BABYMETAL Are the Intergalactic Mayors of Metal Music
METAL FORTH is a statement about metal as an aesthetic rife with individualism; “metal” is not a monolith, and what it is to be “metal” varies from country to country, language to language, band to band.

“We are here to make coffee metal,” Nathan Explosion (Brendon Small) growls in the premiere of the mid-2000s’ Adult Swim series, Metalocalypse. “We will make everything metal. Blacker than the blackest black times infinity.” Unexpectedly, and maybe even improbably, in the years since the show’s cancellation (and subsequent cancellation via DTV films), the mission Nathan and his band, Dethklok, carried out in fiction has been picked up in real life by Japanese kawaii metal exemplars BABYMETAL. Five albums deep into their career, the band has done something extraordinary: They’ve figured out how to make thrashing, squealing, double-bass cacophonies cute, and make “cute” cacophonous.
Scratch that: four albums deep. 2023’s The Other One is just a “concept album,” says the band; METAL FORTH is the real thing. (It couldn’t possibly have anything to do with the too tempting opportunity to mirror “forth” with “fourth.”) Regardless of whatever numerical hierarchy one assigns to METAL FORTH, the album functions as glaze poured over a penny table—something lovely layered upon something industrial—and in serving that function, makes metal’s best argument to date for the genre’s versatility. Incongruous, perhaps, given the music’s name is derived from among the hardest materials known to man, but BABYMETAL is nothing if not a walking, performing incongruity, in the best ways possible. Costumes, for instance, and especially over-the-top ones, are traditional to heavy metal, but BABYMETAL’s outfits hint of an intergalactic royalty otherwise missing in the culture.
Not that that matters when you’re listening to Metal Forth. All you’ll experience here is the music, characterized in part by a motif of creative humility; the number of featured musicians on each of the record’s 10 tracks outnumbers the solo BABYMETAL tracks. If so inclined, one might structurally characterize METAL FORTH as “BABYMETAL and friends” by consequence, which is a plenty sturdy framework to raise around what the band accomplishes through the depth of its collaborations: they’re joined by Bloodywood, Slaughter to Prevail, Tom Morello, Electric Callboy, Poppy, Polyphia, and Spiritbox in selection of songs that rock incredibly hard while demonstrating their creative range.