“Open it the fuck again up!” the muscular Matt Honeycutt instructions, mic gripped in his left fist, mustache prickling with indignation. He’s balefully slash lovingly surveying the group and discovering it slightly sluggish and carefully packed for his style. “I would like all my primitive, low-IQ motherfuckers!” Behind him, his band, Kublai Khan TX, rears and slumps into its subsequent tune. And the group lurches; the group flexes; the group feels its core, which is each a sucking vacancy and a web site of repellent power, just like the area cleared by a fistfight.
“Construct myself within the grime!” Honeycutt roars. “Sacred proper, sacred curse.”
“I’d hate to be in that pit proper now,” somebody says behind me.
Sizzling autumn night time has fallen over Worcester, Massachusetts, over the large, baked asphalt lot behind the Palladium, the ancestral seat of the Northeast’s heavy-metal kingdom. That is the New England Steel and Hardcore Pageant, 25 bands on three levels, 10 unbroken hours of heavy music, and all day, I’ve been watching the pit—the mosh pit, the realm near the stage the place infected dancers whirl and collide. I’ve been watching it, and skulking round it journalistically, as a result of I’m possessed by an thought: What if the pit, this ritualized maelstrom on the coronary heart of the hardcore-metal crowd, may educate us one thing about how you can stay collectively in 2025—about how you can be?
Heavy metallic, of all music, is aware of simply how sick we’re. Simply how pinned down by melancholy, dependancy, madness, know-how, the machine of society and the thumb of God. Steel has been telling us this—gleefully, monstrously—since Ozzy Osbourne first sang, “Again on Earth, the flame of life burns low / In every single place is distress and woe.” It’s a message that by no means goes out of favor. However proper now in America—what with the digital splatteration, the black-hole subjectivity, and the goon squad crouched in a van behind Dunkin’—it has, shall we embrace, an especial piquancy.
Metalfest, as I prefer to name it, has been working on the Palladium since 1999, reliably showcasing the most effective and the brightest, the worst and the darkest, from throughout the spectrum of metallic and hardcore punk. After I say “10 unbroken hours of heavy music,” I’m not kidding. Metalfest is immaculately organized and relentlessly programmed, and the heaviness is steady.
Contained in the Palladium, there’s a small, explosive room for the bands on the jumpier and extra hardcore-punk finish of the spectrum, bands equivalent to Arduous Goal, from Central Massachusetts, and New York Metropolis’s Madball. Outdoors within the lot, the place the metallic hordes are gathered, two massive levels face one another throughout an expanse of some hundred yards, and when a band (say, Gideon) stops taking part in at one finish, one other band (say, Filled with Hell) begins up—instantly—on the different finish. As one set finishes, in different phrases—THANK YOU, WOOST-AAAAAH!—its final chord nonetheless decaying and its ions nonetheless swimming within the afternoon air, you hear behind you a scuttle of drums and a squawk of suggestions and an AWRIGHT! LET’S FUCKING GO! All it’s important to do is flip round.
Good. Good for this crowd. For that is the deepest and most unassuaged want of all metalheads: to stay in a state of steady heaviness.
And heaviness is …? I’ll hazard some definitions. It’s a way of cosmic tragedy, a love of the low finish, an affinity for the thicker frequencies of existence, a paradoxically joyful desolation. It’s the compression of Time in a riff. It’s the load of expertise and the curve of area. It’s the caped shadow of Ozzy, his wings unfold, crying, “Misplaced within the wheels of confusion.” It’s the temper conveyed by the slogans on the backs of the varied band T-shirts that everybody at Metalfest is sporting: FUCK YOUR LIFE; SORROW WILL PREVAIL; YOU WILL DIE MY ENEMY.

The pit is an establishmenta minimum of 40 years outdated. Who began it? The place? Was it birthed within the skinhead cauldron of New York’s Decrease East Aspect, or in Southern California, with the punk-rock surfers and skaters of Huntington Seashore? The legends abound, however someplace (or extra doubtless in a number of locations directly), across the starting of the Nineteen Eighties, the group at U.S. hardcore reveals opened up. The place there had been a crush or a scrum, there was immediately and dramatically an area: for violence, for collision, for expression, for the toughest of the hardcore. The pit. And because the aggression and acceleration of hardcore migrated into metallic, and into the roomier, boomier venues of the metallic circuit, the pit bought larger.
(And never each hardcore or post-hardcore band was pro-pit. run awayof Washington, D.C., would often cease their reveals mid-song, the set’s momentum quiveringly arrested, to deal with thuggish conduct within the area in entrance of the stage.)
As to who’s within the pit, who’s making the pit occur, let’s have a look. There are massive boys throwing their weight round, and there are wild skinnies with flying arms and spinning back-kicks, chopping out their emergency model of private area. There are cheerful barging amateurs, glad to be bounced about, and there are prowling malevolences, ready for the second to blindside somebody or chuck an elbow of their face. There may be the occasional fearless girl. Like America, the pit is simply barely a democracy. However you want youth, and also you want energy: It’s no nation for outdated males.
And right here’s one thing attention-grabbing. The quantity of fights, bloody noses, chest-to-chest confrontations, bouncer interventions I spot at Metalfest: zero. A self-policing surroundings, to a outstanding diploma. Though I do overhear one younger girl in post-pit misery—“That was the stupidest shit I’ve ever seen, woman! I’m furious! Like, who is that this bitch? I’ve by no means seen her earlier than!”—whereas her accomplice murmurs indecipherable sounds of comfort.
A part of being a metallic or hardcore entrance man in 2025 is realizing how you can work the pit, appointing your self a specialist in mob physics. All day at Metalfest, you could possibly hear them calling out the strikes: “Make a circle pit!” (a vortex); “Two-step! TWO-STEPPP!” (a dance, a type of hobbit-y stomp); “Aspect to fuckin’ aspect!” (self-explanatory). The gang will obediently convulse, or it gained’t. “Okay, now we’re gonna play a sport referred to as Wall of Dying,” the singer of Despised Icon declares throughout their early-evening set. “The sport’s fairly easy. I’m gonna rely to 4—”
“TOO HARD!” one wag bellows in entrance of us.
The Wall of Dying, by the way, entails splitting the group down the center, making a channel of area, after which having the 2 sides cost throughout it like clashing medieval armies.
Mid-afternoon, battered by metallic, away from the melee, I’ve a chat with the least metal-looking particular person I can discover—Black, nonbinary, softly and secretly smiling, in pants and fight boots however with floating diaphanous layers. “I’m tripping balls,” they inform me, which partly explains their air of conspicuous apartness: They’re on a non-public journey, drifting by Metalfest on luminous drug filaments. They present me their sketchbook, stuffed with tarot-like photographs of aliens and birds.
“I noticed you within the pit,” I say. “How did it really feel in there?”
The smooth, secret smile. “It’s all hugging; it’s all love. They need the contact.”
You’re questioning concerning the politics. Steel itself, being basically a sensation within the mind stem, is apolitical, however metalheads are human, they usually have their opinions. And if you wish to take heed to this elemental, unreconstructed music, you’re going to must take your dose of illiberalism. Within the pit, you’re going to must cope with the man whose T-shirt reads I STAND FOR THE FLAG AND KNEEL FOR THE CROSS. The entrance males are demagogues; the group is suggestible, fanatical; and between one downstroked chord and the subsequent, you may hear the eclipse of the Enlightenment.
However love abides. Care abides. “I’ve bought 15 seconds ’til I say some actual shit,” Mychal Soto, a guitarist for Oklahoma’s PeelingFlesh, shouts, wiping his face mid-set with a towel within the afternoon glare and looking on the crowd. “This set proper right here goes out to anyone that’s a minority or an individual of coloration that’s needed to battle some actual shit,” he continues. “Regardless that that’s not your downside? Make it your downside—make it your fucking downside. I feel it’s time for us as a folks to develop into human once more. It’s time to present a shit concerning the folks subsequent to us. We’ve to cease this insanity, as a result of if we don’t, this nation goes to be over in our lifetime. This ain’t a cry for both aspect; it is a cry for love and compassion for human beings. So LET’S DO THIS SHIT.”
5 hours later, Honeycutt doffs his baseball hat to the viewers. “This subsequent observe,” he declares, “goes out to all the women in the home!” However this isn’t some sexist rave-up. This isn’t “Ladies, Ladies, Ladies,” by Mötley Crüe. This one’s about truck-stop intercourse employees, exploitation, and generational abuse. That is Kublai Khan TX’s “Swan Music”: “To all the women working Iowa 80 …” Might or not it’s essentially the most savagely empathetic pro-woman tune ever produced by a bunch of huge bushy metallic dudes? In the event you’d heard the refrain of ladies’s voices singing alongside at Metalfest—“For all of the worry, each tear / Slowly burning your sight / For each second within the mild / I fucking see you tonight”—you wouldn’t hesitate to say sure, sure, sure. “Fantastic!” Honeycutt growls contentedly.
There’s a set by Cannibal Corpse at one finish of the Palladium lot, a set by Lorna Shore on the different finish. Then Metalfest wraps up, and we drift off, vibrationally pummeled, numb and gladdened, into the heavy-metal night time. Actuality will include the daybreak: regular life, the 2025 mannequin, with its warpings of ambient strain and its weightless panics. For now, we’re held within the candy penumbra of heaviness. As for my massive thought—that we will heal ourselves within the pit—effectively, let’s simply say that it’s the type of thought solely a journalist would have. However I can nonetheless see them whirling and colliding, the dancers, and my thoughts slows all of it to half velocity, and shafts of magnificence beam out, dazzlingly, from the blur of the limbs and the ecstatic, grimacing faces.
It appears like chaos, however there’s no actual chaos, is there? The whole lot’s trigger and impact, if you understand the place to look.
