Trivium Discography Exclusive Jun 2026
"Until the World Goes Cold," "Silence in the Snow," "Blind Leading the Blind"
(2017) – Comeback
(2005), that catapulted them to international fame. Released via Roadrunner Records
(2011)
"In the Court of the Dragon," "Like a Sword Over Damocles," "The Phalanx"
(2015)
For new listeners, the sheer volume of music (10 studio albums, multiple EPs, and a sprawling collection of B-sides) can be intimidating. For long-time fans, debating the "best" era is a blood sport. This article serves as your definitive roadmap through every major release in the Trivium discography. Trivium Discography
If The Sin and the Sentence was the explosive reunion, What the Dead Men Say is the refined, confident follow-up. It takes the formula of its predecessor and sharpens it into a 47-minute blade. The album is leaner, meaner, and more progressive.
Lifeforce Records Key Tracks: "Pillars of Serpents," "When All Light Dies," "Requiem"
Alex Bent is a revelation. His speed, creativity, and blast beats reignite the band’s fury. Heafy seamlessly switches between gutturals and soaring cleans, often in the same line. The title track is a modern classic, and "Thrown into the Fire" is the heaviest song they’d written in a decade. This album reset the standard for modern Trivium. "Until the World Goes Cold," "Silence in the
(2020) – The Refinement
This is the comeback album of the decade. With new drummer Alex Bent (a virtuoso on the level of drum gods like Dirk Verbeuren), Trivium returned to their full power. The Sin and the Sentence blends everything: the screams of Ascendancy , the thrash riffs of Shogun , and the clean vocals of Silence in the Snow .
This is the most debated album in the catalog. Hiring David Draiman as producer brought a massive, radio-ready low-end and a focus on groove. The result was Trivium’s most commercially accessible album to date. This article serves as your definitive roadmap through
Trivium’s discography is a testament to constant reinvention without losing their core identity – thrash-fueled riffs, dual guitar harmonies, and Matt Heafy’s evolving vocal power.