• members

    Haley Roughton vocals

    Alex Reyes guitar

    Devin Birchfield bass

  • biography

    The world told Haley Roughton to put her dream aside. Except this time, it’s on her terms — and she’s doing it with “emotional gore.” Gore. are a band that brings a distinctly feminine perspective to the heavy music scene.

    Gore.’s origin story is certainly unique. When Roughton went to college, the self-taught vocalist wanted to study music. But family pushed her to find a more stable career. To Roughton’s shock, that career became electrical engineering and by the end of her studies, she had landed a job with a major scientific organization.

    And the career proved useful.

    Roughton credits being an engineer providing her the tools of work ethic, organization and management to help with her Gore.

    The Texas-based trio — vocalist Roughton, guitarist Alex Reyes and bassist Devin Birchfield — formed in 2023. Quickly, the band made waves with their emotionally raw and unapologetically vulnerable sound. The band uploaded two songs to YouTube and gained unexpected rapid response for their vulnerable lyrics and dynamic heavy sound. Fans racked up views and they were even given a seal of approval by established bands such as Motionless in White, Papa Roach, and Flyleaf.

    Their recent signing to Spinefarm further solidifies their footing in the industry.

    Now comes their EP A Bud That Never Blooms. Wrapped in divine metaphors, the EP is a deeply personal exploration of the complexities of femininity. Recorded at Miserable Productions Studios and co-produced by Ben McGuiness and Caleb Freihaut, the EP embodies "emotional gore."

    “The goal of Gore. is to be very raw and vulnerable — emotional gore,” the singer states.

    Embracing touchstones ranging from metalcore to nu-metal to shoegaze and even a bit of pop, Roughton’s cleans are delicate, while the raging harsh vocals have the fury to back up the fully-charged duo of Reyes and Birchfield that quake, riff, and blast.

    The EP may be only five songs, but it packs a punch.

    Tracks like "Babylon" confront the painful realities of womanhood, while "Doomsday" reflects on the desensitization to violence and suffering in today's world. Roughton's vocals range from delicate, emotive cleans to fierce, guttural growls, capturing the duality of strength and vulnerability.

    “Babylon,” especially, is a hyper-personal track for the vocalist, she opens the door on one dream and shuts another. “’Babylon’ is about my desire to be a loving wife with a husband who loves me, children,” she says. “That dream has gotten further and further away. And as a woman, you don't get forever to have that. You just don't. I wanted to be able to share that perspective because in a lot of female-fronted rock bands and metal bands, to get a very girl boss persona, which I think is amazing, and I think the world needs that. But I also want to talk about the parts of femininity that just are terrible. And ‘Babylon’ is my eulogy to that dream for now. I am focusing on music right now instead.”

    “Doomsday” is a bone chill-inducing number as Roughton’s vocals astronomically soar: “I peek my head outside and watch the cops kill all my neighbors’ kids/I wonder if things would be different if their parents had been rich …”

    “It’s just us seeing the worst that the world can offer on a daily basis and being desensitized by it just because it's so much for one human to process,” says the singer of the song’s theme. “And therefore, we can dissociate and see it as just, like, another post on social media.”

    Ultimately, Gore.'s music is an embrace of the raw, unfiltered aspects of life, particularly from a female perspective. With plans for more music in 2025, Gore. is poised to continue challenging norms and expressing the full spectrum of feminine experience through their powerful sound.

    This is Gore. — and the future mission is already set with new music due in 2025.