Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Inter Arma|Paradise Gallows

Paradise Gallows

Inter Arma

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Since releasing 2010's Sundown, Virginia's Inter Arma have thwarted all attempts at pigeonholing their mercurial sound. Given the mind-melting ambition and expansiveness of Paradise Gallows, the word "heavy" should suffice from here on. While they've always referenced sources from obvious to obscure, Inter Arma have courted an otherness that reaches outside metal's confines. This quintet has created a labyrinthian 71-minute behemoth here. The brief "Nomini" commences with a lone fingerpicked acoustic guitar before Trey Dalton and Steven Russell's twinned Southern psychedelic guitar leads pierce through amid rattling kick drums and floor toms. What follows is the crushing, slow-churning grind of "An Archer in the Emptiness." Post-metal, avant rock, and bleak, sludgy death metal balance on a tightrope. Drummer T.J. Childers alternates between processional cymbals, kick drums, and blastbeat snare mayhem, shuttling various time and riff changes as vocalist Mike Paparo narrates in an unrighteously filthy growl. "Transfiguration" channels thrash and black metal in one of the most intense songs Inter Arma have ever delivered. Paparo's shrieks amid the blistering guitar and bass dissonance are chilling (especially near the five-minute mark). The even longer "Primordial Wound" is a portrait of 21st century Sabbathian funeral doom that's nearly glacial in its pace. The only relief is a complete bass dropout in the second half, with Paparo's nearly inhuman squawking that warps the groove into something unrecognizable. The nearly blissed-out heaviness of "The Summer Drones" is haunted by feedback, incessant cymbals, and Joe Kerkes' inventive bassline behind alternating clean and dirty vocals. The hyper-strummed guitar crescendos shapeshift between crushing sludge and prog changes. The tense melodicism of the opener returns on "Potomac" (as if it were actually a literal extension of the opener) with the addition of swelling acoustic piano and shimmering cymbals before those glorious twin leads move it to the horizon. At nearly 12 minutes, the title track possesses a spoken word passage that hovers above a breezy psychedelic vamp that directly references Dark Side of the Moon-era Pink Floyd -- though it reaches into far darker, more damaging territory -- with great guitar solos to boot. The breakneck drum kit chug in "Violent Constellations" is off the rails, but it's ultimately too long for the two-chord Swans-like riff to hold for the duration. "When the Earth Meets the Sky" is dark Gothic Western ethereal Americana. Paparo sings clean and melodic as slide acoustic guitars, reverbed atmospherics, and layered harmony vocals frame his lyrics. It's the only way Paradise Gallows -- with its seemingly endless combination and blur of influences -- could end. There's a lot to take in, but Inter Arma are one of the few bands who could deliver a work of such punishing excess, expansive musicality, and devastating beauty.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

More info

Paradise Gallows

Inter Arma

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From £10.83/month

1
Nomini
00:02:30

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

2
An Archer in the Emptiness
00:07:20

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

3
Transfiguration
00:09:10

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

4
Primordial Wound
00:10:01

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

5
The Summer Drones
00:06:46

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

6
Potomac
00:06:00

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

7
The Paradise Gallows
00:11:41

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

8
Violent Constellations
00:11:13

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

9
Where the Earth Meets the Sky
00:28:53

Inter Arma, MainArtist

(C) 2016 Relapse Records (P) 2016 Relapse Records Inc.

Album review

Since releasing 2010's Sundown, Virginia's Inter Arma have thwarted all attempts at pigeonholing their mercurial sound. Given the mind-melting ambition and expansiveness of Paradise Gallows, the word "heavy" should suffice from here on. While they've always referenced sources from obvious to obscure, Inter Arma have courted an otherness that reaches outside metal's confines. This quintet has created a labyrinthian 71-minute behemoth here. The brief "Nomini" commences with a lone fingerpicked acoustic guitar before Trey Dalton and Steven Russell's twinned Southern psychedelic guitar leads pierce through amid rattling kick drums and floor toms. What follows is the crushing, slow-churning grind of "An Archer in the Emptiness." Post-metal, avant rock, and bleak, sludgy death metal balance on a tightrope. Drummer T.J. Childers alternates between processional cymbals, kick drums, and blastbeat snare mayhem, shuttling various time and riff changes as vocalist Mike Paparo narrates in an unrighteously filthy growl. "Transfiguration" channels thrash and black metal in one of the most intense songs Inter Arma have ever delivered. Paparo's shrieks amid the blistering guitar and bass dissonance are chilling (especially near the five-minute mark). The even longer "Primordial Wound" is a portrait of 21st century Sabbathian funeral doom that's nearly glacial in its pace. The only relief is a complete bass dropout in the second half, with Paparo's nearly inhuman squawking that warps the groove into something unrecognizable. The nearly blissed-out heaviness of "The Summer Drones" is haunted by feedback, incessant cymbals, and Joe Kerkes' inventive bassline behind alternating clean and dirty vocals. The hyper-strummed guitar crescendos shapeshift between crushing sludge and prog changes. The tense melodicism of the opener returns on "Potomac" (as if it were actually a literal extension of the opener) with the addition of swelling acoustic piano and shimmering cymbals before those glorious twin leads move it to the horizon. At nearly 12 minutes, the title track possesses a spoken word passage that hovers above a breezy psychedelic vamp that directly references Dark Side of the Moon-era Pink Floyd -- though it reaches into far darker, more damaging territory -- with great guitar solos to boot. The breakneck drum kit chug in "Violent Constellations" is off the rails, but it's ultimately too long for the two-chord Swans-like riff to hold for the duration. "When the Earth Meets the Sky" is dark Gothic Western ethereal Americana. Paparo sings clean and melodic as slide acoustic guitars, reverbed atmospherics, and layered harmony vocals frame his lyrics. It's the only way Paradise Gallows -- with its seemingly endless combination and blur of influences -- could end. There's a lot to take in, but Inter Arma are one of the few bands who could deliver a work of such punishing excess, expansive musicality, and devastating beauty.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Speak No Evil

Wayne Shorter

Speak No Evil Wayne Shorter
More on Qobuz
By Inter Arma

Garbers Days Revisited

Inter Arma

Desolation's Harp

Inter Arma

Desolation's Harp Inter Arma

New Heaven

Inter Arma

New Heaven Inter Arma

New Heaven

Inter Arma

New Heaven Inter Arma

Sulphur English

Inter Arma

Sulphur English Inter Arma

Playlists

You may also like...

Take Me Back To Eden

Sleep Token

Take Me Back To Eden Sleep Token

Back In Black

AC/DC

The Mandrake Project

Bruce Dickinson

The Mandrake Project Bruce Dickinson

Toxicity

System Of A Down

Toxicity System Of A Down

Invincible Shield

Judas Priest

Invincible Shield Judas Priest