Clean vocals

The term clean vocals is used to describe melodic and clear singing styles. It is most notably used to refer to heavy metal music, as an alternative to harsh, screamed or growled vocals, which are mainly displayed in extreme metal bands. They can range from operatic vocals (such as Nightwish) to simple melodies to harsh yelling, which would only be considered clean vocals when compared to death grunts.

Bands can create contrast between harsh and clean vocals in two ways. One way, employed by bands such as Opeth, My Dying Bride, Fear Factory, As I Lay Dying and Underoath is to have one singer produce both harsh and clean vocals. Other bands, such as Dimmu Borgir or The Project Hate, employ two singers—one for each style. Bands such as Vintersorg and Arcturus often shift between clean and growled vocals.

Many melodic death metal bands use clean vocals; well-known examples include Soilwork, In Flames, Gardenian, Scar Symmetry, and Dark Tranquillity (though most of their albums not feature them). In the majority of songs, clean vocals are mainly used in the chorus or as back up vocals during verses, but songs like In Flames' "Only for the Weak" (Clayman) and "Ordinary Story" (Colony) are exceptions in that they use clean vocals in the verses and growled vocals in the choruses.