Symphonic metal

Symphonic metal is a cross-genre style designation for the symphonic subsets of heavy metal music subgenres. It is used to denote any metal band that makes use of symphonic or orchestral elements. The style features the heavy drums and guitars of metal with different elements of orchestral classical music, such as symphonic instruments, choirs and sometimes a full orchestra, or just keyboard orchestration.

Symphonic metal bands can feature classically trained vocalists, in which case they can be attributed nicknames such as opera metal or operatic metal. Perhaps the most prominent examples of symphonic metal bands are Swedish band Therion, Finnish band Nightwish, German band Xandria, Italian band Rhapsody of Fire, Norwegian band Emperor, American bands Lorna Shore and Trans-Siberian Orchestra and Dutch bands Epica and Within Temptation. Those bands place a large focus on elements prevalent in film scores in addition to the more basic classical components utilized more widely in the genre. Many people who participate in this genre of metal music have a degree in musical thought or have been taught how to sing in a classical style.

It is often confused with subgenres such as power metal, black metal, and death metal in its symphonic branch. Most bands of the 1990s, both power metal and more extreme genres such as black metal and death metal, had already incorporated symphonic elements into their compositions. Symphonic power metal is sometimes mistakenly classified as symphonic metal.