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Dethklok in Minneapolis

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Dethklok
Armory — Minneapolis, MN

Dethklok is a death metal band that exists primarily as a fictional group from the Adult Swim animated series of the same name. The show follows five musicians navigating the absurd logistics of being the world's most brutal band while dealing with record label incompetence, cults, and casual violence. Despite their cartoon origins, Dethklok's music is genuinely heavy—the show's creator Brendan Small composed actual death metal with intricate guitar work and guttural vocals by vocalist Tommy Blacha. Songs like 'Bloodhail' and 'Murmaider' became real tracks that metal fans actually listen to, which is funny but also kind of earned it. The band's jokes work on multiple levels: the music is legitimately brutal while the show's humor mines comedy from metal clichés and the band's own incompetence. They even performed real concerts as Dethklok, which is either the most committed bit or the least ironic thing they could have done.

When Dethklok actually tours, it's packed with fans who came for the heavy riffs and stayed for both. The pit is intense but the whole thing has this self-aware energy—people know this started as a joke but the music hits hard anyway. Brendan Small's guitar work is technical enough to keep musicians engaged. It's heavy without taking itself too seriously, which somehow makes it heavier.

Known for Bloodhail, Go Forth and Die, Dethsupport, Murmaider, The Grill

Dethklok has a modest history in Minneapolis. They last rolled through the Fillmore in September 2023, delivering a 19-song set that included their theme track. The band keeps things straightforward when they're in town, focusing on the material that made them worth the trip in the first place.

Minneapolis has a legitimate metal backbone that stretches back decades — Prince's Minneapolis had its shadow side, and bands like Hüsker Dü and Soul Asylum proved the city could produce legitimate heaviness alongside pop sensibility. Modern metal here tends toward technical precision rather than novelty, which actually makes Dethklok's satirical approach a refreshing outlier. The crowd will either get the joke or they won't.

Stay in the Northeast Minneapolis arts district—it's where the city's creative energy actually lives, with galleries, vintage shops, and the Mississippi River nearby. Eat at Café Alma in the same neighborhood for restrained, high-quality Italian cooking. Spend an afternoon at the Walker Art Center, which sits on a rise overlooking downtown and has genuine landscape appeal. Grab coffee at Spyhouse, a roaster that takes itself seriously without the performative nonsense. The Stone Arch Bridge is worth a walk if the weather cooperates.

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