
Year: 2009
Label: Peaceville
Catalog Number: CDVILEF271XFormat: CD (limited edition digibook with bonus track)
Website: http://katatonia.com
I’ve never been much of a metalhead—not because I don’t enjoy a good skull-crushing power chord now and again, but because so many of the trappings of that genre just seems so, well, juvenile: Over-the-top lyrics, bombastic guitar wankery, ridiculously cartoonish album covers, tight leather trousers, and that annoying falsetto screaming (or those bizarre cookie-monster death growls). Ugh.
But somewhere along the line, I must have missed the moment when heavy metal grew up. Because lately I’ve found myself listening to a number of bands that, despite being categorized as such, either refuse to trot out the above clichés, or who have long since abandoned that adolescent phase to mature into an adulthood of intelligent, complex, melodic music. Recently, quite a number of metal (or formerly-filed-under-metal) bands including Anathema, Opeth, and Ulver have all put out stellar albums of thoughtful, modern progressive rock. With Night Is the New Day, Sweden’s Katatonia have accomplished this as well.
Inspired by goth gods Joy Division, Fields of the Nephilim, and The Cure, as well as early doom-metal merchants such as My Dying Bride and Paradise Lost, Katatonia’s songs, as their latest album title suggests, deal in the dark side of human existence, with doom-heavy lyrics of death, decay, loss, and hopelessness. ”The great end is sweeping in / The dark will rise / Abandon your freedom,” vocalist Jonas Renske despairingly sings on the jackhammering opening track “Forsaker,” the heaviest (yet catchiest) song on the album. Resignation to subjugation, oppression, and/or death seems to be a central theme of Night Is the New Day, appearing again in “Departer,” "Nephilim," "Day and Then the Shade," and the beautifully orchestral “Inheritance,” where Renske sings of letting go of free will (“our inconvenient burden”) with such a mellow nonchalance that it seems like he’s already given up to “[t]he unforgiving void / The forge in which our values burn.”
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