Artist's albums
Live from Pioneertown, Ca
2022 · album
Dharma Wheel (Live)
2022 · single
Sucker / Death May Be Your Santa Claus
2022 · single
The Dharma Wheel
2021 · album
Don't Let the Tears
2021 · single
Dharma Wheel
2021 · single
Under the Wheels, Vol. 2
2020 · album
Alligator Bride (Live)
2020 · single
Calling Lightning Pt. 2 (Live)
2020 · single
Under the Wheels: Live from the Coasts, Vol 1
2019 · album
Coming Down (Live)
2019 · single
Death Prayer in Heaven's Orchard (Live)
2019 · single
Goodbye Ruby (Live)
2019 · single
The Alligator Bride
2018 · album
Missouri
2018 · single
The Wild Boys
2018 · single
Alligator Bride - Single
2018 · single
Mansion Songs
2015 · album
Live Rain
2014 · album
The Russian Wilds
2012 · album
Magnificent Fiend
2008 · album
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Biography
Over nearly 20 years, Howlin Rain may have become the quintessential independent American rock ’n roll band: a steam-spitting Hydra of cranked guitars, kicking asphalt dust through a kaleidoscoping travelogue of desert motels and dives, volleying forth transmissions of sci-fi poetry from the blacktop veins of this cracked and aching country. Now, in America 2021, capping this strangest and sorest of years, the band returns with The Dharma Wheel, a six-track, 52-minute dive into a joyous fantasy realm of exaggerated present. “I wanted The Dharma Wheel to be a portal from our everyday world, the one from which you stand on hard ground and hold the album in your hands and peer into the artwork, and into another universe,” says songwriter, guitarist and vocalist, Ethan Miller. “You enter into that universe with your eyes and ears and mind and take a ride through free-form meditation on these ideas — from big, fundamental concepts about our existence right down to the grease that rolls down the arm of a pulp novel killer as he eats a gas station hot dog in an old Dodge in an alleyway.” Lyrically, Miller has completed his evolution into a mushroom-plucking Whitman of the West, singing outlandish tales in a topographic blend of Humbead’s Revised Map of the World and an inverted U.S. where downtrodden bodhisattvas roam the back streets and moonless country roads.