
Battlecross: The Blue-Collar Thrash Metal Band That Outworked Everyone (2003–2022)
pplpod · pplpod
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Show Notes
In this episode of pplpod, we take a deep dive into Battlecross — the Michigan metal band that turned a high school garage-band dream into a 20-year run built on grit, relentless touring, and pure blue-collar work ethic.
Formed in 2003 in Canton, Michigan by high school neighbors Tony Asta and Hiran Deraniyagala, Battlecross became one of the hardest-working bands in modern American metal, bridging old-school thrash intensity with the groove-heavy power of the New Wave of American Heavy Metal.
This episode is more than a band biography. It is a case study in the economics and logistics of surviving as a working band in the modern music industry: lineup instability, endless touring, label momentum, radio exposure, and the hard reality that sometimes bands do not run out of talent — they run out of runway.
We unpack:
- the origins of Battlecross in the Detroit-area metal scene
- what it means to be a “blue-collar thrash metal” band (and why that label fits)
- the key lineup formation years (Tony Asta, Hiran Deraniyagala, Don Slater, and others)
- their self-released debut Push Pull Destroy (2010) and how it caught the attention of Metal Blade Records
- the pivotal vocalist transition from Marshall Wood to Kyle “Gumby” Gunther
- the re-release era and breakthrough with Pursuit of Honor (2011)
If you are into thrash metal, groove metal, Metal Blade Records, Detroit metal, band history, music industry economics, touring culture, lineup changes, and working-class musicianship, this episode is for you.