XequinsuXochaX, the Detroit artist behind the single oh i have bled
Where Trap Metal Pressure Meets Dubstep Electronics and Melodic Release
The first thing that registers on oh i have bled is the collision. A death metal low end sits under the stutter and drop of dubstep. Over the top, a melodic line keeps the track from staying buried in the dark. XequinsuXochaX, the Detroit project led by Jeremy Foster, built the single around that friction. It lands where heavy music and electronic production now trade tools. Out since 6 February 2026, it keeps reaching listeners who want aggression with real construction underneath.
You can listen to our full playlist which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


A Producer Who Treats Three Genres as One Toolkit
XequinsuXochaX works from one idea, executed in a hard way. Death metal, dubstep, and melodic metal behave like parts of a single instrument, not separate rooms. The death metal supplies the weight, blast-driven and guttural. The dubstep handles motion. It bends the low frequencies and breaks the rhythm into something that lurches rather than marches. The melodic metal is the part that sticks, carrying a tune through the chaos so the song resolves instead of just ending.
That mix also explains why the project reads as trap metal to a hip-hop literate ear. The drop logic, the half-time pockets, and the distorted vocals all borrow from a playbook trap and its heavier offshoots have written for a decade. On oh i have bled, those instincts get pushed to the extreme end of the dial. The result speaks to fans who usually split their listening between rap heaviness and metal proper.

Inside oh i have bled and Its Theme of Damage
The single takes its title seriously. Writers who covered it framed the song around inner turmoil and catharsis. The track earns that framing by sounding like pressure getting released, not performed. Roadie Music described the record in terms of screamo, trap metal, and atmospheric weight. That is a fair summary of how many directions the song pulls at once.
What keeps oh i have bled from collapsing into noise is restraint. The melodic passages give the ear somewhere to land before the next breakdown. The production also leaves room for the electronic parts to breathe, rather than stacking everything into one wall of volume. For a catalogue single rather than a lead release, it carries the focus of a statement piece.

Who XequinsuXochaX Is Really For, From Trap Metal Fans Outward
This is music for listeners who already keep a wide rotation. If your playlists run from trap metal toward heavier ground, XequinsuXochaX will feel familiar fast. Fans of Ghostemane are the clearest fit. That catalogue built its name welding trap cadence to death and black metal weight, the same border XequinsuXochaX patrols here. Listeners who followed Bring Me The Horizon through their electronic turn will recognise the other half of the equation, where dubstep-adjacent production and melodic metal share a chorus.
The point of those comparisons is placement, not imitation. XequinsuXochaX is not chasing either act. The single simply sits in the space their audiences already roam. That is why it travels across scene lines which usually stay separate. A drill listener curious about heavier production and a metalcore fan curious about electronic sound design can meet on the same track.
A Reach That Crossed Borders on Its Own
The independent story behind the track is part of the draw. Since its debut, XequinsuXochaX’s music has gathered more than 750,000 streams on Spotify and over 2.8 million user-generated video views on TikTok. The single itself has passed 20,000 Spotify streams, and its animated video has cleared 5,000 views. The project reports listeners across 153 countries. That is a spread most independent heavy acts take years to build.
Press attention has followed the numbers. The single drew features from Illustrate Magazine, Akt Music, and Edgar Allan Poets, outlets working the experimental and heavy-music beat. “The reception to ‘oh i have bled’ has been incredibly humbling and energizing,” said Jeremy Foster, the artist behind the project. “To see the track connect with so many listeners worldwide, forging a path between genres, is exactly what I set out to do.”
RapStar.News’s curator team summed up the appeal:
“XequinsuXochaX earns a slot in our rotation by making genre fusion sound deliberate instead of decorative, letting the dubstep low end and the melodic lift carry equal weight.”
Where to Hear oh i have bled
oh i have bled is out now, built for repeat listening. It is the kind of single that reveals another layer once the initial impact settles. For an act this early in its run, the craft on display sets a high bar for whatever lands next.
Follow XequinsuXochaX across platforms: Spotify, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram.


