Mushroomhead Songs Ranked
Mushroomhead is an American heavy metal band from Cleveland, Ohio. Formed in 1993 in the Cleveland Warehouse District, the band is known for their avant-garde sound which includes influence from metal, art rock and electro-industrial and their imagery which features masks and costumes as well as their unique live shows usually performed at smaller venues. Mushroomhead has sold over two million media units worldwide and has released eight full-length albums and 15 music videos. Over their lifetime, Mushroomhead has gone through many changes in band lineups, with drummer Steve Felton being the only consistent member. Here are all of Mushroomhead’s songs ranked.
Don’t miss out on the timeless Mushroomhead music below! Click to experience the band at their finest!
10. Never Let It Go (Superbuick, 1996)
“This is by far their best song, J’s aggressive vocals clashing with Jeff’s soft melodic vocals sounds absolutely brilliant, especially the way the ending was delivered.”
9. Save Us (Savior Sorrow, 2006)
“The live version is great and I don’t even know how you can not LOVE this song. The lyrics are fantastic and everything about this song is great. It’s hard not to get completely consumed by this song whenever it comes on, you really just want to sing along as loud as you can.”
8. 43 (Mushroomhead, 1995)
“Beautiful industrial song. My favourite because of the creepy typical mushroomhead intro and dark lyrics. You have to see them live to appreciate the music! I love the water drums in this song! This song is much better live!”
See more: Mushroomhead Albums Ranked
7. Kill Tomorrow (XIII, 2003)
“Kill tommorow is just epic – I mean the vocals that j mann does are just awesome, the drumming is also amazing as well, and it’s agressive manner in which it is written is just – fantastical!”
6. These Filthy Hands (Superbuick, 1996)
“I love this song! Probably my favorite on the entire album. I especially love the breakdown with the synthesizer at 3:40. They incorporate that so well with this song as well as many of their other tracks.”
5. Simple Survival (Savior Sorrow, 2006)
“Rarely do two vocalists work in a band. This was always a rare exception. Sure not everyone will love Mushs sound, but its not the fault of two vocalists. I’m amazed at how they layer their sound to make it work.”
See more: Lamb Of God Albums Ranked
4. Bwomp (Superbuick, 1996)
“Yeah, there are others, and all their other music is pretty good (few songs I like quite a bit), but when I listen to this one, all I hear is the keyboard part in the entire song playing at least something that sounds a lot like the Mortal Kombat theme. Take a listen to each for yourself.”
3. Qwerty (The Righteous & the Butterfly, 2014)
“This song is amazing. I can’t tell if it’s cause the whole song is played over carnival music, how funny the lyrics are, or how serious everything is while the whole thing is just absolutely hilarious”
2. Sun Doesn’t Rise (Freddy vs. Jason, 2003)
“Reminds me of a fun time in metal, many dislike the nü metal revolution but me as an old-school thrash metalhead love it! It was something new and fresh inviting in some interesting influences. Not all metal has to sound exactly the same. But of course that’s just my opinion”
1. Solitare Unraveling (XX, 2001)
“The stark contrast between the two vocalists styles is stunning, and I don’t even listen to metal! Very original, very unique. I’d love to see another band with an excellent female vocalist try Johny Nothing’s role so you could have pure melody vs. hard core vocalists. What a concept! And the lyrics are cool.”