All Shall Perish
All Shall Perish is an American deathcore band formed in Oakland, California, in 2002 by drummer Matt Kuykendall and guitarist Ben Orum, initially with bassist Mike Tiner.[1][2] The group incorporates technical death metal elements into its sound, characterized by aggressive breakdowns, complex guitar work, and lyrics addressing themes of dejection, cynicism, death, and social struggles.[1][3] The band released its debut album, Hate. Malice. Revenge, independently in 2003 through Amputated Records, which established them as early pioneers in the deathcore genre.[1][3] Signing with Nuclear Blast Records in 2005, they produced subsequent full-length albums including The Price of Existence (2006), Awaken the Dreamers (2008), and This Is Where It Ends (2011), the latter featuring vocalist Hernan "Eddie" Hermida's dual clean and harsh vocal styles alongside intricate instrumentation.[1][2] These releases garnered acclaim within underground metal communities for advancing deathcore's technical boundaries, though the band experienced lineup fluctuations, including Hermida's departure in 2013 and drummer changes.[1][3] Following a prolonged hiatus after 2011, during which members pursued other projects, All Shall Perish announced renewed activity in 2024, signaling a potential resurgence amid evolving interest in the genre.[4] The band's enduring influence stems from its role in shaping deathcore's fusion of hardcore breakdowns and death metal precision, without notable mainstream commercial breakthroughs or public scandals.[1][3]History
Formation and Nuclear Blast signing (2002–2008)
All Shall Perish was formed in 2002 in Oakland, California, by bassist Mike Tiner, guitarist Ben Orum, and drummer Matt Kuykendall, who drew from their experiences in the San Francisco Bay Area hardcore and metal scenes, including prior projects like Antagony and End of All.[5][6] The initial lineup also included guitarist Caysen Russo and vocalist Craig Betit, establishing the band as a side project that quickly emphasized technical aggression rooted in death metal and hardcore influences.[6] They self-released a demo before issuing their debut EP, Hate. Malice. Revenge., on August 19, 2003, through the small Japanese label Amputated Vein Records, which featured five tracks showcasing intricate guitar work and brutal breakdowns.[7][8] Following the EP's release, the band undertook extensive underground DIY tours across the United States, honing their live intensity and gaining traction in the emerging deathcore underground despite limited distribution.[9] This grassroots momentum led to a worldwide signing with Nuclear Blast Records in December 2004, a pivotal deal for exposure in the extreme metal market.[10] Nuclear Blast reissued Hate. Malice. Revenge. on February 14, 2005, broadening its reach and solidifying the band's reputation for raw, technical extremity among niche audiences.[10] By 2005, vocalist Craig Betit departed, and Hernan "Eddie" Hermida joined, bringing a more versatile vocal style that enhanced the band's dual clean and growled delivery.[11] Under the Nuclear Blast banner, All Shall Perish recorded their first full-length album, The Price of Existence, released on August 8, 2006, which expanded on the EP's ferocity with longer compositions, complex instrumentation, and themes of existential struggle.[11][12] To promote it, they embarked on multiple U.S. tours, including the early 2006 Spreading Disease tour—documented via band blogs—and appearances that highlighted their precise riffing and high-energy stage presence, fostering a dedicated following in the deathcore circuit.[13][5]Lineup changes and internal challenges (2009–2010)
On February 5, 2009, All Shall Perish announced the departure of lead guitarist Chris Storey, citing long-standing internal issues as the primary cause for the amicable split.[14] The band quickly recruited Jason Richardson as his replacement to maintain touring and recording momentum following the September 2008 release of Awaken the Dreamers.[13] This change occurred amid broader tensions within the group, as co-founding guitarist Ben Orum later described the period as involving "dark times" marked by persistent lineup instability and creative hurdles in developing new material.[15] Throughout 2009 and into 2010, these dynamics strained the band's cohesion, with efforts focused on stabilizing the core lineup to support ongoing tours like the Summer Slaughter package. Richardson's integration helped sustain technical demands, but underlying conflicts echoed the factors behind Storey's exit, including disagreements over direction and personal frictions accumulated from years of intensive touring.[16] By mid-2010, further shifts emerged as original drummer Matt Kuykendall departed, replaced by Adam Pierce of Sea of Treachery, signaling continued flux in rhythm section stability.[17] These personnel adjustments reflected deeper internal challenges, such as balancing aggressive death metal roots with evolving melodic elements introduced on Awaken the Dreamers, which some members found creatively taxing without derailing short-term output. Orum noted in interviews that the band pushed through these obstacles to refine songs for their next release, prioritizing resilience over resolution of all disputes at the time.[15] Despite initial post-album positivity from fan reception and label support via Nuclear Blast, the rapid changes underscored vulnerability to burnout and misalignment, setting a precedent for prolonged instability.[16]This Is Where It Ends and Hermida's departure (2010–2015)
All Shall Perish released their fourth studio album, This Is Where It Ends, on July 26, 2011, via Nuclear Blast Records. The record marked a continuation of the band's deathcore sound, incorporating technical riffs and occasional melodic passages alongside aggressive breakdowns.[18] Produced with an emphasis on precision, it debuted at number 42 on the Billboard 200, selling 8,422 copies in its first week.[19] Following the album's release, vocalist Hernan "Eddie" Hermida balanced commitments between All Shall Perish and Suicide Silence, participating in tours for both acts.[20] In October 2013, Suicide Silence announced Hermida as their full-time frontman after the death of Mitch Lucker, prompting his departure from All Shall Perish. Bassist and founding member Mike Tiner stated that the band had no alternative but to terminate Hermida's involvement, citing external demands from Suicide Silence for exclusive dedication that made dual membership untenable despite prior accommodations.[21] Tiner emphasized that Hermida's refusal to fully quit All Shall Perish left the group with limited options amid scheduling conflicts and professional pressures.[22] Hermida's exit exacerbated the band's challenges, leading to a halt in new material production and reduced activity.[21] All Shall Perish conducted only intermittent live performances without a permanent vocalist replacement, resulting in prolonged inactivity by 2015.[23] This period reflected the causal impact of lineup instability on the group's momentum, with no subsequent releases until years later.[24]Hiatus and disbandment (2015–2020)
Following the departure of vocalist Hernan "Eddie" Hermida in 2013 to join Suicide Silence full-time, All Shall Perish entered a hiatus that persisted despite an announced reunion of the core lineup on October 21, 2015.[25] The reformed group consisted of Hermida, guitarists Ben Orum and Chris Storey, and drummer Matt Kuykendall, excluding bassist Mike Tiner due to prior legal disputes, with initial plans for new music and activity.[26] However, pre-production efforts begun in 2016 yielded no releases, and the band undertook no major tours or recordings during the subsequent years.[27] Internal challenges, including divergent member priorities and incomplete buy-in, prevented sustained progress, as sporadic revival discussions failed to align the lineup.[28] Founding guitarist Orum, who had briefly stepped away in 2012 for family reasons before rejoining the reunion push, pursued production work independently while the band remained dormant.[29] Other members, such as Hermida, maintained commitments to side projects like Suicide Silence, contributing to the prolonged inactivity amid shifting dynamics in the deathcore scene.[30] By April 2020, Hermida confirmed the reunion was effectively defunct, stating it required unanimous band commitment that had not materialized, solidifying the informal disbandment after five years of stalled efforts.[27] No official dissolution was declared, but the absence of activity or label-driven obligations from Nuclear Blast marked the period's close, with the group producing zero output from 2015 onward.[31]Reunion and recent activities (2024–present)
On January 31, 2024, All Shall Perish announced their reunion for performances at the Big Texas Metal Fest on May 26, 2024, and the Inkcarceration Music & Tattoo Festival later that year, reuniting vocalist Hernan "Eddie" Hermida, guitarists Chris Storey and Ben Orum, and drummer Matthew Kuykendall in response to sustained fan interest following nearly a decade of inactivity.[32][33] The lineup notably excluded a bassist, drawing from the configuration active during the band's The Price of Existence and Awaken the Dreamers era.[34] Following these festival appearances, the band scheduled additional U.S. dates, including a sold-out January 3, 2025, show in California supported by Peeling Flesh, Snuffed on Sight, Saltwound, and Iron Front.[35] In May 2025, All Shall Perish revealed a West Coast headline tour commencing October 2, 2025, with stops in cities such as Seattle on October 4 and Salt Lake City on October 7, featuring supports including Desmadre, Girl of Glass, and Torture Hammer.[36][37] The band also confirmed their first European tour in 12 years, dubbed "Slamageddon," set for November 21 to December 2025 across Germany, the Netherlands, and other locations, starting in Berlin.[38] Post-tour, the group began writing material for a new album, with Hermida stating in late 2025 that the process was progressing naturally after successful North American and international outings.[39] This creative restart underscores the band's intent to capitalize on reunion momentum without prior commitments to unreleased material from earlier periods.[32]Musical style and lyrical themes
Musical style
All Shall Perish is classified within the deathcore genre, characterized by the fusion of death metal's brutality—including blast beats, atonal death growls, and technical riffing—with metalcore's groove-oriented breakdowns and occasional melodic interludes.[40][8] Their sound emphasizes dual-guitar harmonies and rapid tempo shifts, distinguishing it from straightforward metalcore through heavier, more dissonant vocal deliveries and intricate drumming patterns.[41][42] The band's debut album, Hate. Malice. Revenge. (2003), exemplifies early raw aggression, blending death metal precision with thrash-infused speed and grind elements in a hybrid structure that prioritizes intensity over polish.[8][43] By contrast, This Is Where It Ends (2011) showcases evolved technicality, with enhanced drumming speed, refined lead melodies, and tighter production that amplifies clarity in riff layering and dynamic contrasts.[42][44] This progression reflects a shift toward more surgical brutality, incorporating groove riffs alongside sustained blast sections for varied pacing.[45] Production across albums highlights increasing refinement, from the upfront, instrument-forward mix of the debut—avoiding major pitfalls despite its aggression—to the precise, high-fidelity tones of later works that underscore harmonic interplay and vocal ferocity.[43][45][44]Influences
All Shall Perish's musical foundations stem from hardcore punk and death metal acts, as articulated by founding drummer Matt Kuykendall in a 2005 interview, where he named Hatebreed for its aggressive breakdowns, Cannibal Corpse for technical precision, and At the Gates for melodic structures integrated into extreme compositions.[46] These influences shaped the band's early emphasis on groove-oriented riffs and rapid shifts between ferocity and harmony, evident from their 2003 debut Hate. Malice. Revenge. onward.[47] Further drawing from brutal death metal pioneers, Kuykendall highlighted Dying Fetus and Opeth as key inspirations, linking to the group's pursuit of complex rhythms and atmospheric depth over simplified aggression.[46] Hardcore elements from bands like Irate and Blood Has Been Shed contributed to the raw, mosh-pit energy, prioritizing underground extremity amid the mid-2000s metalcore surge, as the band avoided mainstream nu-metal trends in favor of visceral, unpolished intensity.[47] Promotional descriptions of the band's sound reinforce these roots, citing additional death metal acts like Suffocation and grindcore-infused technicality from Meshuggah, fostering causal ties to genre evolution through relentless tempo variations and ensemble interplay rather than commercial accessibility.[48] This selective emulation of pioneers underscores All Shall Perish's commitment to extremity, as echoed in member statements favoring subterranean authenticity over polished production.[46]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of All Shall Perish predominantly critique systemic power structures, emphasizing government overreach, corporate exploitation, and the erosion of individual autonomy through empirical observations of institutional failures such as economic coercion and environmental negligence. Tracks like "Wage Slaves" from the 2006 album The Price of Existence depict workers ensnared in cycles of labor exploitation, portraying employers and elites as "thieves" who enforce dependency via debt and consumption, rejecting narratives of inevitable victimhood in favor of calls for resistance against manipulative control.[49][50] Similarly, "Never Ending War" condemns adherence to governmental "hidden agendas" and disinformation, urging confrontation with perpetual conflicts driven by elite interests rather than public welfare.[51] These themes extend to broader societal decay, including fascism and organized religion as mechanisms of conformity, with direct language highlighting causal links between policy decisions and human suffering, as in critiques of prioritizing corporate profits over ecological sustainability—exemplified by guitarist Ben Orum's 2010 reference to the Gulf Coast oil spill as emblematic of negligent leadership tied to band lyricism.[16] In "There Is No Business to Be Done on a Dead Planet," lyrics assail degradative practices that "rise on degradation's wings," attributing planetary ruin to unchecked greed observable in resource depletion and pollution events.[52] Such content privileges personal agency, decrying passive acceptance of elite-driven decay and advocating empirical awakening to structural causation over abstract fatalism. Later works evolve toward existential confrontation with institutional betrayals, as in This Is Where It Ends (2011), where themes of futility underscore observed hypocrisies in power dynamics, yet retain anti-authoritarian realism by grounding despair in verifiable failures like economic disparity and policy deceit rather than ideological abstraction.[53] This progression maintains a focus on reclaiming sovereignty amid control, using stark, unadorned prose to expose how conformity perpetuates cycles of oppression, informed by real-world antecedents like class divides and regulatory lapses.[54]Reception
Critical reception
All Shall Perish's debut album The Price of Existence (2006) garnered praise for its technical intensity and intricate compositions, with reviewers highlighting the band's ability to blend brutal death metal elements with groove-oriented riffs. Teeth of the Divine described it as "one of the most complete and satisfying albums from a young, 'new' band" heard in years, emphasizing its precision and revitalized style.[12] However, some critiques pointed to formulaic breakdowns dominating the structure, as Sputnikmusic noted the music's heaviness and organization but faulted it for excessive repetition and unclear vocals.[55] Aggregated user scores, such as 78% on Album of the Year, reflected broad approval for its raw energy within the emerging deathcore genre.[56] Subsequent releases elicited mixed responses, particularly Awaken the Dreamers (2008), which experimented with melodic elements and clean vocals, drawing both acclaim for innovation and criticism for softening the band's edge. Sea of Tranquility argued it "surpassed The Price of Existence" in impressing fans through atypical tracks like arpeggio-driven "Black Spot," while MetalSucks observed it as "slower and less brutal" than predecessors, potentially alienating core listeners.[57][58] Last Rites deemed it "excellent" yet not matching the prior album's impact due to increased melody.[59] This Is Where It Ends (2011) was lauded for maturing the sound with unpredictable solos and melodic-death influences, as No Clean Singing called it the band's "pinnacle" of good deathcore.[42] Conversely, detractors like Last Rites criticized its "obvious blandness" and diluted aggression in pursuit of accessibility, while Metal Kaoz found it lacking a distinctive spark despite sessions of listening.[60][61] The band's legacy as deathcore influencers is acknowledged in metal communities, with Encyclopaedia Metallum cataloging their role in fusing technical brutality and social-themed lyrics, though professional consensus tempers innovation against repetitive breakdowns.[1] Following the 2024 reunion, live performances at events like Big Texas Metal Fest and Brooklyn shows received positive feedback for sustained energy, as NextMosh recapped the return drawing strong crowds after 11 years, focusing on execution without new material.[62]Commercial performance and fan response
This Is Where It Ends (2010) sold 8,422 copies in its first week in the United States, marking the band's strongest debut sales to date.[63] Earlier releases like Awaken the Dreamers (2008) achieved 5,000 first-week units and debuted at number 1 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart, reflecting solid performance within the independent metal category.[5] The Price of Existence (2006) has sold approximately 20,000 copies worldwide.[64] These figures underscore modest commercial success aligned with deathcore's niche market, bolstered by Nuclear Blast's distribution in the underground metal scene. The band's enduring appeal is evident in streaming metrics, with over 82 million total Spotify streams and tracks like "Wage Slaves" exceeding 12.8 million plays.[65] Reunion tours since 2024 have demonstrated strong fan demand, including sold-out shows such as the second Californian reunion date on January 3, 2025, and multiple European dates on the 2025 Slamageddon Tour, like the Tilburg O13 venue.[35][66] Fan response highlights a dedicated following valuing the band's technical riffs and contributions to early deathcore, with enthusiasts on platforms like Reddit describing albums such as Hate. Malice. Revenge. as foundational and praising the timeless quality amid genre shifts.[67] This grassroots loyalty contrasts with broader metal fatigue, evidenced by consistent headlining sell-outs and peer citations in the subgenre's evolution.[68]Band members
Current members
The current lineup for All Shall Perish's 2024 reunion and subsequent activities features vocalist Hernan "Eddie" Hermida, who rejoined in 2024 following his prior tenure from 2009 to 2013, guitarist Chris Storey, a member since 2003, guitarist Ben Orum, a founding member from 2002 with intermittent activity, and drummer Matt Kuykendall, who has been active since 2003.[33][32] This configuration, announced on February 7, 2024, omits a dedicated bassist, marking a return to core personnel without the full classic ensemble.[34][69] The group has performed with this quartet at festivals including Big Texas Metal Fest in May 2024 and Inkcarceration Music & Tattoo Festival in July 2024.[4]Former members
Hernan "Eddie" Hermida served as the band's vocalist from 2003 to 2013, departing in October 2013 to commit full-time to Suicide Silence following the death of that band's frontman Mitch Lucker.[70][71] The remaining members stated they had no alternative but to end his tenure due to scheduling incompatibilities imposed by Suicide Silence's management.[72] Founding guitarist Ben Orum left in December 2012 after a decade with the band, citing irreconcilable scheduling conflicts despite not regularly touring in prior years; the split was described as amicable.[73] Bassist and founding member Mike Tiner departed in 2015 following a protracted legal arbitration over control of the band's name and unpaid royalties, which halted a planned reunion and new material.[27][26] Other notable former members include original vocalist Craig Betit (2002–2003), who recorded the debut EP before being replaced;[2] drummer Matt Kuykendall (2002–2010), ousted in a 2010 lineup overhaul;[17] guitarist Chris Storey (2003–2009), who announced his exit in February 2009;[23] and subsequent additions like drummer Adam Pierce (2010–2015) and guitarist Francesco Artusato (2010–2015, touring).[74] Early transients such as guitarist Christopher Shutter (2002–2005) and Caysen Russo (guitar 2002–2003; bass 2015–2020) also cycled through amid the band's evolving roster.[5]Discography
Studio albums
All Shall Perish has released four studio albums, all full-length recordings featuring original material. The debut album, Hate . Malice . Revenge, was issued on August 19, 2003, by the Japanese label Amputated Vein Records in CD format.[75] [7] The band's second studio album, The Price of Existence, appeared on August 8, 2006, through Nuclear Blast Records, primarily on CD with later digital and vinyl editions.[76] [11] The Awaken the Dreamers, the third release, came out on September 16, 2008, again via Nuclear Blast Records in CD format, accompanied by digital distribution.[77] [78] The fourth and most recent studio album to date, This Is Where It Ends, was released on July 26, 2011, by Nuclear Blast Records in CD and digital formats.[79] [80] No further studio albums have been released as of October 2025, though the band reported beginning work on new material in May 2025.[39]| Album title | Release date | Label | Primary format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hate . Malice . Revenge | August 19, 2003 | Amputated Vein Records | CD |
| The Price of Existence | August 8, 2006 | Nuclear Blast Records | CD |
| Awaken the Dreamers | September 16, 2008 | Nuclear Blast Records | CD |
| This Is Where It Ends | July 26, 2011 | Nuclear Blast Records | CD |