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8 bands found
Riverside, California's Alien Ant Farm rode their genre-bending cover of Michael Jackson's 'Smooth Criminal' to mainstream success in 2001, but the band's original material was far more adventurous than that hit suggested. Their debut 'ANThology' blended nu-metal riffs with funk, punk, and alternative rock in unpredictable ways. Frontman Dryden Mitchell's acrobatic stage presence and eclectic vocal style set them apart from the heavier acts they toured alongside.
Coal Chamber were among the first wave of nu-metal bands to emerge from Los Angeles in the mid-'90s, pairing Dez Fafara's sneering vocals with dark, gothic-tinged riffs and industrial textures. Their 1997 self-titled debut and follow-up 'Chamber Music' helped establish the nu-metal blueprint alongside peers like Korn and Deftones. Though Fafara went on to greater commercial success with DevilDriver, Coal Chamber's grimy, theatrical take on heavy music remains a touchstone of the era.
FEVER 333 formed in Inglewood, California in 2017, founded by ex-Letlive vocalist Jason Aalon Butler alongside guitarist Stephen Harrison (the Chariot) and drummer Aric Improta (Night Verses), performing their first show in a U-Haul truck in a donut shop parking lot on July 4th. The band's sound merges rap metal, post-hardcore, and political punk in the tradition of Rage Against the Machine, addressing racism, systemic violence, and social inequality with pointed directness on their debut EP Made an America (2018) and full-length Strength in Numb333rs (2019). Both Harrison and Improta departed in 2022, and Butler rebuilt the band with a new lineup — including former The Mars Volta drummer Thomas Pridgen — releasing the second album Darker White in 2024.
Bakersfield, California's Korn essentially invented nu-metal in the mid-1990s, fusing downtuned seven-string guitar grooves, hip-hop rhythms, and Jonathan Davis's anguished, cathartic vocals into something rock had never heard before. Their self-titled 1994 debut and 'Follow the Leader' reshaped the entire landscape of heavy music, selling tens of millions of records worldwide. Three decades and fourteen albums later, Korn remain one of the most influential and commercially successful acts in modern metal history.
San Diego's P.O.D. (Payable On Death) fused nu-metal, reggae, hip-hop, and their Christian faith into a genre-bending sound that broke through to mainstream dominance with 2001's 'Satellite,' which sold over three million copies. Sonny Sandoval's impassioned vocal delivery and Marcos Curiel's inventive guitar work, blending Latin and world music inflections into heavy riffs, gave the band a warmth and diversity that set them apart from their nu-metal contemporaries. Their Grammy-nominated catalog and enduring hits like 'Alive' and 'Youth of the Nation' have kept P.O.D. relevant across generations of rock fans.
Vacaville, California's Papa Roach shot to stardom with 2000's 'Infest,' whose lead single 'Last Resort' became one of the defining songs of the nu-metal era with its unflinching lyrics about suicide and desperation. Jacoby Shaddix's raw, confessional vocal style and the band's willingness to evolve through punk, electronic, and pop-rock phases have kept them commercially relevant for over two decades. With multiple platinum certifications and consistent arena-level touring, Papa Roach have far outlasted the nu-metal movement they helped popularize.
Los Angeles industrial metal outfit Spineshank were a key part of the late-1990s/early-2000s Roadrunner Records roster, blending Fear Factory's mechanized precision with nu-metal's groove and electronic textures. Albums like 'The Height of Callousness' and 'Self-Destructive Pattern' showcased a band more technically accomplished and sonically adventurous than many of their nu-metal peers, incorporating drum machines, samples, and atmospheric programming alongside crushing guitar riffs. After disbanding in 2004 and briefly reuniting, Spineshank left behind a catalog that rewards revisiting for fans of the industrial-metal crossover era.
Static-X combined industrial metal's mechanical precision with nu-metal's groove-heavy bounce and Wayne Static's iconic towering hair to become one of the late-1990s heavy scene's most distinctive acts. Their 1999 debut 'Wisconsin Death Trip' went platinum on the strength of 'Push It' and 'I'm with Stupid,' delivering a relentless, pummeling energy that set them apart from their more angst-driven contemporaries. Following Wayne Static's death in 2014, the remaining members have continued the band's legacy with a masked vocalist, honoring their late frontman's vision while introducing the band to new audiences.
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California Metal Index is an index of California heavy metal bands — death metal, black metal, thrash metal, doom metal, metalcore, hardcore punk, and all heavy music. Browse bands by genre, find metal concerts near you, and discover the California metal scene.