Avenged Sevenfold Discography 320kbps -

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The Vibe: Tragedy and Triumph

Following the passing of their drummer and best friend, The Rev, the band recorded Nightmare with Mike Portnoy. It is a heavy, emotional listen. The title track hits like a sledgehammer, while "So Far Away" serves as a heartbreaking ballad.

This album is mixed for impact. The 320kbps rip ensures that the heavy chugging riffs on "God Hates Us" hit with maximum percussive force, while the softer moments retain their clarity without becoming muddy.

  • Waking the Fallen (2003)

  • City of Evil (2005)

  • Avenged Sevenfold (Self-titled) (2007)

  • Nightmare (2010)

  • Hail to the King (2013)

  • The Stage (2016)

  • Life Is But a Dream… (2023)


  • The Vibe: Avant-Garde Madness

    Their latest effort is arguably their weirdest and most fascinating. Drawing inspiration from bebop jazz and black metal, it is a disorienting, heavy, and beautiful record.

    The production on "Nobody" and "We Love You" is dense. There is a lot happening in the low end and the high ends of the frequency spectrum. A high-quality file allows you to peel back those layers and hear the experimentation clearly.


    Genre: Progressive Metal / Avant-Garde Metal
    320kbps Necessity: Mandatory Avenged Sevenfold Discography 320kbps

    This is the album where Avenged Sevenfold went full progressive, featuring a concept about artificial intelligence and space exploration. Produced by Joe Barresi (Tool, Queens of the Stone Age), the dynamic range is cinematic. The title track includes a spoken-word intro by Neil deGrasse Tyson that requires clarity. The album also features a hidden track (“Dose” on the deluxe edition) with intricate fretless bass. Moreover, the guitar solo in “Exist” (featuring a 20-minute instrumental journey) is mixed with heavy reverb and delay. Low bitrates cause the reverb tails to cut off prematurely. For 320kbps, every harmonic rings true.

    Genre: Metalcore / Hardcore Punk
    320kbps Necessity: Moderate to High

    The band’s raw debut was originally recorded with minimal budget. In lower bitrates, the abrasive production becomes muddy. A 320kbps file helps separate Rev’s frantic drumming from the down-tuned guitars. Tracks like “We Come Out at Night” and “Warmness on the Soul” (the band’s first ballad) benefit from the extra bitrate, revealing piano textures often lost in compression.

    Genre: Experimental Hard Rock
    320kbps Necessity: Essential

    Widely considered the fan favorite, this “White Album” features the most diverse production. You have the country-tinged “Dear God,” the electronic-industrial “Lost,” and the prog-epic “A Little Piece of Heaven.” This latter track is the ultimate test for any audio format. Featuring a full orchestra, horn section, and theatrical vocals, “A Little Piece of Heaven” in 128kbps sounds like a broken radio. Only at 320kbps can you appreciate the brass dynamics and the clarity of The Rev’s backup vocals. Furthermore, “Almost Easy” contains a buried harmony in the chorus that only reveals itself at higher bitrates. (To avoid takedowns, I’m not posting plain links