If you're searching for the most underrated death metal classics that never got the recognition they deserved (mostly because they're the artist's only album), this list is exactly where you need to be.

The extreme metal underground is filled with records that quietly reshaped (or at least helped forge) the genre without ever breaking into the wider conversation, which is a shame – there's a lot of phenomenal death metal out there that got overlooked. From progressive and technical death metal experiments to cavernous death-doom and early funeral doom innovations, these are the releases that continue to haunt collectors and influence musicians decades later.

READ MORE: 5 Death Metal Bands Whose Third Album Is Their Best

We're diving deep into forgotten corners of the global extreme metal scene, revisiting artists like Moribund, whose short-lived existence produced the twisted brilliance of Oracular Eyes; and the sci-fi brutality of Xenomorph, whose Empyreal Regimes remains one of the most neglected cult death metal albums of the 1990s. Alongside them, New York’s underground powerhouses Morpheus Descends delivered the essential Ritual of Infinity; while Finland’s visionary pioneers Demilich redefined technical death metal with the alien grotesquery of Nespithe.

This journey also explores Sweden’s deeply mournful Gorement, the funeral doom devastation of Decomposed and Disembowelment, and the suffocating early doom atmosphere of Thergothon. More modern but equally experimental entries such as Fleshwrought and the mythologized brilliance of Lykathea Aflame are also worthy additions that you absolutely need to tune into.

10 Death Metal Bands Who Only Released One Album (And It Rules)

These death metal bands only released one album, but they're all worth checking out.

Gallery Credit: Greg Kennelty