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With six albums to choose from, Deafheaven's George Clarke reveals the song that he would use to introduce the band to new ...
Meldal-Johnsen helped them evolve, but Deafheaven have a hard time sitting still. They felt a creative itch during the Infinite Granite tour — playing lots of heavy stuff during soundchecks, cementing ...
“Magnolia” is Deafheaven for actual metalheads: four straight minutes of crash-cymbal hits and palm-muted guitars with no pretty parts to speak of. “The Garden Route” plays like an ...
“Magnolia” and the punishing “Revelator” would sound right at home on that record. However, the songwriting here is sharper and more direct than anything Deafheaven has done ...
Following the intensity of “Doberman” and “Magnolia,” it’s a respite, familiar and comforting. What makes Lonely People With Power arguably Deafheaven’s best album is that it embraces ...
Deafheaven play a form of music dubbed ... small details stand out. “Magnolia” has heads-down black metal riffage, but also a passage of chiming guitars that would not be out of place ...
Fifteen years into a storied career that’s crisscrossed the boundaries of black metal and shoegaze, Deafheaven has found a way to once again outdo themselves. “Lonely People With Power” feels like a ...
November’s festival of heaviness and extremity, Damnation, just got even louder – and there’s “so much more to come” to the ...