Artist's albums
Hallucinatorium (2020 Version)
2021 · single
Garbers Days Revisited
2020 · album
Purple Rain
2020 · single
March of the Pigs
2020 · single
Southern Man
2020 · single
Sulphur English
2019 · album
Howling Lands
2019 · single
The Atavist's Meridian
2019 · single
Citadel
2019 · single
Paradise Gallows
2016 · album
The Cavern
2014 · single
Sky Burial
2013 · album
Destroyer
2012 · single
Split
2010 · single
Sundown
2010 · album
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Biography
Richmond's INTER ARMA, reigning masters of the slow build, continue to trace a distinctly ambitious trajectory through modern metal. Their impulses tend toward the epic, but never bloat; they meld several styles — doom, sludge, and hard psych — without coming off like dilettantes. This newest full-length, Sulphur English, finds them mining deeper in the proggy organic doom fields that made both Paradise Gallows and Sky Burial so thrilling while expanding further the on the psych-folk strain that made those albums' peaks seem so lofty. Few metal bands have ever made such effective use of acoustic instruments in truly heavy environments as INTER ARMA do; the acoustic guitar that stitches "Stillness" together is as effective as any overdriven bass; a two-minute gloomy piano-and-feedback piece titled "Observances of the Path" rolls out the carpet for "The Atavist's Meridian," an album highlight that rides a gigantic, roomy drum sound into realms akin to a murkier Paradise Lost, a more aggressive Om, and a dreamier, more stoned Kylesa all playing together at once. Few bands make music as engrossing as INTER ARMA; their lengthy, almost meditative songs rumble patiently forward until you're ready to get thrown off a bridge — and then they throw you, with great force. - Words by John Darnielle