Discography | Trivium
The Ultimate Guide to the Trivium Discography Since exploding out of Florida in the early 2000s, Trivium has become a cornerstone of modern heavy metal. Led by frontman Matt Heafy, the band has constantly evolved, blending thrash, metalcore, progressive metal, and melodic death metal.
"Kirisute Gomen," "Down from the Sky," "Shogun." In Waves (2011)
"The Sin and the Sentence", "The Heart From Your Hate", "Beyond Oblivion"
(2003)
Modern groove metal, melodic metalcore, simplified structures.
This article dives deep into the complete , exploring each studio album's impact, sound, and legacy. 1. Ember to Inferno (2003) The Dawn of a New Force
"Silence in the Snow," "Until the World Goes Cold," "Dead and Gone." Legacy: This album saved Matt Heafy’s career. It proved he could sing without destroying his throat. Drummer Mat Madiro (later replaced by Alex Bent) played solid, but safe, beats. Trivium Discography
Showcased Heafy's rebuilt vocal technique and classical singing control. 8. The Sin and the Sentence (2017) The Ultimate Synthesis
The Clean Experiment. In a shocking move, Heafy revealed he had blown his voice out and needed to relearn how to sing. This album features almost exclusively clean singing. It leans heavily into "tragic melody" and power metal influences. While it alienated the "core" fans, it proved Heafy had developed a legitimate, powerful singing voice.
Trivium burst onto the underground scene as teenagers, quickly caught the attention of major metal labels, and released a pair of albums that defined the mid-2000s metalcore boom. Ember to Inferno (2003) The Ultimate Guide to the Trivium Discography Since
To review Trivium’s discography is to watch a band refuse to stay still. They have oscillated between metalcore, thrash, prog, and stadium rock, often taking heat for changing their sound, only to be praised for it years later.
"Silence in the Snow", "Until the World Goes Cold", "Dead and Gone"