Armed for Apocalypse â The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me Review
By Owlswald
Sludge purveyors Armed for Apocalypse have little interest in fitting neatly into a scene or pandering to an audience. They lack both the time and the inclination. What they do have is relentless drive, a mountain of riffs, and a spirit forged through lived experience and hard-earned endurance. The Portland-by-way-of-Chico quartet has learned its lessons the hard way over 17 years and 3 LPs, cutting their teeth on the road, betting on Kickstarter campaigns to fund tours, and grinding it out night after night. That pathos bleeds through every pore of their music. 2022âs Ritual Violence was a distortion-soaked, relentlessly heavy effort rooted in the likes of Eyehategod, even if its uniformity somewhat blunted its impact. Fourth LP, The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me, is no different, thriving on sheer physicality and a firm commitment to a clearly defined approach that remains Armed for Apocalypseâs bread and butter.
If youâre in the mood for a good olâ fashioned chug-fest, Armed for Apocalypse is here to deliver. The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me locks into its identity early, delivering big, lumbering grooves that bulldoze the listener with sheer physical force. âFists Like Feathersâ and âAshes of the Nightâ announce their arrival immediately with huge down-tuned riffs and distorted drawls dipped in djenty flavors, while âSpellbound,â âKeep Up Appearancesâ and âLost Without a Lightâ pick up the pace with simple but effective Converge-esque hooks and breakdowns that feel designed to move bodies. Drummer Nick Harris absolutely hammers his kit, driving this sludgernaut1 forward with obliterating momentum. Nate Burmanâs vocals split the difference between Greg Puciatoâs (The Dillinger Escape Plan, Better Lovers) unhinged howls and Phil Anselmoâs toughâguy roar, never wavering from his acrid delivery or venturing from his tonal range. You wonât find any flash or frills here, just straight, unchecked fury, and these lads execute it with confidence.
While The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me maintains an intense, uncompromising core, its narrow scope limits its upside. Fueled largely by rigid structures and an overreliance on recurring songwriting formulas, Armed for Apocalypseâs consistency can be appealing in short bursts, but over time, the groupâs approach causes tracks to blur together. From âLost Without A Lightâ through âLurk,â the record delivers a run of pit-inducing cuts that are lean, direct, and effective, but repeated, tropey breakdowns funnel each track back into the chug factory. It reinforces the sense that The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me could have benefited from bolder, more creative risks. Penultimate song âBathed in a Tepid Pool of My Own Filth,â functions as a four-minute interlude of resonant, open string drones, offering little relief from the textural wash percolating throughout, particularly after tracks like âBeyond the Mirageâ or âImmortalâ have already bludgeoned you into submission with similar through-lines.
However, scattered moments of variety across The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me provide evidence that Armed for Apocalypse arenât purely one-trick. Crestfallen verses and brief melodic passages (âImmortalâ) and moments of vulnerability (âBeyond the Mirage,â the title track) suggest more nuanced songwriting, but they surface too sparingly to lift the record from its murky haze. Elsewhere, âFist Like Feathersâ shows the groupâs songwriting chops with a strong bout of riffs and hooks that are memorable from the start, while âLurkâ cycles Nails-like assaults before predictably reverting to metalcore breakdowns. Kurt Ballouâs (Converge) production gives everything a massive, polished heft,2 emphasizing Armed for Apocalypseâs crunchy, blueâcollar ethos and ensures that each pummeling section does its best to batter you until youâre bloodied and broken.
The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me isnât a record that invites deep emotional attachment so much as it aims for raw force. When Armed for Apocalypse allows themselves room to experiment, The Earth Is Breathing Beneath Me hints at something more. Those moments underline that Armed for Apocalypse has the talent and discipline to push beyond sheer heaviness. Their yeoman identity, relentless energy, and willingness to get in and get out without excess flash work to their advantage in many respects, and that authenticity can be enough to satisfy. But I canât help but crave more. Regardless of my desires, The Earth is Breathing Beneath Me never pretends to be more (or less) than what it is and is ultimately content to stop right there.
Rating: Mixed
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Church Road Records
Websites: armedforapocalypse.bandcamp.com | armedforapocalypse.com | facebook.com/armedforapocalypse
Releases Worldwide: April 24th, 2026
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