6 best new songs right now: 4/12/24 | Revolver

6 best new songs right now: 4/12/24

Kerry King, Thursday, Cane Hill and more
cane hill 2024 PROMO, Daniel DeRusso
Cane Hill, 2024
photograph by Daniel DeRusso

Here at Revolver, we're always on the hunt for new songs to bang our heads to — indeed, it's a big part of our jobs. With that in mind, here are the tracks released this week in death metal, hardcore, nu-metal and more that have been on heavy rotation at Revolver HQ.

For your listening pleasure, we've also compiled the songs in an ever-evolving Spotify playlist.

Kerry King - "Residue"

The second taste of Kerry King's long-awaited From Hell I Rise solo album takes the tempo down quite a bit from the thrash attack of "Idle Hands," but the Slayer co-founder has also always reveled in the slow-dread pace of something like "Residue," not just pedal-to-the-floor whiplash.

The whole band locks into a menacing crush here — check Paul Bostaph double-kicking like a maniac, or Mark Osegueda rasping through terrorscape visions of "blood-stained crusades" — but it's still Kerry's show. And the King expertly fires off pure-evil hooks aplenty, ahead of a lyrical solo that naturally gets wickedly whammy-bar wonky.

Architects - "Curse"

When Architects announced that their latest single was produced by former Bring Me the Horizon keyboardist Jordan Fish, metalcore fans' heads started spinning at the sonic possibilities of the mega-sized crossover collab. And honestly, "Curse" lives up to that heady pedigree.

The track is an outright killer that dives through a ton of different aesthetics —from drop-tuned crystallized pop hooks, to some of the girthiest, East Sussex-scented slam riffs of recent vintage. If the partnership with Fish continues like this, we gladly accept the curse.

Halo Bite - "Love Lighter"

"Love Lighter" sure taps into the "fun hardcore punk from the 518" tag Albany quintet Halo Bite gave themselves. The band's latest single — the first to preview their upcoming Winner's Circle EP — smashes by on cathartically crusty melodies, spider-knuckled guitar mania, and even a smooth-ass, if mega-distorted, Latin swing breakdown.

Then again, lead screamer J. Kaiser upends the pastel-pink-chain-punk aesthetic with self-disgusted wordplay and various damned-if-you-do conundrums. Either way, it was recorded at God City studios, and sounds positively massive.

Wage War - "NAIL5"

Wage War's latest single finds them — in their words — "continuing to push the envelope in every way," and between its mercurial synth-bending, subversively pop-inflected sing-rapping, and skin-piercing riffplay, we've got to agree.

In contrast to March's radio-ready "Magnetic," the Floridian metalcore contortionists went full-on wrecking crew with the Rammstein-level industrialized heaviness of "NAIL5," and the second STIGMA tease seems intent on drawing blood.

"No one is safe": Indeed.

Thursday - "Application for Release From the Dream"

None of you expected a brand-new Thursday single to come out this week either, right?

The iconic New Jersey post-hardcore troupe surprise-announced their comeback single — and first new music in 13 years — just yesterday, and put themselves in perma-repeat mode this weekend while working through arena-sized rock grandeur, inspirational gang-vocal trade-offs and a smidge of vintage screamo — all driven by the Rickliest of ceiling-cracking Geoff Rickly vocals.

It's a one-off single for now, but the currently unsigned Thursday say there's more music on the way.

Cane Hill - "Midnight Sun"

Though Cane Hill's "Midnight Sun" single dropped a couple days after this week's big eclipse, the Louisiana group's latest gloomily anthemic stomp-out nevertheless cast an ominous shadow of its own.

Their "Sun" phases between Elijah Witt's insinuating, auto-tuned cleans and emotionally agonized cries ("I can feel your claws dig into me"), while the rest of the band plunge into recklessly retro-futuristic Nineties heaviness and survival-mode djenting. A darkly rhythmic addition to the NOLA nu-groovers' setlist.