Gravity

“…a dark folk band crafting one-of-a-kind foot-stomping compositions doubling as theatrical tellings of history.” – The Music Mermaid


From the very first note, Gravity doesn’t just ask to be heard—it demands to be felt. This dark folk ensemble doesn’t follow trends or chase chart positions. Instead, they channel something older, heavier, and more mythic. With weather-worn vocals, stomping rhythms, and cinematic arrangements, Gravity blurs the line between music and storytelling.

Each song is a stage, every lyric a lantern swinging through time. The band’s sound—rooted in Appalachian grit and baroque drama—echoes with ghost stories, lost letters, and crumbling empires. Their live performances feel like rituals: sweat, shadows, and the echo of old truths pulsing from boots on floorboards.

But it’s not all theater. There’s blood and bone here too. Gravity builds songs from real history—plagues, revolutions, folktales—and wraps them in raw instrumentation that swings between feverish and fragile. It’s this tension that turns listeners into believers.

Their growing discography is proof of a band not just finding its voice, but carving it into stone. From the brooding balladry of Ashes for Laurels to the battle-cry cadence of Iron Gospel, Gravity weaves entire eras into three-minute epics.

No two shows are the same. No two songs come from the same world. But whether they’re performing in candlelit chapels or underground bars, Gravity brings the same electric intensity—a storm of melody and myth, grit and grandeur.