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Groove metal, half-thrash, or post-thrash is a subgenre of thrash metal which took its current form during the early 1990s. Albums such as Exhorder's Slaughter in the Vatican, Sepultura's Arise, and Artillery's We are the Dead incorporated groovish melodies to thrash metal, however it wasn't until albums like Pantera's Vulgar Display of Power, White Zombie's Devil Music, Vol. 1, and Machine Head's Burn My Eyes that groove metal truly took its musical form.

Unlike thrash metal and many of the other heavy metal subgenres, groove metal is not as riff-oriented. Artists of the genre tend to have a style influenced heavily by mid-tempo thrash riffs, accentuated with down-tuned power chords (Drop D or D standard tuning), synchopated chord patterns, mid-paced guitar solos and dissonant bridges or breakdowns, usually mid-tempo. It is a popular belief that modern hard rock or nu metal spawned from this genre of metal. It should also be noted groove metal is not considered to be thrash despite the fact that it originated from it.

Some consider the works done by later-era Anthrax, Annihilator, Exodus, Kreator, Meshuggah and Overkill to be groove metal as well.

Key artists

Metal subgenres

Groove metal | Groove metal | Groove metal

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Groove metal".

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