Does this singer from Mongolia count? This video is amazing to watch, especially since the singer doesn't speak English.
Always thought this was an interesting, but understandable approach. Bands from non-English counties producing music in English, despite their domestic audience not being predominantly English. It speaks, perhaps subtly, to the domination that English has on the first world stage.
Nightwish is probably my favourite example:
Lacuna Coil is another example, out of Italy:
KMFDM out of Germany is yet another:
What other examples can you think of off the top of your head?
Not really an Abba fan, but those concerts they’ve done in the UK with the holograms/ “digital avatars” look incredible.A
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Yes, Gojira and Sabaton are both on my playlist, should have included those in the OP, but it wasn't meant to be an exhaustive list, rather get people to list other bands, which has been eye-opening, some of the bands I just assumed were American were not!Some of the bands with long-term spots on my playlist are in this category.
Poets of the Fall (Finland)
Gojira (France)
Sepultura (Brazil)
In Flames (Sweden)
Opeth (Sweden)
Sabaton (Sweden)
I like Nightwish's older stuff.
I was going to respond to this point with the obvious exception, but then you saw that coming and mentioned it:One might notice that the overwhelming majority of artists who sing in English while not being native English speakers are from Europe. The above is valid mostly for them.
Pretty much any band or singer there that communicates with spoken language and wants to make it has or had to use English at some point.
Then you have one other large enough country, with Rammstein, which sorta never had to switch to English to be amazing.
There have been a few Spanish artists that have made it onto the charts not singing English, but they, like Rammstein, are the exception as you note, and they haven't been as successful as Rammstein has been of course.But that's about it, in my book. Everybody else had at least an English version of their local stuff.
Once you get out of Europe - this is no longer the case. You're either in English speaking countries if you're in north North America, either sing in Spanish and cover everything Mexico and south of it all the way to Antarctica. In Asia, you have plenty of countries that have the population critical mass needed to sustain a good living singing in a local language. India, Indonesia, Japan, China, Malaysia, Thailand - all are large enough to have local stars we never heard about, making boatloads of money and pulling millions of fans.