There’s a specific kind of courage in the pivot. For Nomadic Narwhal, the Phoenix of the heavy music world — always rising, always shifting — that pivot arrives in the form of Call of the Current, the project’s boldest single to date. Where founder Jesse Beisner’s previous work built a mythos around the ocean’s grandeur, this one turns the lens inward. It’s progressive and symphonic metal at its most human: raw, self-produced, hand-painted, and deeply personal. Featured in Loudwire and Decibel, and now landing on Seaborne Records, Nomadic Narwhal has earned the right to get vulnerable.
Nomadic Narwhal emerged in 2022 with debut singles Arrival and Monolith, quickly carving out a space that few artists occupy comfortably: the intersection of cinematic atmosphere, progressive heaviness, and genuine emotional depth. The critically acclaimed four-part Fathoms release confirmed what early listeners already knew — this wasn’t a gimmick built around an aesthetic. It was a fully realized vision.
That vision has always been rooted in the ocean — its power, its mystery, its indifference to human scale. But Call of the Current marks a shift. The ocean is still there, in the metaphor, in the title — but this time it’s internal. The current pulling at Beisner is emotional, not tidal.
“I wrote how I wanted to feel. Sometimes you just need to write to get through some things.”
— Jesse Beisner, Founder
Released May 1, 2026 via Seaborne Records, Call of the Current is Nomadic Narwhal at their most exposed. The production is self-handled — deliberately raw, unrefined in the places where polish would be dishonest. The artwork is hand-painted, a physical act in a digital age, reflecting the DIY identity that has always sat beneath the cinematic surface of the project.
For fans of Deftones and Devin Townsend, the sonic fingerprints will be immediately familiar — that specific combination of heaviness and vulnerability, brutality and beauty, that makes progressive metal resonate beyond its genre. But Call of the Current earns its comparisons rather than chasing them. It sounds like Nomadic Narwhal processing something real, not like a band building a mood board.
The title itself came from the fans — a detail worth noting. It says something about the relationship Beisner has built with his audience that their input shaped what this moment would be called. That’s not a marketing tactic. That’s a community.
“This is Nomadic Narwhal trading grand mythic narratives for something more intimate — where the emotional resonance is palpable and lasting.”
Nomadic Narwhal has always been more than a metal project. It’s been a study in how far you can push cinematic heaviness before it becomes something else entirely — something that sits closer to art than genre. Call of the Current doesn’t abandon that ambition. It deepens it. Stream it. Feel it. Let the current take you.







