Archspire is a Canadian technical death metal band from Vancouver, British Columbia, originally formed in 2007 under the name Defenestrated before adopting its current moniker in 2009.[1][2] Renowned for their blistering speed, intricate compositions, and high-precision instrumentation, the band has carved a niche in the extreme metal scene by pushing the boundaries of technicality while incorporating memorable hooks and thematic depth.[3][4]The band's discography includes four studio albums: All Shall Align (2011), The Lucid Collective (2014), Relentless Mutation (2017), and Bleed the Future (2021), with the latter two released under the Season of Mist label.[5]Relentless Mutation marked a breakthrough, earning acclaim for its extreme speed through tracks featuring rapid blast beats and guitar work exceeding 300 beats per minute.[3]Bleed the Future, recorded at Flatline Audio with producer Dave Otero, explores sci-fi concepts of human evolution into non-human entities, blending extremity with accessibility during the 2020 pandemic songwriting period.[3]Archspire's current lineup consists of vocalist Oliver Rae Aleron, guitarists Dean Lamb and Tobi Morelli, bassist Jared Smith, and drummer Spencer Moore.[6] In 2025, the band became independent, recruited Moore following the departure of previous drummer Spencer Prewett, and completed recording their fifth studio album via Kickstarter, expected for release in 2026.[7][8] The band has maintained an active touring schedule, including North American runs with acts like Whitechapel and international dates in Europe, Australia, and Japan, solidifying their reputation as innovators in technical death metal.[3][6]
History
Formation and All Shall Align (2007–2011)
Archspire was formed in Vancouver, British Columbia, in 2007 under the initial name Defenestrated by drummer Spencer Prewett, who sought to create music in the technical death metal genre after discovering the style during time abroad. The band rebranded as Archspire in 2009, marking a shift toward their signature sound, with guitarist Tobi Morelli joining that year to contribute to riff development using extended-range guitars. Vocalist Oli Peters completed the core vocal element upon joining in 2010, while the lineup also included second guitarist Dean Lamb and bassist Jaron Evil, emphasizing intricate technical death metal compositions characterized by rapid tempos and complex structures.The band self-recorded their debut album All Shall Align amid lineup flux and resource constraints, releasing it independently on April 7, 2011, through Trendkill Recordings for limited distribution. Featuring eight tracks, the album delves into lyrical themes of cosmic alignment, ancient forces, and elemental chaos, as seen in songs like "Ancient of Ancients" and the title track, which evoke a sense of universal order and dissonance. This effort captured their early focus on blending extreme speed with thematic depth, establishing a foundation in the underground metal scene.To promote the release, Archspire began with local shows in Vancouver venues like the Rickshaw Theater for the CD release party, gradually building a dedicated grassroots following through high-energy performances. They followed this with their first cross-Canada tour in April 2011, hitting cities such as Kelowna, Edmonton, and Toronto, which helped solidify their presence in the national extreme metal community despite logistical hurdles. As an independent outfit, the group navigated significant challenges, including self-funding recording and touring expenses, frequent personnel shifts, and restricted access to broader distribution networks, all of which honed their resilience in the nascent stages of their career.
The Lucid Collective (2012–2016)
Following the strong underground reception to their debut album All Shall Align, Archspire attracted interest from Season of Mist, leading to a signing announcement on March 6, 2013. This deal marked a significant step toward professional production and broader distribution for the Vancouver-based technical death metal band.[9]In August 2013, the band entered Rain City Recorders in Vancouver to record their second full-length album, The Lucid Collective, with producer Stuart McKillop and engineer Curtis Buckoll. Released on April 25, 2014, via Season of Mist, the album consists of eight tracks that delve into conceptual themes of collective consciousness, shared dreams, and interdimensional transformation, such as two individuals merging—one into blood, the other into sand—to form a new realm. The core lineup for the recording included vocalist Oliver Rae Aleron, guitarists Tobi Morelli and founding member Dean Lamb (who had solidified the dual-guitar attack since the band's inception in 2007), bassist Jaron Evil, and drummer Spencer Prewett, providing stability amid earlier fluctuations. However, bassist Jaron Evil departed later in 2014, initiating a transitional period that culminated in Jared Smith's addition in January 2016, enhancing the low-end technicality for future endeavors.[10][11][12][13][14]The album's release propelled Archspire into more extensive touring, including North American showcase runs like the 2016 "Race to Denver" trek starting in Seattle and European dates that built on their growing profile. These efforts, alongside support slots for prominent acts in the technical death metal scene, helped elevate the band from niche underground status to a recognized force, with live performances showcasing their blistering speed and precision.[15]Critics praised The Lucid Collective for its heightened structural complexity, intricate riffing, and adrenaline-fueled rhythms, positioning it as a benchmark for progressivetechnical death metal while maintaining a concise 35-minute runtime that avoided filler. Reviews highlighted the album's balance of mathcore influences and death metal aggression, solidifying Archspire's reputation for pushing instrumental boundaries without sacrificing cohesion.[16][1][17]
Relentless Mutation (2017–2020)
Archspire's third studio album, Relentless Mutation, was released on September 22, 2017, through Season of Mist.[18] The record was recorded at Flatline Audio in Denver, Colorado, from August to September 2016, and produced, engineered, mixed, and mastered by Dave Otero.[19] Featuring eight tracks, the album explores themes of cosmic horror, relentless mutation, and telepathic cults, including concepts like a mind-altering tar-like entity known as "The Drip" that corrupts human consciousness and merges dimensions.[20] Building on the touring momentum from their previous album The Lucid Collective, the band emphasized a more melodic approach in their hyper-technical compositions, refining their collaborative songwriting process to balance complexity with accessibility.[21]Promotion for Relentless Mutation included the band's headline "Relentless Mutation Album Release Tour" in 2017, which spanned Canada and the United States starting September 15.[22] This was followed by additional North American dates and a European headline tour in late 2018, covering countries including Germany, Poland, France, Spain, and the United Kingdom.[23] To support the release, Archspire produced lyric videos and playthroughs for tracks like "Involuntary Doppelgänger" and "Remote Tumour Seeker," highlighting their intricate instrumentation and rapid-fire vocals.[24][25] The album's critical and commercial success was underscored by a Juno Award nomination for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year in February 2018.[26]The period also saw internal developments in the band's dynamics, with members like bassist Jared Smith and guitarist Dean Lamb describing an evolved collaborative approach to crafting their demanding technical structures, drawing from shared influences to enhance cohesion without sacrificing intensity.[27] However, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 disrupted their momentum, leading to cancellations of planned headline tours in Canada, Australia, and other regions, as well as broader European commitments.[28] Amid global lockdowns, the band shifted focus to songwriting, using the downtime to develop material for future releases while adapting to the challenges of remote collaboration.[27]
Bleed the Future (2021–2023)
Amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Archspire intensified their songwriting process, which had begun in 2018, allowing them to finalize material despite global restrictions.[29] The band's fourth studio album, Bleed the Future, was released on October 29, 2021, via Season of Mist, featuring eight tracks including "Drone Corpse Aviator," "Golden Mouth of Ruin," and the title song.[29] Recorded in October and November 2020 at Flatline Audio in Colorado with producer Dave Otero—their second consecutive project together—the album captures a rigorous evolution in technical extremity while adhering to health protocols during travel and sessions.[30] Lyrically, it explores dystopian sci-fi concepts born from vocalist Oli Peters' dream, posing ethical dilemmas on human evolution and technology's pervasive role, without a definitive resolution.[3]In 2022, Bleed the Future garnered significant acclaim, winning the Juno Award for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year at the 51st Annual Juno Awards.[31] The album also secured the Western Canadian Music Award for Metal Artist of the Year, highlighting its impact within the Canadian metal scene.[32] These honors underscored the record's innovative blend of blistering speed and conceptual depth, solidifying Archspire's reputation as tech-death pioneers.As live music resumed post-pandemic, Archspire launched their 2022 North American headline tour, dubbed Tech Trek V, with support from Entheos, Inferi, and Vulvodynia, spanning April 13 to May 14 across the US and Canada.[33] They followed with a European run alongside Decapitated in February, navigating remaining health guidelines to deliver high-velocity performances.[34] This return to touring marked a triumphant shift from earlier disruptions, reconnecting the band with fans through intense, technically demanding sets.The album achieved notable commercial success, debuting at No. 2 on Billboard's Top New Artist Albums chart and No. 29 on the Top Current Album Sales chart, with strong initial sales reflecting heightened visibility.[35] Streaming numbers surged, bolstered by the official full albumpremiere on YouTube and instrumental playthrough videos for tracks like "Drone Corpse Aviator," which fostered deeper fan engagement through online breakdowns of the band's virtuosic elements.[36]
Lineup changes and upcoming album (2024–present)
In September 2024, Archspire announced the departure of their longtime drummer Spencer Prewett after more than 15 years with the band, expressing pride in their shared achievements while seeking a replacement through open auditions.[37][38]On May 27, 2025, the band welcomed Spencer Moore, formerly of Inferi, as their new drummer, highlighting his immediate integration into rehearsals and performance of new material at high speeds, such as a track exceeding 420 beats per minute.[39][40]Following the fulfillment of their contract with Season of Mist, Archspire transitioned to fully independent status in 2025, launching a successful Kickstarter campaign on May 29 to fund production of their fifth studio album, which raised CA$396,326 from 3,610 backers by October 2025, with an estimated release in May 2026.[8][7] This move was enabled by the commercial success of their prior releases, allowing greater creative control.Studio sessions for the new album commenced in 2025, with the band teasing snippets on social media that emphasize themes of independence alongside their signature explorations of technological extremes and rapid instrumentation.[39] Amid these lineup adjustments, Archspire continued songwriting and announced the "Return to Prison Island" Australian tour for early 2026, marking their return to the region.[41]
Musical style
Technical elements and instrumentation
Archspire's sound is characterized by extreme tempos that push the boundaries of technical death metal, particularly in their drumming, where blast beats often exceed 300 beats per minute (BPM). Drummer Spencer Prewett employed intricate patterns, including finger switch blasting and switch blasts, to maintain precision at speeds up to 350 BPM in tracks like "Involuntary Doppelgänger" from Relentless Mutation (2017). These elements create a frenetic energy, with Prewett's style incorporating unorthodox lines and polyrhythms that complement the band's rhythmic complexity, distinguishing Archspire from more straightforward death metal acts. As of 2025, the band features new drummer Spencer Moore, who joined after Prewett's departure in 2024.[42][43][44][39]Guitarists Dean Lamb and Tobi Morelli deliver dissonant, progressive riffs through advanced techniques such as sweep picking, three-finger tapping, and hybrid picking, often drawing on harmonic minor and augmented scales for symmetrical, mutating structures. These riffs feature rapid interplay with the bass, evolving across albums to include melodic spirals and arpeggiated patterns that emphasize technical prowess over conventional heaviness. Bassist Jared Smith (since 2016) utilizes a fretless bass to add ethereal, sliding lines and techniques like double thumbing and two-handed tapping, enhancing the "mutating" quality of the instrumentation during mid-song interludes.[45][3][46]Vocalist Oliver Rae Aleron employs a rapid, percussive delivery that blends high-pitched shrieks, guttural growls, and staccato phrasing to synchronize with the instrumental pace, often described as a "shotgun" style for its explosive intensity. This approach allows lyrics to function almost instrumentally, matching the band's high speeds without sacrificing clarity. The incorporation of odd time signatures, such as 7/4 and 8/4 in Bleed the Future, alongside polyrhythms, further defines their progressive edge, creating dynamic shifts that avoid repetitive structures.[47][48][49]Archspire's production has evolved from a raw, independent aesthetic on their debut All Shall Align (2011), handled in-house, to high-fidelity mixes on later releases. Starting with Relentless Mutation, producer Dave Otero at Flatline Audio in Colorado refined their sound, capturing organic chaos at extreme tempos while ensuring clarity in the dense layers—evident in the polished separation of guitars, bass, and drums on Bleed the Future, recorded in 2020. This progression emphasizes meticulous pre-production to highlight individual technical contributions without over-processing the core aggression.[50][3][42]
Lyrical themes and songwriting
Archspire's lyrics predominantly explore sci-fi and philosophical themes, delving into concepts like collective consciousness, multiversal realities, and dystopian futures shaped by mutation and interdimensional forces. In The Lucid Collective, the narratives center on a coalition of cognitive species across infiniteparallel realities who harness lucid dreaming to forge a unified existence unbound by linear time, where beings coexist as living, dead, and dreaming entities simultaneously; this theme stems from vocalist Oliver Rae Aleron's vivid dreams and probes the human mind's limits in comprehending such infinities.[11] Later works expand this universe, with Relentless Mutation introducing cycles of relentless biological and existential transformation, exemplified by the death cult A.U.M. and internal conflicts like "remote tumours"—abstract manifestations of possessed brain hemispheres hunting their counterparts—blending body horror with futuristic philosophy.[51][52]The band's songwriting weaves these motifs into interconnected storylines that span albums, forming a cohesive lore of escalating cosmic dread. Bleed the Future advances the saga through dystopian visions of humanity's replacement by parasitic reptilian entities called Boanets, whose hypnotic golden blood unveils prophetic futures, while "involuntary doppelgängers"—evil, black-liquid aliens known as the Drip—infect hosts to incite murderous rampages, merging horror with themes of involuntary replication and temporal control.[51] This narrative progression evolves from isolated madness in earlier tracks to collective, interdimensional manipulation, creating layered epics that reward repeated listens for their conceptual depth.Songwriting is primarily driven by guitarists Tobi Morelli and Dean Lamb, who craft intricate riffs and structures emphasizing extreme speed and melody, often starting with beats-per-minute challenges to push technical boundaries while ensuring live playability.[53] Oliver Rae Aleron then contributes lyrics tailored for rhythmic precision, adapting sci-fi narratives to fit the music's frenetic pacing through staccato delivery and wordplay, influenced by experimental hip-hop for clarity amid chaos.[53]The band's lyrical evolution reflects a shift from the straightforward aggression of their 2011 debut All Shall Align, which drew from raw influences like Immolation and Origin to convey primal cosmic delineations, to the more intricate, multiverse-spanning epics of subsequent releases, prioritizing philosophical inquiry over mere brutality.[11]
Band members
Current members
As of 2025, Archspire's active lineup features Oliver Rae Aleron on lead vocals since 2009, known for his versatile extreme vocal range that encompasses rapid-fire distortion, guttural roars, and occasional melodic elements.[54][21][55]Tobi Morelli has played guitar since 2009 and serves as a primary songwriter, crafting the band's signature intricate, high-speed riffs.[56][57][55]Dean Lamb has been the second guitarist since 2009, adding layers of harmonic complexity through technical solos and pinch harmonics that enhance the band's polyrhythmic structures.[58][59][55]Jared Smith joined on bass in 2016, incorporating fretless techniques to deliver precise, melodic lines that underpin the music's frenetic pace.[46][60]Spencer Moore, formerly of Inferi, became the drummer in May 2025 following 2024 lineup adjustments, upholding the band's tradition of high-speed precision drumming.[40][61][55]
Former members
Spencer Prewett joined Archspire as a founding drummer in 2007 and remained with the band until his departure in September 2024, contributing over 15 years to their signature extreme speed and technical precision in drumming.[37] His performances, characterized by relentless blast beats and hyper-fast tempos reaching up to 370 BPM, were foundational to the band's early high-velocity sound and helped establish Archspire as a benchmark for technical death metal drumming.[62] Prewett played on all four studio albums, including the debut All Shall Align (2011), The Lucid Collective (2014), Relentless Mutation (2017), and Bleed the Future (2021), and his departure left a significant void in the band's rhythm section, prompting open auditions for a replacement.[63][64]Shawn Haché served as Archspire's original vocalist from 2007 to 2008, performing live with the band during its formative phase before leaving to join the extreme metal group Mitochondrion. His tenure predated the arrival of current vocalist Oliver Rae Aleron and was limited to the pre-All Shall Align era, contributing to the band's initial development as it transitioned from its original name, Defenestrated, to Archspire in 2009.[65]Jaron "Evil" Good handled bass and backing vocals for Archspire from 2009 to 2014, playing a key role in shaping the low-end drive on the debut album All Shall Align and the follow-up The Lucid Collective.[66] Known for his shredding style on a four-string bass, Good's contributions emphasized the band's progressive and riff-heavy technical elements during their early years.[67] He departed amid health concerns in 2013, though he continued briefly into 2014 before leaving fully.[68][69]Clayton Harder briefly filled the bass position from 2014 to 2015, providing continuity during a transitional period following Good's exit and helping stabilize the rhythm section amid lineup shifts. His short tenure bridged the gap to the arrival of current bassist Jared Smith in 2016, whose addition further solidified the low-end with advanced fingerstyle techniques and integration of guitar-like shredding, enhancing the band's overall technical cohesion post-2014 changes.[70]
Discography
Studio albums
Archspire's debut studio album, All Shall Align, was released on April 14, 2011, through Trendkill Recordings.[71] The record consists of eight tracks, including "Deathless Ringing," "Archspire," and "Tandem in the Infinite," clocking in at approximately 36 minutes and showcasing the band's early technical death metal style with rapid riffs and complex drumming.[72]The band's second album, The Lucid Collective, arrived on April 29, 2014, via Season of Mist, marking their first release with a major label.[73] It features eight tracks such as "Lucid Collective Somnambulation," "Scream Feeding," and "The Polyphonic Tongue," emphasizing intricate guitar work and thematic explorations of consciousness over 35 minutes.[66] This album achieved the band's initial international recognition.Relentless Mutation, Archspire's third studio effort, was issued on September 22, 2017, by Season of Mist.[74] The album comprises eight tracks, highlighted by "Involuntary Doppelgänger," "Remote Tumour Seeker," and the title track, delivering a 33-minute barrage of high-speed technicality and mutational themes. It peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart and earned a nomination for the 2018 Juno Award for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year.[75][76]The fourth album, Bleed the Future, followed on October 29, 2021, once again through Season of Mist.[29] Spanning eight tracks like "Drone Corpse Aviator," "Golden Mouth of Ruin," and "Reverie on the Onyx Star," the 32-minute release pushes boundaries with futuristic sci-fi narratives and blistering tempos.[77] It debuted at number 7 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart, number 5 on the Current Hard Music Albums chart, and number 8 on the Independent Albums chart, while winning the 2022 Juno Award for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year.[35][78]Archspire has teased a fifth studio album for a planned spring 2026 release, funded independently through a Kickstarter campaign launched in May 2025 to support recording with producer Dave Otero and full creative control.[7][79]
Other releases
Archspire has released several promotional singles digitally, primarily to build anticipation for their studio albums. These include "Golden Mouth of Ruin" (2021), "Drone Corpse Aviator" (2021), and "Bleed the Future" (2021), all from the album Bleed the Future, available on platforms like Spotify and Bandcamp.[80][77] Earlier singles from Relentless Mutation encompass "Remote Tumour Seeker" (2017) and "Involuntary Doppelgänger" (2017), also distributed digitally via Season of Mist.[3]The band has produced official music videos and lyric videos for select tracks, serving as standalone visual releases. Notable examples are the lyric video for "Involuntary Doppelgänger" (2017), the premiere video for "Remote Tumour Seeker" (2017), the full music video for "Golden Mouth of Ruin" (2021), the official video for "Drone Corpse Aviator" (2021), and the music video for "Bleed the Future" (2023).[24][81][82][83][84]Archspire appears on the 2017 compilation Zero Tolerance Audio 80 with the track "Involuntary Doppelgänger," released by Zero Tolerance Magazine.[85]In 2025, as the band works independently on their fifth studio album, they have teased upcoming digital singles to promote the release, including snippets shared via social media and YouTube.[86][87] No major EPs, splits, or additional demos beyond these promotional outputs have been released.
Awards and nominations
Juno Award
Archspire received a nomination for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year at the 2018 Juno Awards for their album Relentless Mutation.[88]The band achieved their first Juno win in 2022, taking home the Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year award for Bleed the Future.[89] This victory was announced during the Opening Night Awards ceremony held in Toronto on May 14, 2022, as part of the overall Juno Awards events at the Budweiser Stage.[90] The recognition underscored the growing prominence of the Canadian metal scene, with Archspire competing against notable acts like Spiritbox and Brand of Sacrifice.[91]The Juno win significantly boosted the band's visibility, contributing to a surge in streaming numbers for Bleed the Future and facilitating expanded tour opportunities, including their first Latin American headline run later that year.[92][93]
Western Canadian Music Awards
In 2022, Archspire won the Western Canadian Music Award for Metal & Hard Music Artist of the Year, marking their first nomination and victory in the regional honors.[32][94] The award recognized the band's technical death metal prowess, particularly following the critical and commercial success of their 2021 album Bleed the Future, which had already secured a Juno Award earlier that year.[32][95]The ceremony took place as part of BreakOut West in Calgary, Alberta, highlighting Archspire's Vancouver origins and contributions to British Columbia's metal scene.[94][95] This regional accolade underscored the band's role in elevating Western Canada's extreme metal community, fostering greater visibility for local talent through their high-profile achievements.[32]