Sunday 5 May 2019

ALBUM REVIEW: Inter Arma, "Sulphur English"

By: Mark Ambrose

Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 12/04/2019
Label: Relapse Records




The triple guitar attacks, rippling blast beats, and ambient drones may make your skin crawl one moment, before taking your breath away with a moment of acoustic beauty.  If there’s a record coming this year that can outdo this one, I’m more than happy to listen.  But for now, Inter Arma stands head and shoulders above the rest



“Sulphur English” CD//DD//2LPTrack listing


1). Bumgardner
2). A Waxen Sea
3). Citadel
4). Howling Lands
5). Stillness
6). Observances of the Path
7). The Atavist’s Meridien
8). Blood on the Lupines
9). Sulphur English



The Review:


To call Inter Arma one of the standout groups in current metal feels like an understatement:  while they’ve been a solid doomy/sludgy/deathy collective since their debut, “Sundown”, their releases with Relapse Records, starting with 2013’s “Sky Burial”, have been increasingly complex, challenging, and moving. Their latest, “Sulphur English”, is yet another high water mark and an early contender for “year’s best”.

Like the best metal “intro” tracks, “Bumgardner” is atmospheric and pummeling leadup to the chaos and violence to follow.  The rolling drumbeats and mounting static lead right into the gargantuan central riff of “A Waxen Sea”.  You might imagine, with the churning, tidal instrumentation pervading the track, the lyrics would be sheer nihilism, but Inter Arma is a group that effortlessly embraces the terrifying and the sublime.  Some of the lyrics here are practically Wordsworthian: “The morning rises guardedly / Over a stirring countryside / Illuminating the far off sea. / A waxen shield, horizon’s protector.”  It isn’t so much pretty, as it is fundamentally stirring.  

“Citadel” turns toward grimness and decay, referring to the seasons spoiling, wounds “of corporeal and psychic root” that hold the narrator captive.  But Inter Arma keeps turning away from the metallic tropes of abject misery – while there is strife, lead singer Mike Paparo intones that, “A fire burns deep in the citadel of my heart”. Meanwhile, Steven Russell and Trey Dalton swap some of the most face-melting guitar leads and menacing harmonies this side of a Morbid Angel record.
It’s hard not to dissect each song at length – “Howling Lands” is like a death rock dirge crossed with a tribal war dance, highlighting the muscular power that drummer/multi-instrumentalist TJ Childers brings to the band. Plus, between “Howling Lands” and “Stillness”, Paparo pulls off a convincing gothic baritone that occasionally sounds like Danzig at his sweaty, howling best.

“Observances of the Path” serves as an interlude from the folk-metal hymnal of “Stillness” to the complex, polyrhythmic cacophony of “The Atavist’s Meridian”.  For nearly half the song’s twelve minutes, it builds in tension, never approaching a major key or melodic reprieve.  A mid-song interlude lulls the listener into a false sense of security, interspersing quieter, looser guitar picking with spoken word snippets, before gradually building to a violent climax that sounds like Childers is pummeling every drum in the western hemisphere.  I heard this track while driving through catastrophic rain and it was one of the most distressing, terrifying, and exhilarating listens I’ve had in a while – sometimes things just line up perfectly.

“Blood on the Lupines” may be the most “doom” track on the record, at least in terms of tempo and scorching, filthy bass tone courtesy of Joe Kerkes.  But the psychedelic guitar tones occasionally evoke Pink Floyd and early King Crimson.  Paparo dips into his baritone (now more Peter Steele than Glenn), but still howls and shrieks like he’s possessed by some primal, prehistoric spirit.  Taken in tandem with the closing title track, the demonic fury is a beautiful juxtaposition.  Sulphur English” closes like a sermon, warning about the “corrupt tongue of imperious fools” and exhorting the crowd to “beware the charlatan”. I’d be tempted to draw current political analogies, but “Sulphur English’s themes echo through time, more Paleolithic than Anthropocene.  

The idea that these charlatans “in threads woven in gilded opulence” seem to emerge in every era is just as haunting as the propulsive, buzzing music that Inter Arma weaves through the track, and the album itself.  The triple guitar attacks, rippling blast beats, and ambient drones may make your skin crawl one moment, before taking your breath away with a moment of acoustic beauty.   Sulphur English” is a rare record that functions both as a showcase of eclectic and skilled musicianship and a unified, brilliant tome best enjoyed in one prolonged listen.  If there’s a record coming this year that can outdo it, I’m more than happy to listen.  But for now, Inter Arma stands head and shoulders above the rest.



“Sulphur English” is available HERE




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