In•ter a•li•a
in•ter a•li•a is the fourth studio album by American post-hardcore band At the Drive-In, released on May 5, 2017, through Rise Records, representing the group's first full-length recording in 17 years following their 2001 disbandment.[1][2] Formed in El Paso, Texas, in 1993, At the Drive-In gained prominence in the late 1990s underground scene for their frenetic live performances and genre-blending sound, achieving mainstream breakthrough with the 2000 album Relationship of Command before splintering into side projects Sparta and The Mars Volta.[3][4] Produced by guitarist Omar Rodríguez-López and Rich Costey, in•ter a•li•a comprises 11 tracks emphasizing angular riffs, rapid tempo shifts, and Cedric Bixler-Zavala's surreal, politically charged vocals, though recorded without longtime member Jim Ward.[5][6] While lauded for recapturing the band's explosive energy in songs like "Governed by Contagions," the album drew mixed critical reception, with some reviewers noting it as a competent but derivative effort lacking the raw innovation of prior works.[7][8] Subsequent internal conflicts, including public disputes between Bixler-Zavala and Rodríguez-López, rendered in•ter a•li•a the band's final studio release, underscoring At the Drive-In's pattern of abrupt formations and dissolutions driven by creative and personal tensions.[4]Background and Reunion
Historical Context and Hiatus
At the Drive-In formed in 1993 in El Paso, Texas, initially by vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala and guitarist Jim Ward, amid a local DIY punk scene.[9] The band solidified its lineup with guitarist Omar Rodríguez-López, bassist Paul Hinojos, and drummer Tony Hajjar, releasing early EPs and albums on independent labels that built a cult following through intense live performances and a blend of post-hardcore energy and art-punk experimentation.[3] Their breakthrough came with the 2000 album Relationship of Command, released via Grand Royal, which captured critical acclaim and commercial momentum, peaking at No. 116 on the Billboard 200 amid heightened media attention following tours supporting major acts.[10] By early 2001, following exhaustive world touring and escalating hype, the band announced an indefinite hiatus, citing in a press release "complete mental and physical exhaustion" as the primary factor, though internal accounts later highlighted contributing elements like creative stagnation, relentless schedules, and substance abuse issues among members.[11][12] This split, formalized in March 2001, stemmed from accumulated pressures that fractured group dynamics, prompting members to pursue divergent paths rather than sustain the original configuration.[13] Post-hiatus, Bixler-Zavala and Rodríguez-López founded The Mars Volta, exploring progressive and experimental rock, while Ward, Hinojos, and Hajjar formed Sparta, shifting toward more melodic post-hardcore sounds; Hinojos eventually transitioned to The Mars Volta.[3] These side projects reflected irreconcilable artistic visions that had simmered during At the Drive-In's final years, with Ward's departure from the 2016 reunion lineup—replaced by guitarist Keeley Davis—underscoring persistent tensions and preventing a full original reconstitution for the In•ter a•li•a era.[14]Reunion Announcement and Lineup Formation
At the Drive-In reunited in January 2012 after an 11-year hiatus, initially performing at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 15 and 22 in Indio, California, followed by Lollapalooza in Chicago on August 5.[15] [16] These festival bookings, without any new material, reflected pragmatic motivations tied to promoter interest and demand for legacy acts rather than artistic reinvention, leading some fans to perceive the shows as nostalgia-driven cash-ins.[17] Efforts escalated in late 2015, when the band agreed to reconvene and booked a slot at the Rock on the Range festival for May 2016, their first joint appearance in four years.[18] By January 2016, they announced an international tour alongside intentions to release new music, signaling label involvement with Rise Records.[19] This progression culminated in December 2016 with the single "Governed by Contagions," released on December 8 via Rise Records, confirming the band's commitment to original material under guitarist Omar Rodríguez-López's production oversight.[20] [21] The lineup underwent compromises, excluding founding guitarist Jim Ward due to his commitments with Sparta, as announced on March 19, 2016, just before the tour's launch.[22] [23] Ward's departure, pivotal for the band's dual-guitar harmonic interplay, prompted the addition of guitarist Keeley Davis starting in 2016, which fans and observers noted altered the group's chemistry by reducing layered textures central to their earlier sound.[24] A brief stint with guitarist Icky Woods preceded Davis's integration, further highlighting ad hoc adjustments amid skepticism over the reunion's authenticity.[25]Production Process
Songwriting and Composition
Omar Rodríguez-López served as the primary musical force in composing in•ter a•li•a, developing riff-driven structures through organic, iterative sessions that emphasized the band's signature chaotic post-hardcore energy, including spastic rhythms and dual-guitar interplay.[26] These elements drew from At the Drive-In's pre-hiatus sound rather than the progressive experimentation of Rodríguez-López's Mars Volta projects, as the band aimed to recapture the immediacy of their early dynamic during a 2016 planning meeting in Seattle.[27] Song development occurred iteratively, often in tour downtime such as backstage jams or laptop recordings, where Rodríguez-López and vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala evaluated material based on whether it "moved" them emotionally, refining riffs until cohesive tracks emerged without prolonged deliberation.[26] The process began in late 2015 after the band's October reunion commitment for touring and new music, progressing through collaborative jams across 2016 tour stops, with key piecing-together in Seoul in July 2016 before finalization in Los Angeles.[27] This yielded 11 tracks by early 2017, reflecting a democratic yet riff-centric approach amid band chemistry rebuilt post-hiatus.[27] Bixler-Zavala's role centered on lyric integration, layering surreal, oblique phrasing onto the established musical frameworks, though the process faced delays from an eight-month creative disagreement with Rodríguez-López over direction, compounded by trust issues and personal events like family births and deaths.[28] Despite these tensions, the compositions maintained At the Drive-In's empirical focus on high-energy output, prioritizing rhythmic assault over expansive innovation.[29][26]Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for in•ter a•li•a occurred at The Sound Factory in Hollywood, California, throughout 2016.[30][21] This location facilitated a focused effort aligned with the band's reunion momentum, enabling a compressed timeline from initial tracking to completion ahead of the May 2017 release. The process reflected logistical trade-offs inherent to post-hiatus production, where urgency to capitalize on reformed lineup chemistry limited extended experimentation in favor of core band performances.[11] Guitarist Omar Rodríguez-López co-produced the album alongside Rich Costey, who handled mixing duties.[8][30] This internal leadership prioritized capturing the group's raw intensity, evident in multilayered guitar arrangements from Rodríguez-López and Keeley Davis, propulsive rhythms by drummer Tony Hajjar, and vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala's high-energy yelps and phrasing.[7] The production choices favored immediacy over refinement, yielding a dense sonic palette that echoed the band's live dynamism but occasionally amplified inconsistencies from the abbreviated schedule.[8]Musical and Lyrical Elements
Style, Instrumentation, and Influences
The album's style adheres closely to post-hardcore conventions, emphasizing frenetic pacing, dissonant angular riffs, and math-rock-inflected rhythmic complexity that prioritize intensity over accessibility.[7] Tracks deploy rapid tempo shifts and interlocking guitar patterns, evoking the controlled chaos of punk-hardcore origins while incorporating subtle textural effects like flanger-laden leads.[31] This sonic blueprint contrasts with the more anthemic, hook-driven urgency of Relationship of Command (2000), substituting fragmented structures and groove-oriented interludes for sustained crescendos, a shift attributable to the altered lineup and intervening side projects rather than unproblematic continuity.[32][31] Instrumentation centers on dual guitars from Omar Rodríguez-López and Keeley Davis, whose contributions introduce melodic contours absent in the original configuration with Jim Ward, tempering raw aggression with cleaner phrasing amid the prevailing distortion.[33] Tony Hajjar's drumming provides propulsive, shifting patterns that drive the momentum, often accelerating through polyrhythmic bursts, while Paul Hinojos's bass lines furnish a grounded counterweight to the upper-end turbulence.[32] The rhythm section's tightness anchors the album's high-velocity excursions, though the overall palette leans toward elaboration over the stripped urgency of earlier efforts, reflecting practical adaptations in execution post-reunion.[7] Influences from Fugazi and Drive Like Jehu manifest in the emphasis on taut, dissonant interplay and rejection of straightforward verse-chorus forms, underscoring At the Drive-In's roots in El Paso’s hardcore scene fused with Dischord-style experimentation.[34] These elements persist without dilution, yet the record's deviations—such as subdued hooks and episodic builds—undercut narratives of effortless evolution, instead evidencing the causal frictions of reformed personnel and matured technical priorities.[31][11]Themes and Lyrics
The lyrics of in•ter a•li•a, penned primarily by Cedric Bixler-Zavala, adopt a cryptic, riddle-infused structure that favors abstract imagery and phonetic flow over explicit declarations, enabling socio-political critique without descending into overt protest rhetoric.[28] This opacity, often delivered in stream-of-consciousness bursts, resists facile interpretation or co-option by mainstream narratives, distinguishing the album from more literal activist songwriting by prioritizing evocative puzzles that demand listener engagement.[28] Bixler-Zavala has described his method as avoiding "straight-forward lyrics," instead crafting "labyrinth-style riddles" to address power imbalances indirectly.[28] Central themes revolve around alienation from institutional structures and the contagious spread of authoritarian control, as in "Governed by Contagions," which uses North Korea's rigid society as a cautionary lens for familial and media indoctrination.[28] Lines like "Portrait of a family force-fed through tunnel straws / Singing cannibal hymns of the bourgeoisie" depict elite-driven manipulation propagating like a virus through society, critiquing how information pipelines sustain systemic dominance without naming specific perpetrators outright.[35] Similarly, tracks such as "Holtzclaw" embed references to real-world abuses, invoking the name of Daniel Holtzclaw—a police officer convicted in December 2015 of 18 counts of sexual assault against 13 women—to highlight brutality and ethnic targeting under veiled poetic language.[36] Bixler-Zavala employs this indirection to probe a "war on ethnicity" and institutional complicity, fostering personal reflection over declarative outrage.[36] Sexual abuse and institutional betrayal emerge in "Incurably Innocent," drawn from Bixler-Zavala's wife's experiences of assault and police indifference, framing victim agency as a hard-won confrontation with "incurable" societal innocence.[28][36] The album's lyrical viscera—raw yet encoded—contrasts with the denser, prog-infused narratives of Bixler-Zavala's Mars Volta collaborations, retaining a punk-rooted immediacy that sidesteps platitudinous moralizing in favor of causal dissection of power's infectious mechanics.[28] This approach, while prone to charges of pretension due to its empirical elusiveness, aligns with the band's historical marginality, channeling border-town disillusionment into commentary that unmasks contagion without prescribing cures.[36]Release and Commercial Aspects
Promotion and Singles
The lead single "Governed by Contagions" was released on December 8, 2016, marking At the Drive-In's first new material in 16 years and available as a free download via the band's official website.[37][38] Accompanied by a lyric video directed by Damon Locks and Rob Shaw, the track's themes of intercepted transmissions and societal control through contagious ideas generated initial discussion around surveillance and manipulation motifs.[37][38] This release served as a key promotional tactic to rekindle fan interest following the band's 2012 reunion announcement, emphasizing a high-energy post-hardcore revival after a 17-year album hiatus.[1] The follow-up single "Incurably Innocent" arrived on February 22, 2017, also via lyric video, further building anticipation with its frantic pacing and abstract lyrical content.[39][1] Album pre-orders were launched alongside the second single through Rise Records in North America and Transgressive Records internationally, tying into a narrative of triumphant return while highlighting production involvement from Omar Rodríguez-López and Rich Costey.[40][1] However, promotional efforts encountered pre-release skepticism due to lineup adjustments, including the departure of original bassist Paul Hinojos before full recording, which some attributed to Rodríguez-López's dominant creative influence, prompting questions about band dynamics.[1] Streaming platforms like YouTube and Spotify hosted the singles for broad accessibility, aiming to leverage digital virality for hype accumulation ahead of the May 5, 2017, release.[41][42]Release Details and Chart Performance
In•ter a•li•a was released worldwide on May 5, 2017, by Rise Records in the United States and Transgressive Records internationally.[1] The album became available in multiple formats, including digital download, compact disc, and 12-inch vinyl LP, with the latter pressed on colored variants such as clear with black smoke and opaque purple.[43] In the United States, the album debuted at number 39 on the Billboard 200 chart, propelled by approximately 14,000 equivalent album units sold during its first week, encompassing pure sales and streaming equivalents. This marked a modest entry relative to the anticipation surrounding the band's reunion after a 17-year recording hiatus, amid a music industry landscape shifted toward streaming, where physical and download sales had declined significantly from early 2000s benchmarks. In the United Kingdom, it entered the Official Albums Chart at number 30. These chart positions underscored the album's niche commercial footprint, with first-week figures falling short of blockbuster expectations for a post-hardcore act's long-awaited return, especially when juxtaposed against the over 500,000 lifetime sales of their 2000 breakthrough Relationship of Command.[44] Subsequent weeks saw rapid drops from the charts, reflecting limited sustained momentum in a fragmented market.[45]Reception
Critical Reviews
Upon release, in•ter a•li•a received generally favorable reviews, aggregating to a Metacritic score of 70 out of 100 based on 27 critic assessments, with 62% positive, 33% mixed, and 3% negative ratings, reflecting a solid but polarized reception rather than universal acclaim.[46] This tempered consensus stemmed in part from the album's position as At the Drive-In's first full-length in 17 years since Relationship of Command, fostering expectations of reinvention that the record's familiar post-hardcore template partially fulfilled but did not exceed.[47] Critics praising the album highlighted its explosive energy and urgency, positioning it as a vital rock revival amid a landscape dominated by less visceral genres. Consequence of Sound assigned a B grade, commending the band's return as "a good record that comes surprisingly close to meeting the stratospheric expectations" through its complicated, high-octane dynamics reminiscent of their peak era.[32] Similarly, some reviewers noted the tracks' ability to recapture the group's signature intensity, with interlocking guitars and propulsive rhythms evoking a timely resurgence of post-hardcore's raw power.[32] Conversely, detractors argued the album stagnated by prioritizing nostalgia over progression, failing to match the hype of a long-awaited comeback. Pitchfork critiqued it as featuring "dutiful performances and familiarly obtuse lyrics," suggesting a sense of obligation rather than fresh inspiration in its execution.[7] Loudwire deemed it polarizing, observing that it risked alienating listeners by leaning too heavily on past formulas without sufficiently pushing envelopes into new territory.[48] Common criticisms included Cedric Bixler-Zavala's strained vocal delivery, which some felt lacked the earlier agility, and the absence of Jim Ward's guitar and backing vocals, which had previously added crucial textural depth and contrast to the arrangements.[49] These elements contributed to perceptions of the album as competent yet uninspired, causally linked to the extended hiatus that amplified scrutiny on whether the band could evolve beyond its foundational sound.[49]Fan Reactions and Commercial Metrics
Fan reactions to in•ter a•li•a revealed a divide, with some appreciating the album's recapture of the band's frenetic live energy in studio form, while others dismissed it as a nostalgic cash-grab lacking innovation after a 17-year hiatus. On platforms like Reddit, users described it as "very solid" with "catchy hooks" that honored the band's post-hardcore roots without over-polishing, yet reunion fatigue led to backlash, including characterizations as a "clear and rather sad cash grab" on Discogs user comments.[50][30] Forums echoed grassroots skepticism, with discussions questioning whether the material better suited an EP format given perceived dated elements and uneven pacing compared to classics like Relationship of Command.[51] Aggregated fan data underscored limited enthusiasm, as evidenced by a 2.98/5 rating on RateYourMusic from 2,745 votes, reflecting broader ambivalence toward its reliance on familiar tropes over fresh evolution.[52] Post-release tours in 2017 attracted dedicated crowds, with setlists blending staples like "One Armed Scissor" and new tracks drawing praise for high-energy delivery at venues such as New York's Terminal 5, though some attendees voiced complaints over an imbalance favoring in•ter a•li•a material at the expense of deeper cuts from earlier eras.[53] Commercial metrics highlighted niche appeal rather than mainstream resurgence; the band's Spotify monthly listeners hovered around 289,000 as of 2025, with album streams remaining modest relative to peers in the genre.[54] Physical formats saw multiple colored vinyl variants upon release, but absence of remasters or widespread reissues by 2025 signaled subdued long-term demand, aligning with total career album sales under 150,000 units dominated by pre-hiatus output.[44][43]Post-Release Developments
Band Dissolution
In November 2018, At the Drive-In announced an indefinite hiatus following the completion of their reunion tour in support of in•ter a•li•a.[55] The decision came after the band's final performance on November 17 in São Paulo, Brazil, marking the end of live activities tied to the album's promotion.[56] Frontman Cedric Bixler-Zavala indicated uncertainty about future performances, stating via Twitter that the group lacked plans for additional shows.[57] This followed a period of intensive touring that echoed prior instances of strain, including 2016 cancellations attributed to vocalist's health issues and band exhaustion, though no specific 2018 tour dates were officially canceled for such reasons.[58] The hiatus has extended without resolution, with no subsequent recordings or reunions announced as of 2025, positioning in•ter a•li•a as the band's last original release. Contributing dynamics reportedly included accumulated fatigue from the reunion effort and diverging personal priorities among members, though public statements emphasized a need for rest over irreparable conflict.[55]Internal Conflicts
In late 2018, At the Drive-In announced an indefinite hiatus via social media, effectively halting all band activities following the promotional cycle for In•ter a•li•a. The decision stemmed from frontman Cedric Bixler-Zavala's escalating personal challenges, including his 2017 departure from the Church of Scientology and involvement in civil lawsuits against the organization and actor Danny Masterson, whom Bixler-Zavala accused of raping his wife in incidents dating to 2001, with claims that Scientology officials covered up the assaults.[59] [60] These legal entanglements, which included harassment allegations against Bixler-Zavala and his wife by Scientology affiliates, consumed his focus and prevented commitment to touring or new material, as he stated in November 2018 interviews expressing uncertainty about future live performances.[57] No formal lawsuits arose between band members over these matters, and Bixler-Zavala issued no public retractions of intra-band claims amid his Scientology exit, though the church's influence on personal relationships was later cited by collaborators as a factor in relational strains.[61] Guitarist Omar Rodríguez-López, in subsequent reflections, attributed broader relational dynamics to exhaustion from high-pressure reunions rather than specific incidents, emphasizing creative divergences where his emphasis on expansive projects clashed with Bixler-Zavala's shifting priorities toward solo endeavors and family.[60] These post-reunion frictions echoed unresolved issues from the band's 2001 dissolution, rooted in burnout and unequal creative control, ultimately precluding further collaboration; Rodríguez-López proceeded with solo work and reformed The Mars Volta in 2022 without Bixler-Zavala, while the latter limited musical output amid ongoing personal litigation.[62] No court dismissals or band statements explicitly addressed abuse allegations, with verifiable records showing only the hiatus as the empirical endpoint of joint efforts.[57]Credits
Personnel
The core lineup for in•ter a•li•a featured founding members Cedric Bixler-Zavala on lead vocals, Omar Rodríguez-López on guitar and production, Paul Hinojos on bass, and Tony Hajjar on drums and percussion.[43] [52] Guitarist Keeley Davis, recruited for the band's 2016 reunion, handled additional guitar duties in place of original member Jim Ward, who departed prior to recording and did not contribute.[43] Rich Costey, known for mixing albums by artists including Foo Fighters and Rage Against the Machine, co-produced and mixed the record alongside Rodríguez-López.[63] [43] Engineering was provided by Martin Cooke and Nicolas Fournier, with additional credits for layout by Christopher Friedman and photography by Jùnn.[43] [63] No guest musicians or additional performers are listed in the liner notes beyond the primary band members.[43]Track Listing
in•ter a•li•a comprises 11 tracks written by At the Drive-In, with a total runtime of 41:01.[30][52]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "No Wolf Like the Present" | 3:39 |
| 2 | "Continuum" | 4:02 |
| 3 | "Tilting at the Univendor" | 3:27 |
| 4 | "Governed by Contagions" | 3:27 |
| 5 | "Pendulum in a Peasant Dress" | 3:41 |
| 6 | "Incurably Innocent" | 3:27 |
| 7 | "Call Broken Arrow" | 4:11 |
| 8 | "Holtzclaw" | 3:50 |
| 9 | "Torrentially Cutshaw" | 3:12 |
| 10 | "Ghost-Tape No. 9" | 4:16 |
| 11 | "Hostage Stamps" | 3:53 |