Published: 25 Apr 2025 / Last Update: 20 Jun 2025
Doomgaze lives in the space between drone doom and shoegaze, pulling together cavernous riffs, blurred atmosphere, and a mood that can feel either lush or abrasive depending on the artist. What ties it all together is immersion, the sense of being pulled into something usually slow-moving and emotionally dense. This list is just a starting point, meant to highlight some of the key albums and give a sense of how many different shapes the genre can take. Putting it together wasn’t easy. Doomgaze is still evolving, and there are plenty of newer records and emerging artists that deserve their own space, which is something we hope to return to later.
If you are new to the genre, a lot of this may feel unfamiliar or even quite challenging at first. The long runtimes, droning riffs, and patience it asks of the listener will not be everyone’s cup of tea. But if that mix of heaviness and immersion speaks to you, it can be incredibly rewarding.
And if you’re looking for more, we also have a constantly-updated doomgaze playlist on Spotify, where you can discover more from this unique genre.
As always, if you have questions, whether you’re unsure where to start, curious about bands with a similar sound, or need more recommendations, don’t hesitate to reach out in the comments. We’re happy to help you navigate this sonic journey!
Without further ado, here are our top 50 doomgaze albums you need to hear:
1-10: Top Picks
(in no particular order)
The Angelic Process – Weighing Souls With Sand (2007)
A foundational work in the genre’s evolution, Weighing Souls With Sand feels like a personal collapse rendered in sound. Built on towering layers of distortion, distant vocals, and overwhelming volume, it’s crushing from every angle, and one of the best places to start if you want to hear the genre’s abrasive side.
Jesu – Conqueror (2007)
Conqueror trades Godflesh’s industrial harshness for slow-moving guitars, soft vocals, and layers of dense, melodic fuzz. It’s heavy but strangely serene, with an emotional weight that feels more like longing, and its influence on doomgaze is hard to miss.
This Will Destroy You – Tunnel Blanket (2011)
Longtime fans were understandably surprised by Tunnel Blanket, which leaves much of the band’s earlier post-rock sound behind. In place of soaring crescendos, it leans into towering walls of distortion, slow-burning structures, and a darker emotional palette. “Little Smoke” and “Black Dunes” capture that approach perfectly, unfolding more like rituals than structured compositions.
Have A Nice Life – Deathconsciousness (2008)
Bleak, sprawling, and deeply personal, this album merges shoegaze and post-punk into a haunting meditation on death and meaning. With lo-fi textures and distant vocals that deepen the sense of emotional detachment, it became a cult classic through word of mouth. Not traditionally “heavy,” but the weight is undeniable.
USA Out Of Vietnam – Crashing Diseases And Incurable Airplanes (2014)
This feels like an apocalyptic sound collage, with metal, psych, and ambient all colliding at once. It’s loud and chaotic, but there’s still something oddly serene about it.
Nadja – Skin Turns To Glass (2008)
Nadja have been one of the key acts in doomgaze’s underground, incredibly prolific and deeply influential. Skin Turns to Glass is an early glimpse of what makes them distinctive, with longform songs built from looping riffs, buried melodies, and a slow sense of drift. Its length and repetition will not work for everyone, but if you are drawn to that kind of immersion, it can be hard to shake.
King Woman – Created In The Image Of Suffering (2017)
A storm of doom-laden riffs and anguished beauty, this album channels spiritual trauma into something both heavy and haunting. Led by Kris Esfandiari’s hypnotic vocals and towering guitar work, it blends crushing heaviness with a sense of vulnerability that feels deeply personal.
Daxma – Unmarked Boxes (2021)
Inspired by the poetry of Rumi, Unmarked Boxes unfolds with a patient, meditative intensity. Long droning passages gradually open into moments of crushing beauty, blurring the line between post-metal, doom, and shoegaze. It feels expansive without ever losing focus, like a slow reflection on grief, transformation, and letting go.
Sugar Horse – The Live Long After (2021)
There is a lot going on in The Live Long After, but it never feels random. The album pulls together post-metal, shoegaze, and sludge with angular riffs, soaring melodies, and shifting structures that give it a real sense of tension and movement.
Vanessa Van Basten – La Stanza Di Swedenborg (2008)
A hidden gem from Italy’s underground, La Stanza di Swedenborg walks the line between post-rock and drone metal — at times euphoric, at times sinister, always steeped in atmosphere.
11-25: Further Recommendations
(in no particular order)
(DOLCH) – Feuer (2015)
Part of a trilogy with Nacht and Tod, (DOLCH)’s debut album Feuer blends doom, darkwave, and ritualistic gloom into something dense and haunting. Its long tracks drift through droning guitars and captivating female vocals, creating an atmosphere that feels both intimate and otherworldly.
You Big Ox – I Hate It Here Too (2024)
I Hate It Here Too layers massive, slow-moving riffs with distant vocals and shoegaze-laced melancholy. It’s equal parts crushing and cathartic, and for all its heaviness, there’s still a real sense of clarity beneath the distortion.
Oldest Sea – A Birdsong, A Ghost (2023)
Not a huge or showy record, A Birdsong, A Ghost keeps its focus on mood, space, and restraint. Its mix of funeral doom, post-metal, and ambient folk, together with the sparse instrumentation and haunting vocals, gives it a sorrow that settles in slowly.
The Angelic Process – Coma Waering (2002)
Even rawer and more abrasive than its follow-up, Coma Waering laid the groundwork for The Angelic Process’s signature sound: an overwhelming mix of distorted noise, cathartic intensity, and desperation. It’s chaotic and beautiful at once, helping shape doomgaze before it had a name.
A Film In Color – They March In Endless Circles (2018)
Fans of Tunnel Blanket will probably find a lot to like here. It works in a similar long form ‘post-rock-gaze’ space, with a doom-inflected edge and a slow, weathered feel.
GENA – Slow Day (2015)
Born from the depths of Russia’s colder landscapes, Slow Day weaves thick, distorted riffs with ambient shoegaze, creating an expansive yet isolating atmosphere.
ISON – Andromeda Skyline (2018)
Andromeda Skyline stretches doomgaze into something more cosmic, pairing synth-heavy atmosphere with brooding riffs and ethereal vocals. It moves at a glacial pace, letting shimmering textures and deeper emotion drift together like it was made for deep space.
Jesu – Everyday I Get Closer To The Light From Which I Came (2013)
Jesu’s trademark blend of bright, melodic moments and introspective depth is fully intact here, though this album leans further into ambient textures and emotional nuance. Slow, warm, and meditative, it trades sheer weight for atmosphere and is a significant entry in Broadrick’s ever-evolving catalog.
Am Himmel – As Eternal As The Starless Kingdom Of Sorrow (2022)
Combining gothic catacombs and cosmic darkness, As Eternal As The Starless Kingdom Of Sorrow weaves black metal intensity with mystical synth layers to create a chilling, surreal atmosphere. Particularly recommended for fans of The Angelic Process.
Have A Nice Life – Time Of Land (2010)
A lesser-known entry in their discography, this 4-track EP captures the hypnotic qualities of Deathconsciousness in a more restrained form.
Seirom – 1973 (2012)
SEIROM’s 1973 offers a striking contrast to Mories’ darker work in Gnaw Their Tongues and Aderlating, blending drone metal’s hypnotic pull with warm, ethereal synths.
Holy Fawn – Death Spells (2018)
Not strictly doomgaze but circling its edges, Death Spells pulls from ambient, post-rock, alt-rock, and blackgaze to build its towering sound. Tracks like “Dark Stone,” “Sleep Tongue,” and “Seer” feel especially crushing, full of distortion, buried vocals, and a vast emotional weight.
Wolvennest, Der Blutharsch And The Infinite Church Of The Leading Hand – WLVNNST (2016)
A collaboration of diverse musicians, WLVNNST builds its atmosphere through pulsating beats, eerie synthesizers, and black metal influences. The ambient vocals drift through it all, adding to the mystery.
Fourteen Nights At Sea – Minor Light (2015)
Minor Light sits in a similar space to Tunnel Blanket and They March In Endless Circles on this list, stretching slow guitar repetitions across a broad, smothering atmosphere. It’s less about build or release than about being pulled deeper into the same unresolved feeling.
Iress – Flaw (2020)
Heavy, hazy, and emotionally raw, Flaw blends doom-laden riffs with dreamlike textures and soulful female vocals. A strong recommendation for fans of King Woman and similarly emotive doomgaze.
26-50: Extended List
(in no particular order)
A Sea Of Dead Trees – Garmonbozia (2021)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Antethic – Ghost Shirt Society (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
BleakHeart – Dream Griever (2020)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Blood Pact – Heaven (2023)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Codeia – “don’t be afraid”, she whispered and disappeared (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Cold Body Radiation – The Orphean Lyre (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Dead Swords – Enders (2019)
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Dreamswell – Spoiled (2019)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Fvnerals – Wounds (2016)
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Give Up To Failure – Burden (2020)
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Hyatari – They Will Surface (2008)
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Iroha – Iroha (2011)
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Jesu – Ascension (2011)
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King Woman – Celestial Blues (2021)
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Mountaineer – Bloodletting (2020)
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Nadja – The Stone Is Not Hit By The Sun, Nor Carved With A Knife (2016)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Planning For Burial – Below The House (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Outlander – The Valium Machine (2019)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Pallow – Blueprints For An Empty Vessel (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Solip – Without (2017)
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Spotlights – Seismic (2017)
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Through A Glass, Darkly – Through A Glass, Darkly (2017)
Listen: Spotify | Bandcamp
Transitional – Stomach Of The Sun (2010)
Listen: Spotify
Vanessa Van Basten – Vanessa Van Basten (2009)
Listen: Spotify
Want more? Our companion playlist features highlights from these albums and beyond, and it’s regularly updated with new releases. Feel free to follow if you’d like to stay in the loop.





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