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Fort Worth Band Dead Butterflies Are Screaming Into the Summer

The Texas screamo band survives off loaning and borrowing instruments, rapidly rising as an exciting DIY act to watch.
Image: A man from a band screaming into a microphone
Dead Butterflies has recently opened for bulletsbetweentongues. Diego Hernandez
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Dead Butterflies fuse breakcore, brass and teenage angst into one of Texas screamo’s most streamed acts—before adulthood even kicks in.

Somewhere in Fort Worth, seven musicians in their late teens, some fresh out of high school and others about to graduate, are screaming into borrowed microphones and patching together synthesizers with thrifted cables.

Their band, Dead Butterflies, is not old enough to rent a van without a parent's signature, but they have already surpassed some of the most prominent names in Texas screamo.

As of May, they are drawing over 32,000 monthly listeners on Spotify. That is more than bulletsbetweentongues, a well-established Texas screamo group that Dead Butterflies recently opened in early March. However, the group does not measure their worth in numbers alone.

For them, the point has always been the music, the community it fosters and their passion for the craft.

“Seeing this band grow into what it is now is literally a childhood dream come true,” Micah Zimmer, founder and vocalist, says.

Dead Butterflies began in August 2023, when songwriter Micah Zimmer, now 18, discovered bands like Your Arms Are My Cocoon and felt inspired to experiment with a style known online as bedroom skramz.

A blend of emotionally raw screamo and lo-fi production, bedroom skramz emerged from online DIY communities where artists recorded intense, often cathartic songs using limited equipment in bedrooms, closets and dorm rooms. For Zimmer, the genre initially seemed inaccessible and chaotic, but it became a challenge worth exploring.

Zimmer’s passion for music began well before Dead Butterflies, shaped by years of electronic production and deep involvement in marching band. The spark that set everything in motion came when he first heard his high school band perform pep tunes.

“I had a big moment of ‘oh my god, this is what I want to do for the rest of my life,’” Zimmer says.

That path led him to trumpet, then guitar, and eventually the EDM software that powered the first Dead Butterflies recordings.

“I never had the funds to afford a studio or any fancy recording equipment,” Zimmer said. “I just said, ‘whatever’ and used the gear I had collected making EDM songs and used that to record everything.”

The first EP was recorded in his room, direct into a Focusrite interface, without amps or reverb. Zimmer describes the sound as “awful,” but said it felt honest.

According to Zimmer, the CDs and cassettes for the debut sold out within minutes of being posted. A trickle of attention soon turned into a wave. Friends and fellow musicians expressed interest and the solo project evolved into a full band, seven members deep, all of whom were friends from school band programs.

The current lineup includes Micah Zimmer on vocals and songwriting, Stella Prewitt on trombone and vocals, Yair Guillen on bass, Josue Hernandez on drums and co-writing, Kai Lathpakdy on guitar, Jonathan Macias on guitar and Tyler Bautista on trombone and keyboard. The members' ages range from 17 to 19.
click to enlarge Bandmates sitting down on a carpet
Dead Butterflies is made up of seven members with their ages ranging from 17 to 19.
Diego Hernandez
Nearly all seven members of Dead Butterflies received structured music education in jazz, marching band and orchestra. Five of them play brass instruments.

Their rehearsals take place at Guillen's house and feature an array of instruments, including guitars, trombones, trumpets and synthesizers. Hernandez, who once had ambitions of performing at jazz festivals, now tracks blast beats from a laptop recording rig set up in his room.

Their sound is a mix of screamo intensity, glitchy electronic elements, shoegaze textures and ambient passages. Brass instruments are often layered into the arrangements. Trombone parts crash into distorted guitar riffs and the songs frequently shift direction without warning.

They have described their setup as makeshift. Much of their equipment is borrowed. At one point, their drum throne broke during practice and was replaced with an office chair.

“Dead Butterflies survives off of loans and borrowing,” Zimmer says.
click to enlarge Man playing drums
Josue Hernandez playing drums.
Diego Hernandez


Despite these limitations, the band has continued to gain traction. Their music is recorded using home setups and digital audio workstations like Ableton. The band writes collaboratively, often starting with riffs or looped samples. Their lyrics, written mostly by Zimmer, are introspective and emotional, reflective of the genre’s traditions.

“I initially started Dead Butterflies as a way to aggressively get out my sadness,” Zimmer says. “It evolved into diving deeper into my personal life and letting myself open up to not only the audience but to myself.”

The band's music evolved into a platform for exploring themes of self-hatred, grief and healing. Zimmer noted that their recent work carries a more hopeful tone, with upbeat instrumentals and lyrics that, though melancholic at first glance, ultimately convey a narrative of progress and moving forward.

Though some members are still in school and others have already graduated, Dead Butterflies are managing academic responsibilities, the transition to adulthood and the increasing attention their music is receiving. Balancing schoolwork with the demands of the band has created a hectic but rewarding routine.

"We’re figuring it out, taking it day by day. But we know that this moment is something special, and we’re all giving it everything we’ve got,” Prewitt says.

Despite their online success, Dead Butterflies are not exactly household names within their own schools. The band members are not among the popular crowd at school, and many of their peers remain unaware of their growing Spotify following.

"We do not really get any special treatment or anything," says Macias. "At school, we are just regular students. Our music life exists separate from our school life."

Dead Butterflies is part of a broader resurgence in the North Texas emo and screamo scenes. Cities like Fort Worth and Denton have long supported underground music, with venues such as Rubber Gloves and a network of house shows contributing to a strong DIY culture.

Bands from the region, including Record Setter and Teethe, have built loyal followings and encouraged experimentation.
Dead Butterflies sit naturally in this environment. The group does not shy away from incorporating elements not traditionally associated with screamo, including brass arrangements and IDM-inspired beats.

“I had my hands in various genres before even thinking about doing screamo. Whether it is marching band brass, breakcore drums, or Latin jazz, Dead Butterflies is just a big pot of sound that I love,” Zimmer says.

Their rise also reflects a changing landscape in music promotion. Online platforms like Bandcamp and Spotify have allowed bands like Dead Butterflies to build followings without traditional industry support.
click to enlarge Bandmate playing guitar
Jonathan "Johnny" Macias playing guitar.
Diego Hernandez
Not all members of Dead Butterflies are graduating this spring. Some already have, and others are wrapping up their senior year.

Their plans for the future vary. Some will attend college or trade school. One member will enlist in the National Guard. While the future of the band in its current form is uncertain, all members have expressed a desire to continue making music together in some capacity.

“Dead Butterflies has made us all better musicians, but more than that, it has kept us together,” Prewitt says.

For a band built on home recordings and borrowed gear, they have reached far. Whether or not they remain active after graduation is still to be seen.

However, for now, they are still teenagers with Spotify accounts, marching band memories and a growing catalog of songs, ending their school years with a sense of accomplishment and anticipation for what comes next.

“I always have, and still do, see Dead Butterflies as a really fun group of friends," Zimmer says. "Making music on a stage, hanging out and eating Waffle House afterward."