Daniel Wilding
Daniel Wilding (born 22 January 1989) is an English extreme metal drummer best known for his role as the longtime drummer of the pioneering death metal band Carcass.[1][2] Born in Kettering, England, Wilding grew up in a musical family where his sisters played piano and his mother and uncle performed on guitar.[3] He began playing drums at the age of 10 after being inspired by a friend's drum kit, initially receiving formal lessons for four years that covered Latin, rock, and jazz styles before becoming largely self-taught in metal techniques such as double bass drumming.[3] By age 16, he joined his first band, the UK death metal group Killing Mode, which was signed to Peaceville Records, and soon after co-founded the black/death metal band Misery.[4] At 17, Wilding became the drummer for the Belgian deathgrind band Aborted, with whom he toured extensively and performed at major festivals including Hellfest, Metal Camp, and Brutal Assault by age 18.[3] Wilding's career has spanned multiple prominent acts in the extreme metal scene, including Trigger the Bloodshed, The Order of Apollyon, The Soulless, Hansen & Friends, Heaven Shall Burn, Rolo Tomassi, and Savage Messiah, contributing to recordings and global tours alongside groups like Behemoth, Vader, and Napalm Death.[1][5] He joined Carcass in 2012, providing drums for their acclaimed albums Surgical Steel (2013) and Torn Arteries (2021), both released via Nuclear Blast Records, and has since headlined major metal festivals worldwide. As of 2025, Wilding continues to tour with Carcass, including performances at festivals like Summer Dying Loud.[2][4][6] Beyond performing, Wilding founded The Extreme Drummers Academy in 2021, an online platform offering metal drumming lessons, masterclasses, courses, and community resources based on his over 20 years of professional experience.[5] He also hosts The Extreme Drummers Podcast, featuring interviews with metal musicians and drummers, and releases new lessons through platforms like Toontrack.[5][7] Wilding endorses equipment from Paiste cymbals, Vic Firth drumsticks, and Tama drums, which he uses in his setups for their responsiveness and durability in high-intensity performances.[8]Biography
Early Life
Daniel Wilding was born on January 22, 1989, in Kettering, England.[1] He was raised in Chichester, West Sussex.[9] He grew up in a highly musical family environment, where his sisters played piano and his mother and uncle performed on guitar.[3] At the age of 10, Wilding discovered his passion for drumming after a close friend acquired a drum kit, which immediately fascinated him.[3] A friend provided initial basic instruction, and after about a year focused on practicing double bass techniques, Wilding began formal lessons that lasted four years.[3] These lessons introduced him to reading music and various styles, including Latin, rock, and jazz.[3][10] Following this structured phase, Wilding shifted his focus to metal music, which he discovered independently, and pursued advanced double bass drumming through self-taught methods using CDs and videos, as no local teachers specialized in those techniques at the time.[3] His early musical interests centered on extreme metal genres such as death metal and grindcore.[3][10] Although he received some formal instruction early on, much of his development in heavier styles was self-directed.[3] By age 16, Wilding had transitioned into his first band, marking the start of his involvement in the local metal scene.[3]Career Beginnings
Daniel Wilding entered the music scene at the age of 16 in 2005, joining the Brighton-based death metal band Killing Mode as their drummer. Formed in 1997, the group had previously secured a deal with Peaceville Records and established itself as a fixture in the UK underground metal circuit, blending aggressive riffs with themes of death, hate, and war.[3][11] During his brief tenure with Killing Mode, which ended with the band's disbandment in 2006, Wilding gained formative experience through high-profile live performances, including support slots for international acts such as Vader, Napalm Death, Behemoth, Nile, and Cannibal Corpse. These shows exposed him to the rigors of professional touring and helped solidify his reputation in the local metal community. The band had recorded ten original songs intended for a full-length album, but internal issues prevented its release, leaving the material unreleased at the time of the split.[4][11] Following Killing Mode's dissolution in 2006, Wilding co-founded the black/death metal band Misery that year, also based in Brighton. The group quickly produced and independently released their debut EP, A State of Suffering, on Thirty Days of Night Records in 2006, distributed across major UK and European stores. Wilding contributed significantly to songwriting on the EP, demonstrating early compositional talent alongside his drumming prowess. Misery's run was equally short-lived, with the band disbanding later that year due to similar challenges faced by their predecessor.[3] These initial endeavors in the UK metal underground allowed Wilding to develop his technical expertise in extreme metal drumming, focusing on double-bass techniques and high-speed precision that would define his style. His involvement in local performances and grassroots releases built a foundation in the scene, paving the way for his transition to broader recognition with Aborted in 2007.[3]Rise to Prominence
In 2007, Daniel Wilding joined the Belgian death metal band Aborted, where he contributed to their evolving sound in the technical death metal genre by recording the album Strychnine.213, released in 2008 through Century Media Records.[12] His drumming on tracks like "Ophiolatry on a Hemocite Platter" emphasized the band's shift toward more intricate blast beats and complex rhythms, blending grindcore aggression with technical precision.[13] Wilding departed Aborted in 2009 to pursue other opportunities, having solidified his reputation as a versatile extreme metal drummer during his two-year tenure. Following his exit from Aborted, Wilding simultaneously joined several prominent acts, showcasing his ability to balance session and full-time commitments across the death metal spectrum. In 2008, he became the drummer for the blackened death metal band The Order of Apollyon, contributing until 2014; in 2009, he linked up with UK technical death metal outfit Trigger the Bloodshed; and by 2011, he recorded with melodic death metal group The Soulless.[9] This period of multi-band involvement highlighted his demand in the underground scene, as he navigated touring schedules and studio sessions without compromising performance quality. Starting in 2011, Wilding also served as the touring drummer for German metalcore band Heaven Shall Burn, performing at major festivals including Hellfest and Metal Camp, which expanded his live experience and network in European metal circuits.[2] Wilding's career reached a significant milestone in 2012 when he joined legendary grindcore/death metal pioneers Carcass as their permanent drummer, a role he has held continuously, making him the band's longest-serving drummer as of 2025.[14] With Carcass, he played on critically acclaimed albums such as Surgical Steel (2013) and Torn Arteries (2021), both released via Nuclear Blast Records, where his precise, high-speed drumming anchored the band's resurgence in the genre.[15] In recent years, Wilding has remained active with Carcass on the North American Putrefaction Tour in September and October 2025, alongside special guests Brujeria, Necrot, and Hedonist.[16] He has also expanded into education, offering drum lessons through collaborations with Toontrack's Metal Month series and his own Extreme Drummers Academy platform, providing weekly metal drumming tutorials and masterclasses from 2024 onward.[17] These endeavors underscore Wilding's enduring impact as a foundational figure in death metal and grindcore, bridging performance, recording, and mentorship for emerging extreme metal artists.[2]Personal Life
Daniel Wilding resides in England, where he maintains a base amid the demands of international touring. He is married and has two sons.[9] Balancing the rigors of life on the road with personal commitments presents significant challenges for Wilding, as he has described the musician's lifestyle as "very hard [and] unpredictable." Despite these difficulties, he values the opportunity to return home and spend time relaxing with friends and family.[18][3] Outside of performing, Wilding pursues drumming education through The Extreme Drummers Academy, an online platform he founded in 2024 to teach metal drumming techniques to students of all levels via lessons, courses, masterclasses, and community interactions.[5]Musical Style and Equipment
Drumming Style and Influences
Daniel Wilding's drumming is characterized by blistering double-bass speed and intricate blast beats, which form the foundation of his aggressive yet musically integrated approach in extreme metal genres such as deathgrind and melodic death metal.[2] He emphasizes precision in high-tempo patterns, often incorporating single-stroke rolls around the kit and quadruplet-based fills to maintain momentum without sacrificing clarity, as seen in his breakdown of core techniques like thrash beats and orchestrated quads.[19] This style balances raw power with groove elements, allowing him to support complex riffs while adding dynamic accents and variations on snare and kick patterns.[3] Wilding's influences draw from a mix of rock, punk, and extreme metal drummers, reflecting his transition from conventional lessons to self-taught metal techniques starting around age 14.[3] Key early inspirations include Joey Jordison for relentless speed and aggression, Andols Herrick for groove-laden heaviness, and Travis Barker for punk-infused energy, alongside broader figures like Lars Ulrich and Dave Grohl who shaped his foundational sense of rhythm and dynamics.[3] Among his favorite contemporary players, he has cited Dirk Verbeuren for technical versatility, Gil Sharone for innovative extreme patterns, and Brann Dailor for progressive integration, influences that inform his preference for tight, live-endurable performances.[3] Over his career, Wilding's style has evolved from the raw, chaotic double-bass intensity of his teenage years in bands like Misery—where he focused on building speed through paradiddles and accent shifts—to a more polished precision honed during extensive touring and recordings with Aborted and Carcass.[3] In later work, such as Carcass's Surgical Steel, he refined blast beat variations and double-bass grooves to enhance melodic structures, prioritizing endurance for long sets while pushing technical boundaries in blackened death and deathcore contexts.[2] This progression underscores his contributions to the genre, where he has advanced the integration of complex footwork with cohesive band dynamics, influencing a new generation of extreme metal drummers through educational resources like his Extreme Drummers Academy.[2]Endorsements and Setup
Daniel Wilding has maintained a long-standing endorsement with Tama Drums since the early 2010s, favoring their Starclassic series for both studio recordings and live tours.[20] His typical configuration includes a 22" x 18" bass drum (often doubled), rack toms in 10" x 7", 12" x 8", and 13" x 9" sizes, a 16" x 16" floor tom, and a 14" x 6" Starphonic snare, as used on Carcass's 2013 album Surgical Steel.[21] As of August 2024, his setup features Tama Starclassic Maple in Piano White with 22” x 18” bass drums (x2), 10” x 7”, 12” x 8” rack toms, 16” x 16” floor tom, and a Starphonic snare.[22] For cymbals, Wilding switched to Paiste in August 2021, becoming an official artist with the brand.[8] His current Paiste setup features a 15" Formula 602 Modern Essentials Hi-Hat, 18" Signature Full Crash, 10" 2002 Splash, 22" Signature Blue Bell Ride, 18" Signature Wild Crash, 16" Swiss Flanger, and 18" Heavy China, providing a versatile sound suited to extreme metal's demands in live and recorded settings.[8] Prior to Paiste, he endorsed Sabian and Meinl cymbals, with stage-used Sabian pieces from earlier tours available through his official merchandise.[20] Wilding uses Evans drumheads across his kit, including models with dampening for controlled tone in high-intensity playing.[23] He favors Vic Firth sticks, particularly the Extreme 5B nylon-tip model, which offers durability for the fast, aggressive strokes required in extreme metal.[24][25] As part of his endorsements, which remain active as of November 2025 with Tama, Paiste, Vic Firth, and Evans, Wilding participates in clinics and educational content, including drum playthrough videos like the official 2021 cam for Carcass's "Torn Arteries," showcasing his Tama and Paiste setup.[4][26] He employs custom configurations of his endorsed gear for Carcass tours, adapting to varying stage demands.[26]Discography
With Killing Mode and Misery
Daniel Wilding joined the UK death metal band Killing Mode as drummer in 2005, contributing to the group until its end in 2006; the band produced no official releases during his tenure.[11] Subsequently, Wilding performed drums and co-wrote material for the black metal band Misery on their independent debut EP A State of Suffering, released in 2006 via Thirty Days of Night Records.[3][27] The EP's track listing is as follows:- "Dishonour Thy Father, Pigs!"
- "In The Glow Of Burning Churches"
- "Drowned By Fire"
- "The Night Of Dying Eyes"