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Official Merch

Infinite Granite - 12" Deluxe Picture...
$34.99 USD

Infinite Granite - 12" Clear w/ Cobal...
$30.99 USD

Infinite Granite - 12" Cobalt Blue w/...
$30.99 USD

Infinite Granite - 12" Clear w/ Light...
$30.99 USD

Infinite Granite - 12" Black Vinyl
$27.99 USD

Infinite Granite CD
$13.99 USD

Orbs Tie Dye T-Shirt
$30.00 USD

Style Guide Black T-Shirt
$30.00 USD

Shellstar Black T-Shirt
$30.00 USD

Infinite Granite - Enamel Pin Set
$25.00 USD
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What fans are saying

Tim
October 14th 2025
Don't have a photo. Deafheaven was seemless live. Very energetic, unique stage presence, and those guys were actually having fun on stage all the while putting on a killer show. They were lush. They were lethal. They were brutal. They were beautiful. The only metal band where you can sway to while a circle pit intensifies in the background.
Lexington, KY@Manchester Music Hall
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Deafheaven Biography
DEAFHEAVEN.COM
Deafheaven’s music feels like a project of accrual—on each album they fill new songs with elements of what they’ve learned in their earlier experiments. You hear echoes of past recordings in the howls of the present: the sun-dappled screamo histrionics of Roads to Judah are more fully realized in Sunbather’s pastel star-scapes; New Bermuda doubles down on the heaviest elements of both of those records; Ordinary Corrupt Human Love threads together elements of the soft and the heavy into an especially epic statement. Infinite Granite, often described simply as Deafheaven’s record with mostly clean vocals, compressed it all into something strikingly solid. That was true, but there was much more to it than that; listening to Lonely People With Power, you can hear its echoes everywhere—and if you listen closely, you can find deeper ways back into it when you listen to it again... Ultimately, Lonely People is a record that is anti-loneliness. It’s about finding less harmful ways to escape: your chosen family, your community, and even magic.
Read MoreDeafheaven’s music feels like a project of accrual—on each album they fill new songs with elements of what they’ve learned in their earlier experiments. You hear echoes of past recordings in the howls of the present: the sun-dappled screamo histrionics of Roads to Judah are more fully realized in Sunbather’s pastel star-scapes; New Bermuda doubles down on the heaviest elements of both of those records; Ordinary Corrupt Human Love threads together elements of the soft and the heavy into an especially epic statement. Infinite Granite, often described simply as Deafheaven’s record with mostly clean vocals, compressed it all into something strikingly solid. That was true, but there was much more to it than that; listening to Lonely People With Power, you can hear its echoes everywhere—and if you listen closely, you can find deeper ways back into it when you listen to it again... Ultimately, Lonely People is a record that is anti-loneliness. It’s about finding less harmful ways to escape: your chosen family, your community, and even magic.
Metal
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