... — Avenged Sevenfold - Life Is But A Dream -2023-
How the heaviest band of the 2000s metalcore scene decided to burn down their own rulebook—and found enlightenment in the wreckage.
Not for everyone. Essential for anyone who’s ever wondered what happens when a metal band decides to stop being a metal band.
The result is the most audacious, polarizing, and unexpectedly profound album of their career. The seven-year gap between 2016’s The Stage and Life Is But a Dream was fraught. The pandemic, personal losses, and a collective existential reckoning pushed the band to the brink of creative exhaustion. Guitarist Synyster Gates and frontman M. Shadows have both admitted in interviews that they considered walking away entirely. Avenged Sevenfold - Life Is But A Dream -2023- ...
Across the album’s 53 minutes, the band careens through genres with ADHD abandon. “Mattel” mixes industrial clangor with a soaring, Beatles-esque bridge. “We Love You” is a schizophrenic masterpiece—alternating between a thrumming Daft Punk-esque synth loop, a thrash metal breakdown, and a lounge-jazz piano outro. “Beautiful Morning” channels Alice in Chains’ sludge, while “Cosmic” is a ten-minute prog-epic that floats through Pink Floyd space rock before collapsing into a screaming metalcore finale.
But others—including a surprising number of younger listeners—have hailed it as a masterpiece. It’s an album that rewards repeated, active listening. The chaos is orchestrated. Every bizarre transition and out-of-place synth was argued over, recorded, and re-recorded until it felt wrong in just the right way. How the heaviest band of the 2000s metalcore
“Nobody,” “Cosmic,” “Mattel,” “We Love You”
On “Nobody,” the lead single, he asks: “ Tell me who’s the one to show the way? / No one. ” It’s a defiant anthem of optimistic nihilism. On the brutal closer, “(D)eath,” the album resolves not with a metal fist-pump but with a quiet, synthesized acceptance: an ambient elegy that fades into static, as if the dreamer has finally woken up. The result is the most audacious, polarizing, and
Terrify us, they did. From its first seconds, Life Is But a Dream announces itself as a trickster. The opening title track is a two-minute, solo piano instrumental—a delicate, melancholy waltz that sounds like Debussy scoring a David Lynch film. No guitar heroics. No drums. Just a lonely melody that feels like walking through a dream you can’t wake up from.