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Genre

djent

Top Djent Artists

Showing 25 of 2,122 artists
1

1.1 million

3.5 million listeners

2

Architects

United Kingdom

1.3 million

2.8 million listeners

3

Gojira

France

1.8 million

2.3 million listeners

4

Wage War

United States

639,951

1.3 million listeners

5

Polyphia

United States

1.4 million

1.2 million listeners

6

Currents

United States

348,689

1.1 million listeners

7

Fit For A King

United States

508,761

1.1 million listeners

8

Polaris

Australia

412,027

1.0 million listeners

9

ERRA

United States

324,690

996,288 listeners

10

365,187

843,004 listeners

11

Silent Planet

United States

239,055

688,017 listeners

12

Jinjer

Ukraine

828,873

634,414 listeners

13

844,989

577,802 listeners

14

August Burns Red

United States

778,773

568,543 listeners

15

Thornhill

Australia

210,429

565,428 listeners

16

Volumes

United States

208,092

547,293 listeners

17

Northlane

Australia

380,063

457,608 listeners

18

Chelsea Grin

United States

564,245

426,461 listeners

19

Emmure

United States

382,856

407,149 listeners

20

Soen

Sweden

324,851

405,773 listeners

21

The Browning

United States

205,767

403,250 listeners

22

Alpha Wolf

Australia

213,491

394,421 listeners

23

296,037

386,758 listeners

24

165,413

374,807 listeners

25

Periphery

United States

547,248

353,389 listeners

About Djent

Djent is a subgenre of progressive metal defined by a tight, highly rhythmic guitar sound: palm-muted, downtuned riffs played on seven- or eight-string guitars, often locking into dense, staccato grooves. The texture tends to be weighty and percussive, with poly-rhythms, shifting meters, and a clockwork precision that invites close listening. Vocals range from harsh growls to clean textures, but the defining feature remains the guitar lattice: machine-like in attack, yet capable of surprising melodic nuance when paired with bass and drums.

Djent began surfacing in the mid-2000s from the worldwide progressive-metal underground, growing out of the template laid by Meshuggah. The term “djent” itself is an onomatopoeia for the distinctive palm-muted, down-tuned guitar sound; its origin is debated, but it became a widely used label in online communities and metal circles to describe the sound and the scene that formed around it.

Musically, the key ingredients include extended-range guitars (7- or 8-strings are common, and lower tunings are not unusual), tight palm-muting, and a focus on rhythmic complexity. The drums often provide relentless, precisely articulated patterns, with polymeters and rapid tempo changes that can feel like a mathematical exercise as much as a groove. While the core is heavy and aggressive, many djent bands incorporate textures from thrash, metalcore, jazz fusion, and ambient music, creating a spectrum from brutal anthems to intricate, airy passages.

If you’re tracing the lineage, you’ll encounter a roster of bands that are frequently cited as ambassadors. Meshuggah, the Swedish trio turned global touchstone, essentially defined the template in the late 1990s and early 2000s with albums like Nothing and obZen. SikTh, from the United Kingdom, helped lay the groundwork in the mid- to late-2000s with intricate guitar work and a forward-driving energy. In the 2010s, Periphery and TesseracT—two bands rooted in the United States and the United Kingdom—became central to the movement, expanding the vocabulary with concept albums, expansive guitar lines, and a strong community ethos. Animals as Leaders delivered instrumental virtuosity that pushed the technical bar higher, while Dutch outfit Textures blended extreme technique with melodic texture. Monuments (UK) and Veil of Maya (US) further widened the audience by combining brutal grooves with accessible songcraft and high-caliber musicianship.

Geographically, djent’s appeal was strongest in the United States and the United Kingdom, but it developed a robust global footprint. Sweden’s scene remains influential, and active djent communities have thrived in the Netherlands, Germany, France, Brazil, Japan, and beyond. Australia and Canada, among others, nurtured dedicated scenes as well, often feeding back into the DIY, online-driven culture that sustains the genre’s growth.

In sum, djent is less a single sound than a conversation about rhythm, tonality, and technical imagination. It challenges players to push timing, tone, and texture in tandem, and it continues to evolve as new bands remix, redefine, and expand what progressive metal can be.