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  7. If You Don’t Have Haters, You’re Not Loud Enough: Dealing with Hate as a Metal Band

If You Don’t Have Haters, You’re Not Loud Enough: Dealing with Hate as a Metal Band

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Let’s face it—metal is not for everyone. It’s loud, raw, confrontational, and often misunderstood. So when a metal band gets hate, the question isn’t “Why?”
It’s more like:

“Why wouldn’t you?”

In fact, if you’re making noise, if you’re doing something real, and if people are talking—haters are proof you’re alive.

Still, hate can sting. Whether it’s from trolls in comment sections, critics who don’t get it, or even scene elitists, here’s why it’s normal—and how to turn it into fuel instead of frustration.


⚡ 1. Yes, It’s Normal—and Sometimes Healthy

Every band that made history had haters.

  • Metallica got called “sellouts.”
  • Deathcore bands are called “fake metal.”
  • Black metal bands are mocked for being “too raw” or “too weird.”

If you’re getting criticism, it means people are noticing. And that’s the first step to breaking through.

Hate means your band matters enough to react to.

🤘 2. Not All Haters Are the Same

There are different breeds of hate:

  • Trolls who insult just to feel powerful.
  • Elitists who gatekeep what “real metal” is.
  • Critics who may have a valid point (but deliver it poorly).
  • Casuals who just don’t like heavy music—and that’s okay.

Knowing the type helps you respond accordingly—or not at all.

🔥 3. Let Your Music Talk Louder

One of the best responses to hate is… more music.

  • Release another brutal track.
  • Drop a video with more attitude.
  • Use the hate as a lyric or theme.

Some of the greatest songs in metal history came from rage against critics.
Let the hate amplify your volume, not silence you.

Turn insult into inspiration.

💬 4. Reply with Power—Or Silence

When you do respond:

  • Stay cool. Don’t match their anger.
  • Be witty, respectful, or leave a cryptic quote from your lyrics.
  • If they cross the line? Block. Move on. No energy wasted.

Sometimes the most metal thing you can do is:
say nothing, and keep shredding.

🧠 5. Learn What’s Useful, Ignore the Rest

Not all hate is trash. Some contain:

  • Hidden feedback
  • Pointers to improve production, artwork, or performance

If it’s constructive (even if wrapped in rude tone), extract the value and grow.

But if it’s baseless noise?
Leave it where it belongs—in the void.

🕯️ 6. Build a Fanbase That Drowns Out the Hate

You don’t need to be loved by everyone—just your people.

  • Engage with real fans in comments.
  • Thank those who support you.
  • Create a community around your music—through Discord, Instagram stories, or even at shows.

Your real supporters will shield you from the noise.

The louder your tribe gets, the quieter the trolls become.


Conclusion

Yes, haters will come. But they don’t define your worth.
What defines you is:

  • Your sound
  • Your spirit
  • Your refusal to bend

Keep creating. Keep screaming. Keep marching forward.

Because the only bands without haters…
are the ones no one hears.

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