All Shall Perish rose from Oakland in the early 2000s, fusing melodic death riffs with hardcore weight and nimble shred.
Oakland roots, sharpened edges
After years of dormancy and members focusing on other projects, they are marking two decades of
The Price of Existence with a focused return.
How the set may unfold
Expect the album played front to back, with anchors like
Eradication,
Wage Slaves,
The Day of Justice, and
Better Living Through Catastrophe, plus a deep cut or two if time allows. The room skews mixed-age: veterans in sun-faded tees share rail space with newer fans who found the band online, while guitar diehards clock the harmonies and drummers map the blasts. A neat bit: the record was cut at Castle Ultimate with Zack Ohren, and many twin-lead lines were stacked for extra bite in the mix. Early on, the group sharpened their sound at Oakland warehouses and 924 Gilman matinees, which shaped their tight-then-chaotic live swings. Note that song picks and production flourishes here are our best read from past eras and could change the night of.
The culture around All Shall Perish, twenty years on
What people wear and why it matters
The scene feels like a reunion and a first chapter at once, with vintage 2006-era shirts next to fresh prints and patched denim vests beside plain black hoodies. You will spot beat-up skate shoes, back-of-hand Xs, and a few MySpace-era fringes, but the mood stays easy and focused on the music.
Little rituals on the floor
Big chant moments tend to form on the silent gaps before a breakdown, when the crowd counts the hits out loud and then surges as one. Merch gravitates to anniversary art, simple album text, and likely a limited foil poster or colored vinyl for collectors. After the set, people trade riff favorites and photo rolls, and you hear older fans compare past Bay Area shows while newer fans swap playlist links. Local openers often bring a thrash or hardcore tint, which keeps the floor moving and frames the headliner with a Bay twist.
How All Shall Perish makes it hit live
Riffs first, then the drop
Live,
All Shall Perish leans on a sharp split between low growls and cutting highs, with phrasing spaced so the riffs still read in the room. Guitars chase bright, sung-like melodies over chugging rhythms, then pivot into halftime drops that let the kick drum feel huge. The band favors low tunings around drop A with tight palm mutes, and they sometimes nudge tempos up a few clicks live to keep the energy snapping. Bass often doubles the rhythm but will slip a quick run before a breakdown to glue the shift, a small move that adds lift without showboating. Drums toggle blasts with crisp two-step beats, and tom-led builds set up the album's biggest hits with simple, clear counts.
Small choices, big impact
A lesser-known habit: they extend the
Eradication intro with stutter-mutes and a false stop before the first full slam, which cues the floor without words. Expect stark strobes on the fastest passages and warm washes when twin leads bloom, letting the music stay front and center.
If you ride with All Shall Perish, you may like these
Neighbor sounds, kindred pits
Fans of
Suicide Silence tend to vibe with
All Shall Perish because both balance cavernous lows and piercing highs with mosh-friendly drops.
Whitechapel brings a thicker, groove-forward punch that appeals to listeners who like low-tuned precision and clean song arcs. If bleak atmospheres and relentless touring appeal to you,
Carnifex hits a nearby lane with darker textures and steady pacing. For fans who favor speedy melodic runs and twin-guitar fireworks,
The Black Dahlia Murder lands close to the shreddier side of the set. Listeners who came up on metalcore with weighty breakdowns may cross over from
As I Lay Dying, trading sing-alongs for harsher tones but keeping the drive.