Lamb Of God - Europe 2026
Haus Auensee, Gustav-Esche-Straße 6, 04159 Leipzig Kort
mán. 03.08.2026 19:00
Support: Thy Art Is Murder, Bleed From Within & Fit For An Autopsy
US-amerikanischen Groove-Metal Pioniere im August 2026 für eine Show in Leipzig
Lamb of God gehören zweifelsfrei zu den größten und wichtigsten Metalbands der USA. Mit ihrem oft als Groove-Metal kategorisierten Sound und Einflüssen aus Thrash Metal und Metalcore hat die Band die NWOAHM (New Wave Of American Heavy Metal) maßgeblich angetrieben und sich in den 2000er-Jahren einen ikonischen Status erarbeitet. Alben wie „Ashes Of The Wake“ (2004) und „Sacrament“ (2006) gelten als wahre Klassiker der Band und haben mit Songs wie „Laid to Rest“, „Redneck“ und „Walk with Me In Hell“ regelrechte Metalhits etabliert. Dafür sprechen auch fünf Nominierungen bei den Grammy Awards für die beste Hard Rock/Metal Performance sowie zwei Goldene Schallplatten in den USA. Nach eigenen Tourneen um die ganze Welt, Supportslots für Metal-Legenden wie Slayer und Metallica sowie Performances auf den wichtigsten Rockfestivals der Welt kommen Lamb of God im Sommer 2026 für eine exklusive Show nach Deutschland. Am 3. August werden die US-Amerikaner aus Richmond, Virginia mit Thy Art Is Murder, Bleed From Within und Fit For An Autopsy als Supports im Leipziger Haus Auensee live zu sehen sein. Ein bockstarkes Package, das modernen Metal in all seiner Vielfalt und Brutalität regelrecht zelebriert.
Allen Widrigkeiten zum Trotz, wie der Inhaftierung von Sänger Randy Blythe (2012) oder dem Ausstieg des Schlagzeugers und Gründungsmitglieds Chris Adler (der 2019 durch Art Cruz ersetzt wurde), blieben Lamb of God sich und ihren Werten durchweg treu. Als die Band 2000 ihr Debütalbum „New American Gospel“ veröffentlichte, änderten sie die Regeln des US-amerikanischen Metals grundsätzlich. Spätestens mit ihrem zweiten Album „As The Palaces Burn“ avancierten sie zur Speerspitze der NWOAHM und wurden mit den markanten Riffs der Gitarristen Mark Martonund Willie Adler, Chris Adlers groovigem Drumming, John Campbells präzisem Basssound und Randy Blythesprovokanten Lyrics weltbekannt. 2004 erschien „Ashes Of The Wake“ und kurbelte den weltweiten Erfolg weiter an, den die Band 2006 mit „Sacrament“ nahtlos bestätigte. 2009 folgte „Wrath“ und brachte der Band mit Platz 2 der Billboard 200 und Platz 1 der US-Rock-Charts ihre bisher höchste Chartplatzierung. Auch „Resolution“ (2012) und „VII: Sturm und Drang“ (2015) landen auf Platz 1 der Rock-Charts und in den Top-3 der Billboard 200. 2020 wurde ihre Self-Titled Platte „Lamb of God“ mit Platz 7 zum bestplatzierten Album der Band in den deutschen Albumcharts und lieferte mit „Memento Mori“ einen weiteren Hit. Im Jahr 2022 erschien ihr aktuelles Werk „Omens“, das sich „in eine makellose Diskographie einreiht und mit den sozialkritischen Texten der Band auch textlich einiges zu bieten hat“, so laut.de. Mit ihren neuen Singles „Sepsis“ und „Parasocial Christ“ veröffentlichten Lamb of God im Herbst 2025 neues Material und deuten damit bereits auf die mögliche Ankündigung ihres zehnten Studioalbums.
Flytjendur
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Lamb of GodFar from holy, Lamb of God are a metal band from Virginia, US. They are recognized as being part of the New Wave of American Heavy Metal movement.
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Bleed From Within
Pure Scottish Metal.
Twitter @bleedfromwithin
Instagram @bleedfromwithin
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Fit for an Autopsy
The crushing music of Fit For An Autopsy is for any fan of extreme metal, its sound and fury is absolutely unflinching in purpose. The band expertly blends excessive, force-fueled death metal with atmospheric groove and impassioned personal diatribes, reflecting back the dark state of current events. Their fifth studio album, The Sea Of Tragic Beasts, doesn’t waste time with fantasy bullshit or cliché gore horror. Fit For An Autopsy are metal guys, to be certain, but they grew up in the hardcore scene. They embrace the responsibility to put as much devoted purpose into their lyrics and message as they do into their dense, heady, songs, forging a magnificently powerful new "post-deathcore."
“When I write a song, I’m trying to feel emotionally connected to it. I really don’t like saying things that don’t matter over music that I want to matter,” says Will Putney, producer/guitarist, principal songwriter and co-founder. “We’ve always addressed serious topics going back to our first album. Anyone who really looks around at the current state of the world should be able to relate to the aggression, anger, frustration, and sadness often communicated in our music."
Putney’s fellow guitarist/co-founder, Patrick Sheridan, strongly agrees. He emphasizes that while the music of Fit For An Autopsy may evolve it will always be aggressive and will always have purpose. “We think it's important to carry that torch. Somebody's got to say something about what's going on. If you're not using your music, which is a great platform, for something meaningful that you care about on some level, then you're wasting it.”
The six men of the New Jersey based group – which includes vocalist Joe Badolato, bassist Peter Spinazola, third guitarist Tim Howley, and drummer Josean Orta – put maximum intentionality into everything they do. They are constantly challenging themselves as musicians, adding to the band’s overall creative arsenal, connecting with audiences around the world, and supporting one another in the band as individual people.
Fit For An Autopsy first summoned one of the most crushing takes on the then-burgeoning deathcore genre with their 2008 demo and the following year’s self-released Hell On Earth EP, which led to a deal with The Red Chord vocalist Guy Kozowyk’s Black Market Activities label.
Their debut album The Process Of Human Extermination earned them a place among the genre’s giants, cementing them as energizing leaders rather than stale followers. As MetalSucks observed: “The band’s brutal, glowering take on [deathcore] reminded [us] of the squandered potential of the genre. Hardcore grooves and swagger, when incorporated correctly, blend quite well with death metal.” Fit For An Autopsy’s determined drive, work ethic, and devilishly unmistakable talent next elicited the attention of Good Fight/eOne, the group’s home starting with their sophomore album.
On Hellbound, Fit For An Autopsy expanded their commanding approach to death metal with hints of various sub-genres by absorbing increasingly diverse elements, from the rhythmic experimentalism of Gojira to the aggressive post-Noisecore of Converge, with a dose of the New Wave Of Swedish Death Metal, and a touch of groove unique to the New Jersey six-piece. The group began to cut their teeth on the road, racking up several full US tours with the likes of The Acacia Strain, Thy Art Is Murder, Whitechapel, Suicide Silence, and Crowbar. Towards the end of this album cycle, the touring took its toll on original frontman Nate Johnson, who amicably split from the band.
Rather than take a step back, the third studio album Absolute Hope Absolute Hell served as the recorded introduction of the defining powerhouse vocalist Joe Badolato, whose impressive range helped destroy all remaining self-imposed doubts and boundaries. It’s something the group’s instrumental members had yearned to do as even as they prepared the material prior to enlisting their new singer.
Absolute Hope Absolute Hell cracked the Top 20 on the Hard Rock Albums chart and hit #3 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart. As Putney often noted in interviews, the record stood defiantly apart from those that offered little more than thirty minutes of blast beats and breakdowns.
Sure, that kind of nonstop pummeling has its place, but Fit For An Autopsy concentrated their focus less on crazy tempo changes and more on atmosphere and vibe, keeping one foot in the crushingly heavy arena while drawing more deeply from traditional metal influences, post-rock, and esoteric nuance. In 2015, the same year as Metal Injection and other tastemakers hailed the group’s progression, Fit For An Autopsy joined the Stronger Than Faith Tour with Suicide Silence, Emmure, and Within The Ruins, followed by a co-headlining tour with Aborted, a trek with Old Wounds, and the Tune Low Die Slow Tour with Acacia Strain and Counterparts.
“Being out there touring, I can say that our fans have been very accepting of each change and progression,” Sheridan notes proudly. “I’m very grateful, as oftentimes bands are scrutinized heavily as they evolve. We definitely took a step in a direction that people were excited about, and will continue to do so.”
Putney points to Absolute Hope Absolute Hell as a definitive moment in the band’s career when they truly came into their own. “I like the earlier records a lot but we were definitely lumped in with a lot of similar-sounding bands at the time. I was happy that we were able carve our own path a little bit more on the last album, which we carry with confidence into the future.”
Between Absolute Hope Absolute Hell and its follow-up The Great Collapse, the group’s members were able to broaden their creative horizons even further with what became known as “The Depression Sessions,” a uniquely collaborative project that combined Fit For An Autopsy with their friends in Thy Art Is Murder and The Acacia Strain. Jettisoning the cutthroat competitiveness that often gets between bands, the trio of extreme metal acts joined forces for experimental sessions more akin in spirit to the jazz greats and hip-hop artists, but within the context of heavy music.
All of that collaboration and experimentation – to say nothing of Putney’s accomplishments as an in-demand genre producer whose credits include work with both of the bands who joined them in “The Depression Sessions,” among other genre standouts – led to an all new focus on the band’s fourth album, The Great Collapse.
“Iron Moon” is an aggressive shot across the bow of the status quo, railing against the mundane servitude of the 9-to-5 grind, yearning for a life of meaning and purpose. It’s as anti-establishment in tone as the album is in sound. Fit For An Autopsy break with genre convention even as they reshape and redefine their chosen sonic landscape. “Heads Will Hang” confronts the worldwide refugee problem, demanding empathy, placing the listener in the shoes of someone displaced from their home, hungry to escape into a safer life. “When the Bulbs Burn Out” expresses the group’s deep concerns or conservationism sustainability. “Black Mammoth” was inspired by the conscientious activism of the Dakota Access Pipeline protestors. Other tracks are more abstract lyrically, but no song on The Great Collapse is without intensity.
The album’s underlying death metal foundation serves as strong support for its more adventurous forays into chaotic hardcore, bits of deathcore, and a meditative, almost droning rumination not unlike the best of shoegaze and desert rock, like a hazy collision between Queens Of The Stone Age and Russian Circles. The omnipresence of rock titans Tool weaves in and out in powerful doses, with The Great Collapse inviting ever more favorable comparisons to Gojira, a band whose evolutionary trajectory is not dissimilar from Fit For An Autopsy’s path.
Two extensive years of touring followed this release, which debuted at an impressive position of #47 on the billboard top 200. The band circled the globe multiple times, covering an ever expansive fan base opening for the likes of Trivium, Arch Enemy, Hatebreed, Sepultura, and Architects. European festivals, a successful headliner, and another coheadliner with Unearth followed suite.
The band buckled down in the fall of 2018 to prepare what may just be their defining moment, the Nuclear Blast Records debut The Sea Of Tragic Beasts. The intention of Fit For An Autopsy to truly carve their own path appears to have been triumphantly realized.
The title track wastes no time demonstrating the unbridled primitive aggression and intensity the group has come to perfect. "Mirrors" weaves in and out of saddened passages, chaotic metal, and atmospheric epicness, all while maintaining thoughtful expressions on the human condition. "Shepherd" could very well go down as a melodic death metal classic, and it's cascade into the deeply impassioned "Your Pain Is Mine" is a shining testament to this band's versatility and musical prowess. Socially conscience themes are once again abundant and blunt. There's an underlying urgency to the personal exploration on this album, and an almost desperation to the tone and delivery of Badolato that truly breaks down the boundaries of extreme music, and crosses into a much more connected conduit with the listener. One thing is clear at the end of this 45 minute journey, there is no stopping Fit For An Autopsy from their realizing their vision as musicians. And in all honesty, who would want to.
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Thy Art Is MurderThy Art Is Murder ascended the ranks of extreme metal's top tier bands with a meteoric underground rise as explosive as humankind's seemingly inevitable descent into doom and death. With their new album, Godlike, Australia's most harrowingly brutal export since George Miller's Mad Max franchise invites audiences worldwide to join them in a fresh Armageddon. The sixth explosive album in the band's arsenal, Godlike cements Thy Art Is Murder as death metal's modern torchbearers. A soundtrack to a divisive post-modern dystopia, Godlike sees Thy Art Is Murder explore new depths and dynamics without sacrificing an ounce of intensity or urgency the band have staked their career on.