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Home»Featured»Slaughter To Prevail returns to Toronto for North American Tour
Featured

Slaughter To Prevail returns to Toronto for North American Tour

By Darryll MagbooJune 3, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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Walking into History on April 18 felt more like preparing for impact instead of going out to see a show. Slaughter to Prevail have reached a point where their live shows carry a kind of reputation that precedes them – a sheer physical force, chaos, and a catalogue increasingly built around viral moments and crushing breakdowns. Their Toronto set reflected that evolution perfectly, balancing newer material from Grizzly with the songs that transformed them from internet phenomenon into one of modern deathcore’s biggest names. Arming themselves on this tour with legends in their own right, the audience was up for a brutal gift that kept on giving.

Atilla

The night opened with Attila, and they wasted little time turning History into chaos. Known for their unapologetically over-the-top energy and party-metal swagger, the band brought a very different flavour to the evening than the brutality that would follow. Being back in Canada after 10 years, they made sure to bring the good vibes and a do-whatever-you-want attitude, even attempting to put together a girl-only mosh pit. Their set felt designed to immediately ignite movement in the room, both on stage and in the audience. It was less about slow builds and more about instant crowd participation, breakdowns, and pure mayhem. It’s no complaints when musicians focus on energy and fun instead of taking things too seriously. And at the end of the day, people came to see a band just crush it on the stage doing their thing and Attila did just that.

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Next came Whitechapel, and the shift in tone was immediate. As one of the most influential names in modern deathcore, the appearance of this 6-piece from Tennessee carried the weight of a veteran act stepping into the room. Where Attila leaned into chaos and personality, Whitechapel delivered something darker and heavier, balancing technical precision with crushing atmosphere. The vocals of Phil Bozeman is an absolute masterclass every time he takes the stage and really compliments the vocal power the audience expects from the evening’s headliner. Visually, the show leaned into their Hymns in Dissonance album with Phil even donning the antler mask on the cover to give off the cult leader vibes this 2025 release revolved around. For a lot of longtime fans of the genre, their set probably didn’t feel like an opener at all and closer to a co-headliner-level performance instead.

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At this point, the Toronto crowd had already been taken through two distinct eras of heavy music. The lineup progression worked especially well starting with Attila that injected reckless energy, while Whitechapel supplied top-tier deathcore pedigree, and then Slaughter to Prevail arriving as this modern force built to turn all that momentum into complete destruction. The throughline made the headlining set to come feel like the culmination of peaking intensity rather than simply the final act of the night. After blasting a recording of Confusion by New Order (that “Blood Rave” song from the movie Blade) and then some hymnal throat singing in dimmed lights, Toronto was more than ready to get the last set started.

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Opening with Bonebreaker was an immediate kick to the face to set the tone. It is one of the band’s most recognizable modern live tracks and one of their most frequently played songs, making it an ideal opener because it drops the audience directly into maximum intensity rather than slowly building there. There was no warm-up period or teasing here; these masked stage demons essentially started at full speed. Banditos followed and pushed further into the newer era, while Russian Grizzly in America represented the current Grizzly cycle and one of the band’s most visible recent tracks. The song’s over-the-top imagery and rollout have helped it become a major focal point of this era and of this set especially with the red-eyed grizzly bear heads that hung at each side of the stage background. Unfortunately for Toronto, History probably wasn’t able to house the band’s giant bear display as seen in some of their shows this year.

Alex Terrible no mic

To talk more setlist, what made the progression interesting was how heavily it leaned toward newer material at the front. Rather than opening with early staples from Misery Sermon or Chapters of Misery, the show introduced fans first to the band’s current identity. Viking, Imdead, Babayka, and Bratva all reinforced that. Viking especially has become one of the defining songs of this phase of Slaughter to Prevail and consistently ranks among the most-played tracks in their live rotation since being released. A definite highlight of the evening with Alex Terrible flexing his vocal strength and volume by singing the breakdown without needing a mic being a trigger for absolute pit chaos.

Then came Baba Yaga, which was another one of the biggest moments of the entire show, no doubt. Among fans, it has become one of the band’s signature songs especially with its online popularity leading up to its release and must be their most-played live track by now. The song’s placement deep into the main set rather than early on was smart to create more anticipation instead of immediate payoff that they delivered on anyways from the start of the set. Once those opening lyrics drop, it’s hard not to get amped when you know what’s next.

Evgeny Novikov

Koschei closed that section before drummer Evgeny Novikov took over with a solo break. Structurally, it worked as a good pressure release valve. These deathcore sets can become relentless walls of impact, and pausing for a drum showcase really let the room breathe before one final assault. A calm before the storm with purpose, so to speak.

Alex Terrible

The final run of Conflict, Kid of Darkness, and Behelit carried a different energy because these songs increasingly represent the bridge between the band’s underground roots and their mainstream rise. Fans online have shown love to Kid of Darkness and Behelit as newer tracks of the current era, and Behelit seems to have sort of built some rep as a dramatic late-set moment which really sets up the encore track nicely. With its slow yet menacing crawl, the guitars really stand out here.

It would’ve been nice to see 1984 live but was there ever really any mystery about what the final song would be? Demolisher has become THE Slaughter to Prevail song thinking about the breakdown, the vocal performance from Alex, and the online reaction videos that turned it into a phenomenon. The track marked a major turning point for the band and remains one of their most celebrated songs among fans. Saving it for the encore felt unavoidable because almost any other closer would have felt smaller by comparison and diehard fans can’t be surprised at this point. If it’s not “saving the best for last”, it is actually more like saving the song that changed everything for them.

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The progression of the set ultimately told a story about where Slaughter to Prevail are now which is how it should be especially to keep fans looking ahead. Earlier material took a back seat while Kostolom and Grizzly dominated the night. While giving Toronto a curated setlist that rips the pit open, they delivered a snapshot of a band actively reshaping its own identity that now sits somewhere between deathcore extremity and genuine festival-headliner scale at the same time.

Keep up with the latest on their Instagram and Website.

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Darryll Magboo

Darryll Magboo (@dare.maker) is a photographer, visual artist, and auteur based in downtown Toronto. Harnessing his love for cinema, his work tries to capture life to romanticize it.

Latest posts by Darryll Magboo (see all)

  • Slaughter To Prevail returns to Toronto for North American Tour - June 3, 2026
  • The Academy Is… returns to Toronto for their debut album celebration tour - May 24, 2026
Alex Terrible Atilla concert photography concert review history live music Slaughter To Prevail Toronto weraddicted Whitechapel
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