In an era where rock and metal are often treated as heritage genres—nostalgia acts playing the hits in increasingly smaller venues—Avenged Sevenfold chose to make something genuinely weird. It may cost them radio play. It may shrink their next arena tour. But it will also ensure that this album is debated, dissected, and defended for years to come.
The closest reference point isn’t metal at all. It’s Mr. Bungle, Frank Zappa, or late-period Radiohead—artists who weaponize genre whiplash to keep the listener off-balance. Lyrically, Life Is But a Dream is a meditation on absurdism. The title is a direct quote from the Spanish poet Pedro Calderón de la Barca’s 17th-century play La vida es sueño . Shadows spends the album wrestling with Albert Camus’ question: If life has no inherent meaning, is that a tragedy or a liberation? Avenged Sevenfold - Life Is But A Dream -2023- ...
In June 2023, Avenged Sevenfold did something that legacy acts are explicitly told never to do: they alienated their core audience on purpose. In an era where rock and metal are
“We were bored,” Shadows told Kerrang! around the album’s release. “Playing ‘Bat Country’ for the ten-thousandth time felt like a museum exhibit. We either had to make something that terrified us, or we had to stop.” But it will also ensure that this album
Then comes “Game Over.” A lurching, glitchy synth stutter erupts into a frantic punk-metal blast beat, with Shadows half-singing, half-rapping about nihilism and video game mechanics. “ I’m not running / I’m just standing at the edge of the world ,” he sneers. It’s jarring. It’s awkward. And then it’s brilliant.
“Nobody,” “Cosmic,” “Mattel,” “We Love You”