Unholy Confessions
"Unholy Confessions" is a heavy metal song by the American band Avenged Sevenfold. It is the opening track on their second studio album, Waking the Fallen (2003), and was released as the lead single on August 2, 2004, through Hopeless Records.[1][2] The track, which runs for 4 minutes and 43 seconds, marked a pivotal shift in the band's sound, incorporating prominent clean vocals by lead singer M. Shadows alongside their signature aggressive style, and it explores themes of infidelity and emotional turmoil in a romantic relationship.[3][4] The song originated from a guitar riff composed by rhythm guitarist Zacky Vengeance, with the chorus developed by M. Shadows during the band's touring schedule, and it was finalized with a heavy breakdown section upon their return home.[4] Lyrically, it depicts a couple's mutual betrayals, as M. Shadows explained that the content drew from general observations of relational deception rather than a specific personal event.[4] Unholy Confessions was the band's first composition to feature predominantly clean singing, distinguishing it from their earlier, more screamo-influenced work on Sounding the Seventh Trumpet (2001).[5] The single was formally issued on August 2, 2004, accompanied by a music video directed by Greg Kaplan, which helped propel the band's visibility after signing with Warner Bros. Records.[6] Critically, Unholy Confessions has been praised for its energetic riffs and anthemic quality, becoming one of Avenged Sevenfold's most enduring live staples, often performed as the final song before encores since its debut on February 25, 2003.[4] It peaked at number 4 on the UK Rock & Metal Singles Chart. M. Shadows told Metal Hammer that he wouldn't say the song is a well-written song, but at the time it worked, with its raw energy resonating strongly with fans and capturing the band's transitional phase toward mainstream success.[4] The track's legacy includes inspiring covers by artists like Jacksepticeye and fan participation in live performances, underscoring its role in defining Avenged Sevenfold's evolution from metalcore roots to broader heavy metal appeal.Background
Writing process
"Unholy Confessions" was primarily written by Avenged Sevenfold's vocalist M. Shadows and rhythm guitarist Zacky Vengeance during the band's early career in 2002-2003.[3][7] The song emerged as part of the creative process for their sophomore album, Waking the Fallen, marking a pivotal moment in the band's development from their punk-influenced debut.[7] The writing sessions took place in informal settings, including band members' homes in Huntington Beach, California, and during the Take Action Tour in early 2003.[7] Zacky Vengeance composed the initial main riff, which the band jammed on in a garage before refining it further in Orange County.[4][7] M. Shadows developed the chorus while on tour, drawing from fragmented sessions where band members worked in separate rooms at their booking agent's house in Chicago; as Shadows later reflected, "We’ve never done that since!"[7] The song was completed with the addition of a heavy breakdown section, which Shadows described as "some stupid, meaty breakdown" to enhance its intensity.[4][7] Initial ideas for the track leaned heavily into the band's metalcore roots, with demo versions emphasizing screamed vocals throughout.[7] However, the final structure evolved to incorporate prominent clean singing in the chorus, representing a deliberate shift toward melodic elements and marking one of the band's earliest experiments with harmonized vocals.[7] This blend drew influences from melodic death metal riffs reminiscent of At the Gates and soaring, twin-guitar melodies inspired by Iron Maiden, helping to distinguish the song within the metalcore landscape.[7] The lyrics stemmed from personal struggles and observations of deception in relationships, reflecting the youthful angst of the band members at the time rather than specific real-life events.[4][7] Shadows noted that the writing captured "pulling from your own angsty little heart" during their formative years, influenced by the dynamics of constant touring and band camaraderie.[7]Recording and production
The recording sessions for "Unholy Confessions" formed part of the production for Avenged Sevenfold's second studio album, Waking the Fallen, which took place over several months in 2003 at studios in Hollywood, California, including Third Stone Recording and Mates Inc.[8] The track was co-produced by the band alongside Andrew "Mudrock" Murdock and Fred Archambault, with Archambault also handling engineering duties assisted by Ai Fujisaki.[9][10] Key production decisions emphasized enhancing the song's intensity through layered guitar harmonies performed by Synyster Gates and Zacky Vengeance, which amplified the track's dual-guitar interplay during riffs and solos.[11] Dynamic contrasts were achieved by transitioning from aggressive breakdowns to melodic choruses, with producers encouraging vocalist M. Shadows to incorporate clean singing in the chorus for added emotional depth—a shift from the band's earlier screaming style that initially met resistance but defined the final sound.[10] The song's dramatic orchestral string intro, arranged by Scott Gilman, drew from classical music elements to create a cinematic opening, while instrumental sections, including extended guitar solos, contributed to its 4:45 runtime.[9] Producers faced challenges in tempering the band's raw, high-energy performances with more structured elements, such as introducing a click track to drummer The Rev's playing to ensure tighter grooves and reduce improvisational fills, ultimately balancing aggression with polish.[10] Demos developed during the pre-production writing phase were handed to the production team for studio refinement, allowing the core riffs and structure to evolve under professional guidance.[10]Composition
Musical structure
"Unholy Confessions" is composed in the key of D minor, employing a harmonic palette typical of metalcore with progressions built on the i, VI, and VII chords.[12][13] The song maintains a base tempo of 93 beats per minute, though its double-time feel in riff sections creates an energetic pace perceived around 186 BPM, with shifts to slower breakdowns for emphasis.[14][15] The structure follows a conventional verse-chorus format augmented by metal elements: it opens with a harmonized guitar intro featuring palm-muted riffs and swells, transitioning into aggressive verses, anthemic choruses, a bridge with dual guitar solos, and an extended outro that fades with layered guitar harmonies.[16] Instrumentation centers on dual lead guitars delivering harmonized riffs and solos by Synyster Gates and Zacky Vengeance, with bass lines by Johnny Christ mirroring the guitar patterns to enhance rhythmic heaviness.[16][17] The Rev's drumming incorporates rapid double bass patterns, particularly in the verses and breakdowns, providing a propulsive foundation that blends metalcore aggression with technical flair.[18] The track fuses metalcore's breakdown-heavy verses—infused with thrash-like riffing for intensity—with progressive metal-inspired clean vocal choruses that offer melodic contrast and harmonic depth.[13][19] This arrangement highlights the band's early evolution, balancing raw energy and intricate layering achieved during recording.[7]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of "Unholy Confessions" center on a tumultuous relationship marked by mutual infidelity, deception, and ensuing guilt, presented through a raw, introspective narrative that evokes a sinner unburdening their conscience. The song opens with a dialogue between lovers parting amid unresolved tension—"I'll try," she said as he walked away, "Try not to lose you"—setting a tone of futile attempts at preservation against inevitable betrayal, as echoed in the line "Nothing tears the being more than deception, unmasked fear." This establishes the core theme of emotional wreckage caused by hidden sins, where the protagonist grapples with the pain of exposing lies, portraying a cycle of hurt that implicates both parties equally.[4][3] Deeper into the track, themes of inescapable guilt and a twisted form of redemption emerge, framed as an "unholy" confession from a tormented soul unwilling to absolve the other. Key verses like "When sin's deep in my blood, you'll be the one to fall" symbolize the protagonist's acknowledgment of their own moral corruption, suggesting that personal failings inevitably drag down those closest, while "Confided in me was your heart, I know it's hurting you but it's killing me" highlights the dual torment of betrayal's aftermath—self-inflicted anguish mirroring the partner's pain. The repeated plea "When the time comes, forgive me" underscores a desire for unholy redemption, not through divine grace but through raw admission, blending vulnerability with defiance in a monologue that refuses easy resolution. This narrative draws on biblical allusions to sin and confession, twisting sacramental elements into something profane to reflect the characters' damned entanglement.[4][3][7] The vocal delivery by M. Shadows amplifies these themes, with screamed verses conveying raw anger and inner turmoil during the confessional buildup, transitioning to cleaner, harmonized choruses that represent a momentary catharsis and plea for forgiveness. This shift marks one of the band's earliest prominent uses of clean vocals in a high-energy track, contrasting their prior screamed-heavy style to mirror the song's emotional arc from confrontation to fragile hope. Influences stem from the band's youthful experiences, as Shadows has described the lyrics as drawn from "angsty little heart" emotions of adolescence, infusing personal relational struggles with dramatic, metal-infused imagery of sin and fallibility without direct ties to external fame pressures at the time.[7][20]Release
Single formats and track listing
"Unholy Confessions" was released as a single on August 2, 2004, by Hopeless Records, primarily as a digital download to promote the album Waking the Fallen.<grok:render type="render_inline_citation">| Side | Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | Unholy Confessions | 4:43 |
| A | 2 | Eternal Rest | 5:12 |
| B | 1 | Eternal Rest (live) | 5:16 |
Promotion and music video
The song "Unholy Confessions" received promotion through radio airplay on rock stations, including KNAC in Southern California, which featured coverage of the band's album Waking the Fallen.[21] It was also supported by extensive touring in 2003 and 2004, as Avenged Sevenfold performed over 100 shows across North America and Europe to promote the album, including appearances on the Warped Tour and other festival circuits.[22] [23] The track made its live debut on February 25, 2003, at the Troubadour in West Hollywood, California, where it was performed alongside other new material from Waking the Fallen.[24] It became a staple in the band's setlists, remaining a regular feature through their 2005 tours.[25] The official music video, directed by Greg Kaplan, was released in 2004 to coincide with the single's launch on August 2.[6] [26] The video intercuts performance footage of the band dressed in white suits inside a church with a narrative storyline involving themes of confession and ensuing chaos, incorporating religious iconography and symbolic scenes of fire and destruction.[27] It premiered on MTV2's Headbangers Ball program later that year, helping to boost the band's visibility in the metal scene.[28]Reception and impact
Critical reviews
Upon its release in 2003 as the lead single from Avenged Sevenfold's album Waking the Fallen, "Unholy Confessions" was praised by critics for its aggressive yet melodic metalcore style, blending heavy riffs, breakdowns, and harmonized choruses. Punknews.org described the album as a "more focused effort" that advances beyond typical metalcore.[29] Punktastic called it a "magnificent" opener full of "evil screaming, beautiful harmonies and epic guitar solos," highlighting its role in fusing heavy music traditions.[30] Rough Edge Review noted the track's contribution to an "epic metal blend" within a hardcore attitude, making it palatable to diverse audiences.[31] In retrospective assessments, the song has been reappraised as a cornerstone of the band's early sound. A 2014 review of the Waking the Fallen: Resurrected reissue by Louder Sound (formerly Metal Hammer) hailed the album as one of the greatest metal releases of the 21st century, emphasizing its fearless ambition.[32] Kerrang! ranked it second among the band's greatest songs in 2020, praising its dynamic structure that merges metalcore roots with grander influences, including runaway guitar leads and melodramatic themes of constriction and plague.[33] Critics commonly praised the song's dynamic structure, which alternates intense verses with soaring choruses.[34] Some noted minor drawbacks, such as the growls occasionally overshadowing the melodies. Song-specific mentions in album reviews from metal outlets like Metal Hammer and Kerrang! contributed to aggregate scores averaging around 4/5 stars for Waking the Fallen.[32]Commercial performance and legacy
"Unholy Confessions" marked a significant commercial milestone for Avenged Sevenfold as the lead single from their 2003 album Waking the Fallen, helping propel the record toward RIAA gold certification for 500,000 units shipped in the United States on July 17, 2009, and later platinum certification for 1,000,000 units on March 17, 2021.[35] The single itself was certified gold by the RIAA for 500,000 units (sales + streaming) on March 17, 2021.[36] While the single did not achieve prominent positions on major Billboard charts, its heavy rotation on MTV2's Headbangers Ball provided the band with their initial breakthrough into mainstream metal audiences, boosting album sales and visibility in the underground scene.[37] The track's legacy endures as a cornerstone of Avenged Sevenfold's evolution, particularly in introducing prominent clean vocals from singer M. Shadows, which foreshadowed the band's departure from pure metalcore toward a more melodic heavy metal style on subsequent releases like City of Evil.[7] Its aggressive riff structure and dynamic shifts have influenced the metalcore genre broadly, with the intro riff becoming a template for later acts blending screamed verses and soaring choruses. Fan and critic acclaim further cements its status; a 2020 Revolver magazine poll ranked it as the top Avenged Sevenfold song, while Kerrang! placed it second in their list of the band's greatest tracks that same year.[38][33] In live performances, "Unholy Confessions" served as a setlist staple from its 2003 debut through 2011, appearing at 580 concerts during that span and embodying the raw energy of the band's early tours.[39] It was largely retired from regular play between 2012 and 2022 amid shifts in the band's catalog but returned triumphantly in 2023 for their 20th-anniversary tour of Waking the Fallen, where it closed many shows and reignited nostalgia among longtime fans, with 37 performances that year. The song's cultural footprint extends to rhythm video games, including its inclusion in Rock Band 3 in 2010, exposing it to a wider gaming audience.[39] Symbolizing the creative peak of Avenged Sevenfold's formative years, "Unholy Confessions" prominently features the drumming of Jimmy "The Rev" Sullivan, whose intricate intro beat and driving rhythms—co-written during band jams—highlight his foundational influence on the group's sound before his tragic death in 2009.[7] This track, alongside others from Waking the Fallen, remains a testament to The Rev's versatility, blending technical prowess with emotional intensity that shaped the band's identity and inspired tributes in their post-2009 work.Personnel
Band members
The performing musicians on the recording of "Unholy Confessions" from Avenged Sevenfold's 2003 album Waking the Fallen consisted of the band's core lineup at the time.- M. Shadows (Matthew Charles Sanders): lead and screamed vocals.[31]
- Synyster Gates (Brian Haner Jr.): lead guitar, backing vocals.[31]
- Zacky Vengeance (Zachary James Baker): rhythm guitar, backing vocals.[31]
- Johnny Christ (Jonathan Seward): bass guitar, backing vocals.[31]
- The Rev (James Owen Sullivan): drums, backing vocals (recorded prior to his death on December 28, 2009).[31][40]
Production credits
The production of "Unholy Confessions," the lead single from Avenged Sevenfold's 2003 album Waking the Fallen, involved several key non-performing staff members responsible for recording, mixing, and mastering the track.[41]| Role | Personnel | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Producer | Andrew Murdock (as Mudrock) | Oversaw overall production.[9] |
| Co-producer | Fred Archambault | Assisted in production duties.[42] |
| Recording engineers | The Gatekeepers | Handled tracking at Third Stone Recording and Mates in Hollywood, California.[9] |
| Mixing engineer | Andrew Murdock (as Mudrock) | Mixed the track.[9] |
| Assistant engineers | Fred Archambault, Ai Fujisaki | Provided support during recording and mixing.[43] |
| Mastering engineer | Tom Baker | Mastered at Precision Mastering in Hollywood, California.[9] |