By 1998, radio (KROQ-type stations), MTV ( Total Request Live ), and the Ozzfest touring festival had fully embraced nu metal. It was the first metal subgenre since glam to sell millions to suburban teenagers.
A new wave of bands, many of whom were kids when nu metal peaked, now embrace and modernize the sound: metal evolution nu metal
| Band | Style | Key Track | |------|-------|------------| | | Nu + mathcore + industrial | “Virus://Vibrance” | | Tallah | Nu metalcore with intense rap vocals | “Overconfidence” | | Tetrarch | Melodic nu metal (Korn + Deftones) | “I’m Not Right” | | Wargasm (UK) | Digital nu metal + punk energy | “Spit.” | | Graphic Nature | Nu metal + modern metalcore breakdowns | “Killing Floor” | | Bloodywood | Indian folk + nu metal + rap (from New Delhi) | “Gadaar” | By 1998, radio (KROQ-type stations), MTV ( Total
This guide is structured chronologically and thematically, from Metal’s "need for change" to Nu Metal’s ultimate implosion and its 2020s revival. Why Metal Needed a Mutation Why Metal Needed a Mutation | Band |
| Band | Album | Year | Key Innovation | |------|-------|------|----------------| | | Korn | 1994 | The blueprint. Jonathan Davis’s scat-rapping, Fieldy’s slap-bass percussion, Head & Munky’s dissonant, detuned 7-string riffs. Song: “Blind.” | | Deftones | Adrenaline | 1995 | Added atmospheric shoegaze textures and Chino Moreno’s sensual/aggressive duality. Less hip-hop, more art-rock. | | Sepultura | Roots | 1996 | Brazilian groove metal + indigenous percussion + guest vocals from Korn’s Davis. The bridge between death metal and nu. | | Coal Chamber | Coal Chamber | 1997 | Dark, gothic-lite imagery with simple, bouncy riffs. “Loco” became a minor hit. | Part 3: The Explosion & Commercial Peak (1998–2001) Nu Metal Takes Over the World