“I’ll be in a new city for the first time, fucking completely isolated, sad, depressed, contemplating the void… and the sweetest person will come up and tell us that we changed their life for the better. It’s so good, because it makes so many painful moments worth it.”
Infant Island drummer Austin O’Rourke has been asked by Kerrang! to pull some positives out of their music, because – in the best possible way – to spend time with the Virginian metallers both in-person and on record is to receive a reminder that all is not well.
Joined by guitarist and co-vocalist Alexander Rudenshiold, the pair are also talking K! through the process of creating their stunning new album, Obsidian Wreath, which has been venerated in metal and punk circles since its release. An unrelenting, grandiose mix of black metal, shoegaze and hardcore, its apocalyptic themes were only emphasised when the recording process began with the band “masked up” during the pandemic.
“I challenged myself to let the song kill me, you know?” laughs Austin. “By the end of recording it, I was gasping for air and needing a hug.”
“When I was writing lyrics, I was thinking about the larger systems that we have to interface with all the time,” adds Alexander. “Found Hand is about feeling alienated from labour, but also socially, in isolation or whatever… We’re interested in making music that is resonant with these larger, ongoing feelings.”
“The energy that we’re channelling is interesting,” says Austin, “because the glimmer of hope is humanity gaining coherence.”