically because of the glam metal it was bad. And I cant stand to listen to men that sound like women and dress and look like women. Terrible era of Metal. Metallica, Priest, Iron, Megadeth now that was metal hard and something that you can bang the head to. Little history did you know that Pantera started out as Glam Metal. And turned into what I believe revolutionized the kind of metal we listen to today. I think the grunge era turned Pantera into what I believe the Best hard heavy metal band ever. Are they heavier than Metallica? Yes! Priest? Yes! Maiden? Yes! Did they have the bad ass solos? Yes! Do they claim their glam metal past time? Hell no! Why you ask? Worst period of metals existence. Did grunge help? Every bit. Look I listen to anything big variety in my opinion. But no one should degrade grunge nor nu metal for turning into something different that the 80’s were just so bad at doing from the 70’s. And I know there is a bunch of 80 followers and I dont have too big of a problem with 80’s except the ones that claim they are metal when only they have nice power chords to a man that looks like a women and sings like a ten year old. Thats not metal! Warrant! Haha, Skidrow! haha. There was metal before the 80’s and there still is now. Why don’t everyone step back and give all of it a chance. I did, and I pick out what I liked. Some people cant look past what metal was and has become.

  10. Scott says:

    I think we’re all glad that the glam era has come and gone, although there are still those bands that try to make the come-back. Lucky for us, they fail miserably and only tour for a short period of time with their geriatric groupies a-following. Grunge had it’s ups and downs. I mean there were some good rock bands that brought rock to a different level than what was considered mainstream at the time. Again notice that the ones that were musically strong are still around. Well, ok, Pearl jam is still around. Everyone else has pretty much broken up or band members have passed away. AIC is sometimes considered grunge but I really don’t like that they got tossed in to that because they were truly one of a kind.

  11. Dude (subscribed) says:

    Even tho grunge pushed thrash (and other metal genres) into underground, Metal was the winner – almost a decade of popularity while grunge had like 4 years, Nu-metal had 4-5 years to exist also. Anyway, metal (thrash/heavy) has it’s popularity back and it’s only growing and will be there for next decade undoubltly . Haven’t heard of any new grunge/nu-metal tho :)

    P.s.
    Sound of white Noise and Cuatro has a heavy grunge influence in them, so they didn’t survive that era.

  12. HandofDeath says:

    This was a good diverse list. In the end, grunge died out in roughly 1996 and metal still trudges forward.

    Notable mentions

    Pantera- Far Beyond Driven (1994)

    Megadeth- Rust in Peace (1990)

    Prong- Cleansing (1994)

    Machine Head- Burn my Eyes (1994)

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