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Katatonia
239,455 Followers
• 36 Upcoming Shows
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Show More Dates (36)
Latest Posts
Katatonia
17 days ago
Katatonia's live shows just got more exciting!!!
NEW single ' Lilac' Out Now + The countdown begins...
'Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State' The NEW Katatoniamore
NEW single ' Lilac' Out Now + The countdown begins...
'Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State' The NEW Katatoniamore

View More Posts
Katatonia merch


Nightmares as Extensions of the Wakin...
$19.98

Nightmares as Extensions of the Wakin...
$16.98

Night Is The New Day
$29.98

Katatonia Night Is The New Day Patch ...
$16.41

Tonight's Decision 25th Anniversary M...
$29.98

Sky Void Of Stars
$13.63

Sky Void Of Stars
$17.40

The Great Cold Distance
$26.98

Brave Murder Day
$13.98

The Fall Of Hearts
$11.80

The Fall Of Hearts Sleeve
$37.98
View All
Katatonia's tour
Live Photos of Katatonia

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Fan Reviews

Lisandro
November 15th 2024
Con respecto a lo emotivo de poder escuchar a Katatonia en vivo, la profesionalidad de los músicos, la potencia y mística de esta banda, etc solo puedo decir que todo fue excelente.
La estrella que le quito al recital es debido a la calidad del sonido que hay en el lugar. Groove debería invertir en mejoras acústicas en el lugar, había demasiada reverberancia, demasiada saturación en el sonido. Incluso los dos primeros temas sonaron realmente mal, hasta que el sonidista le encontró la vuelta para mejorar el asunto, sin llegar por eso a ser óptimo el resultado.
Buenos Aires, Argentina@Palermo Groove

Leandro
July 8th 2024
Todas las bandas se lucieron, lo único que no me gustó fue que no hubo la misma predisposición escénica para todas las bandas, no había juego de luces cuando tocaron las primeras bandas, estaba muy poco preparado, y machine head tenía de todo, muy buen show, en fin, fui para ver a Katatonia más que a las otras bandas, y me decepcionó un poco ver que los organizadores no le dieron tanta importancia o atención a esos detalles para las demás bandas
Lisbon, Portugal@Altice Arena

Mike
February 10th 2024
Sounded tight. Played the songs I wanted to hear. Newer songs of course were more commercial but that’s to be expected. My main gripe is about the “stage show”. I get that it’s the norm nowadays for bands….particularly guitarists to go direct with digital modelers rather than using amps on stage. When a band from Sweden plays Australia cartage is expensive. It makes sense not to lug hundreds of pounds of amps across the world with you to save costs. However Katarina’s stage consisted of a half dozen Marshall full stacks - that’s nearly fifty 12” guitar speakers. I’m willing to bet all but one of these cabinets were an empty shell with no speakers inside and were merely for “show”. If a foreign act is going through the effort to put on a stage show by renting a dozen Marshall cabs then why don’t they actually have the balls to do it for real? Rent another three power amps and plug them in!
Sydney, Australia@Metro Theatre
View More Fan Reviews
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About Katatonia
‘Stagnation’ is not a word in the Katatonia dictionary. Since breaking through as masters of death/doom, Stockholm’s freethinkers have transcended genre, consolidating goth, shoegaze and prog into bleak, melodic songs. Now, after three decades of invention and reinvention, Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State marks another bold leap – not to mention singer, founder and lead songwriter Jonas Renkse’s most personal effort to date.
Following the immediate anthem-making of City Burials (2020) and Sky Void of Stars (2023), Katatonia’s 13th album gets more experimental and more metal without holding back on catchiness. The dark hooks and tender vocals remain, yet the band also drive in unpredictable directions while delivering their hardest riffs in years. It’s an indelible introduction to new guitarists Nico Elgstrand and Sebastian Svalland, who replace longtime member Roger Öjersson and co-founder Anders Nyström.
“Nightmares… is a very riff-based and very guitar-heavy album,” says Jonas. “When I was writing it, I knew that we would have a couple of new guitar players coming in. And, if you have two guitarists joining, you don’t want to present them with songs that are 60 percent keyboards. Maybe I subconsciously felt that I had to come up with some cool riffs so that they’d still want to join the band!”
The force and fearlessness throughout Nightmares… is clear from the start of the very first track, ‘Thrice’. Thunderous chords give way to an ambient verse, before the music builds back up to a wall of open-string chugs. On ‘The Light Which I Bleed’, Nico and Sebastian lead a loose, proggy jam that ratchets into a hard-hitting doom riff. ‘Wind of No Change’ even bridges the present and Katatonia’s earliest past, bassist Niklas Sandin and drummer Daniel Moilanen laying down a goth pulse while Jonas croons “Hail Satan” in a throwback to the band’s extreme metal roots.
“I just had this riff going, and I thought it had a bit of a heavy metal feel to it, or even a Slayer vibe,” the frontman explains. “And then I thought, maybe I should write something Satanic, because I haven’t really touched that with Katatonia since we did our first demo.”
In the lengthy Katatonia tradition of keeping listeners on their toes, Nightmares… also packs songs which rebel against the rest of the album. The verses of ‘Departure Trails’ de-emphasise the six-string, with the ballad stacking layers of keyboards and synths to near-symphonic levels. Meanwhile, ‘Warden’ boasts one of the most pop-friendly choruses in their catalogue.
Jonas calls his band’s ongoing rejection of musical rules “subconscious”. He adds, “Touring is great, but it gets tedious if you play the same old style of songs all the time. You want to change it up in some way, and I think it’s the same with the records.”
Katatonia started writing what would become Nightmares… in October 2023. Nico was already in the touring lineup at that point, and Sebastian was brought in the following June, effectively ending Anders’ near-35-year membership of the band he helped start.
“I haven’t really spoken to him about it but, in my way of seeing it, he wasn’t happy with being in a band, at least not this band,” Jonas says to explain his former musical partner’s exit. “He didn’t want to tour. He didn’t write music for a long time. He wasn’t very interested in band stuff: meetings, rehearsals. He wasn’t really there.”
In October 2024, Katatonia holed up in a converted church in rural Sweden owned by Tore Stjerna (Mayhem, Watain, Tribulation) to track drums, then recorded the rest of the instruments in their own studio in Stockholm. All the while, Jonas was getting closer and closer to his 50th birthday and found himself in a reflective mood. “I’ve been like that for the last couple of years, especially last year,” he admits. “50, it’s a big number, and I’ve been doing this for so long now.”
That introspection manifests across this new set of songs. After coming up with the album’s title, Jonas penned ‘In the Event Of’: the climactic finale narrates a nightmare he had more than 10 years ago, with a soundtrack of ominous synths and sorrowful chords. The artwork of Nightmares… is a direct illustration of those lyrics.
“It was supposed to be day, but it was super dark,” Jonas remembers of his haunting dream. “Looking at the sky, you could see flashes of fire behind dark clouds. And there were chains coming from the sky. The last line of the song is, ‘Mothers waiting in rows for the shadows of their children.’ I could see fences, a place where you would keep people captured, and mothers standing there, waiting for their children to come back.”
Just as soul-bearing, if not more so, is lead single ‘Lilac’, which voices a desire to forget painful memories. Jonas also sings in his own language for just the second time ever during ambient piece ‘Efter Solen’, which he co-wrote with Joakim Karlsson, a close friend and collaborator in synth-rock project Korda.
He reveals, “It’s the first song we ever worked on together, and it wasn’t done. While I was writing this album, Joakim was on to me, saying, ‘We should finish that song! I want it finished because it’s so good.’ I said, ‘Yeah, but maybe we should use it on the new Katatonia album.’ When I was finishing the song, I was so used to hearing it in Swedish that I had to write the rest of the lyrics like that.”
Now more than a dozen albums deep into a 30-year-plus career, Katatonia’s well of inspiration still hasn’t run dry. If anything, Nightmares… is one of the bravest and most vulnerable releases to bear their name. And, going forward, the band’s confidence will only continue to grow, thanks to the new blood in their ranks.
“This is a great place to be in,” Jonas says of the Katatonia of 2025. “Inspiration-wise, it’s so good to be surrounded with people that come in with energy and ideas and a strong will to take part, to take the band further. I want people to feel at home in this band and feel like we’re making a difference together.”
– Matt Mills, March 2025
Following the immediate anthem-making of City Burials (2020) and Sky Void of Stars (2023), Katatonia’s 13th album gets more experimental and more metal without holding back on catchiness. The dark hooks and tender vocals remain, yet the band also drive in unpredictable directions while delivering their hardest riffs in years. It’s an indelible introduction to new guitarists Nico Elgstrand and Sebastian Svalland, who replace longtime member Roger Öjersson and co-founder Anders Nyström.
“Nightmares… is a very riff-based and very guitar-heavy album,” says Jonas. “When I was writing it, I knew that we would have a couple of new guitar players coming in. And, if you have two guitarists joining, you don’t want to present them with songs that are 60 percent keyboards. Maybe I subconsciously felt that I had to come up with some cool riffs so that they’d still want to join the band!”
The force and fearlessness throughout Nightmares… is clear from the start of the very first track, ‘Thrice’. Thunderous chords give way to an ambient verse, before the music builds back up to a wall of open-string chugs. On ‘The Light Which I Bleed’, Nico and Sebastian lead a loose, proggy jam that ratchets into a hard-hitting doom riff. ‘Wind of No Change’ even bridges the present and Katatonia’s earliest past, bassist Niklas Sandin and drummer Daniel Moilanen laying down a goth pulse while Jonas croons “Hail Satan” in a throwback to the band’s extreme metal roots.
“I just had this riff going, and I thought it had a bit of a heavy metal feel to it, or even a Slayer vibe,” the frontman explains. “And then I thought, maybe I should write something Satanic, because I haven’t really touched that with Katatonia since we did our first demo.”
In the lengthy Katatonia tradition of keeping listeners on their toes, Nightmares… also packs songs which rebel against the rest of the album. The verses of ‘Departure Trails’ de-emphasise the six-string, with the ballad stacking layers of keyboards and synths to near-symphonic levels. Meanwhile, ‘Warden’ boasts one of the most pop-friendly choruses in their catalogue.
Jonas calls his band’s ongoing rejection of musical rules “subconscious”. He adds, “Touring is great, but it gets tedious if you play the same old style of songs all the time. You want to change it up in some way, and I think it’s the same with the records.”
Katatonia started writing what would become Nightmares… in October 2023. Nico was already in the touring lineup at that point, and Sebastian was brought in the following June, effectively ending Anders’ near-35-year membership of the band he helped start.
“I haven’t really spoken to him about it but, in my way of seeing it, he wasn’t happy with being in a band, at least not this band,” Jonas says to explain his former musical partner’s exit. “He didn’t want to tour. He didn’t write music for a long time. He wasn’t very interested in band stuff: meetings, rehearsals. He wasn’t really there.”
In October 2024, Katatonia holed up in a converted church in rural Sweden owned by Tore Stjerna (Mayhem, Watain, Tribulation) to track drums, then recorded the rest of the instruments in their own studio in Stockholm. All the while, Jonas was getting closer and closer to his 50th birthday and found himself in a reflective mood. “I’ve been like that for the last couple of years, especially last year,” he admits. “50, it’s a big number, and I’ve been doing this for so long now.”
That introspection manifests across this new set of songs. After coming up with the album’s title, Jonas penned ‘In the Event Of’: the climactic finale narrates a nightmare he had more than 10 years ago, with a soundtrack of ominous synths and sorrowful chords. The artwork of Nightmares… is a direct illustration of those lyrics.
“It was supposed to be day, but it was super dark,” Jonas remembers of his haunting dream. “Looking at the sky, you could see flashes of fire behind dark clouds. And there were chains coming from the sky. The last line of the song is, ‘Mothers waiting in rows for the shadows of their children.’ I could see fences, a place where you would keep people captured, and mothers standing there, waiting for their children to come back.”
Just as soul-bearing, if not more so, is lead single ‘Lilac’, which voices a desire to forget painful memories. Jonas also sings in his own language for just the second time ever during ambient piece ‘Efter Solen’, which he co-wrote with Joakim Karlsson, a close friend and collaborator in synth-rock project Korda.
He reveals, “It’s the first song we ever worked on together, and it wasn’t done. While I was writing this album, Joakim was on to me, saying, ‘We should finish that song! I want it finished because it’s so good.’ I said, ‘Yeah, but maybe we should use it on the new Katatonia album.’ When I was finishing the song, I was so used to hearing it in Swedish that I had to write the rest of the lyrics like that.”
Now more than a dozen albums deep into a 30-year-plus career, Katatonia’s well of inspiration still hasn’t run dry. If anything, Nightmares… is one of the bravest and most vulnerable releases to bear their name. And, going forward, the band’s confidence will only continue to grow, thanks to the new blood in their ranks.
“This is a great place to be in,” Jonas says of the Katatonia of 2025. “Inspiration-wise, it’s so good to be surrounded with people that come in with energy and ideas and a strong will to take part, to take the band further. I want people to feel at home in this band and feel like we’re making a difference together.”
– Matt Mills, March 2025
Show More
Genres:
Alternative Rock, Alternative Metal, Heavy Metal, Progressive Metal
Band Members:
Sebastian Svalland, Niklas Sandin, Daniel Moilanen, Jonas Renkse
Hometown:
Stockholm, Sweden
No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to Katatonia to play in your city
Request a Show
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (36)
Latest Posts
Katatonia
17 days ago
Katatonia's live shows just got more exciting!!!
NEW single ' Lilac' Out Now + The countdown begins...
'Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State' The NEW Katatoniamore
NEW single ' Lilac' Out Now + The countdown begins...
'Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State' The NEW Katatoniamore

View More Posts
Live Photos of Katatonia

View All Photos
Katatonia merch


Nightmares as Extensions of the Wakin...
$19.98

Nightmares as Extensions of the Wakin...
$16.98

Night Is The New Day
$29.98

Katatonia Night Is The New Day Patch ...
$16.41

Tonight's Decision 25th Anniversary M...
$29.98

Sky Void Of Stars
$13.63

Sky Void Of Stars
$17.40

The Great Cold Distance
$26.98

Brave Murder Day
$13.98

The Fall Of Hearts
$11.80

The Fall Of Hearts Sleeve
$37.98
View All
Katatonia's tour
Fan Reviews

Lisandro
November 15th 2024
Con respecto a lo emotivo de poder escuchar a Katatonia en vivo, la profesionalidad de los músicos, la potencia y mística de esta banda, etc solo puedo decir que todo fue excelente.
La estrella que le quito al recital es debido a la calidad del sonido que hay en el lugar. Groove debería invertir en mejoras acústicas en el lugar, había demasiada reverberancia, demasiada saturación en el sonido. Incluso los dos primeros temas sonaron realmente mal, hasta que el sonidista le encontró la vuelta para mejorar el asunto, sin llegar por eso a ser óptimo el resultado.
Buenos Aires, Argentina@Palermo Groove

Leandro
July 8th 2024
Todas las bandas se lucieron, lo único que no me gustó fue que no hubo la misma predisposición escénica para todas las bandas, no había juego de luces cuando tocaron las primeras bandas, estaba muy poco preparado, y machine head tenía de todo, muy buen show, en fin, fui para ver a Katatonia más que a las otras bandas, y me decepcionó un poco ver que los organizadores no le dieron tanta importancia o atención a esos detalles para las demás bandas
Lisbon, Portugal@Altice Arena

Mike
February 10th 2024
Sounded tight. Played the songs I wanted to hear. Newer songs of course were more commercial but that’s to be expected. My main gripe is about the “stage show”. I get that it’s the norm nowadays for bands….particularly guitarists to go direct with digital modelers rather than using amps on stage. When a band from Sweden plays Australia cartage is expensive. It makes sense not to lug hundreds of pounds of amps across the world with you to save costs. However Katarina’s stage consisted of a half dozen Marshall full stacks - that’s nearly fifty 12” guitar speakers. I’m willing to bet all but one of these cabinets were an empty shell with no speakers inside and were merely for “show”. If a foreign act is going through the effort to put on a stage show by renting a dozen Marshall cabs then why don’t they actually have the balls to do it for real? Rent another three power amps and plug them in!
Sydney, Australia@Metro Theatre
View More Fan Reviews
About Katatonia
‘Stagnation’ is not a word in the Katatonia dictionary. Since breaking through as masters of death/doom, Stockholm’s freethinkers have transcended genre, consolidating goth, shoegaze and prog into bleak, melodic songs. Now, after three decades of invention and reinvention, Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State marks another bold leap – not to mention singer, founder and lead songwriter Jonas Renkse’s most personal effort to date.
Following the immediate anthem-making of City Burials (2020) and Sky Void of Stars (2023), Katatonia’s 13th album gets more experimental and more metal without holding back on catchiness. The dark hooks and tender vocals remain, yet the band also drive in unpredictable directions while delivering their hardest riffs in years. It’s an indelible introduction to new guitarists Nico Elgstrand and Sebastian Svalland, who replace longtime member Roger Öjersson and co-founder Anders Nyström.
“Nightmares… is a very riff-based and very guitar-heavy album,” says Jonas. “When I was writing it, I knew that we would have a couple of new guitar players coming in. And, if you have two guitarists joining, you don’t want to present them with songs that are 60 percent keyboards. Maybe I subconsciously felt that I had to come up with some cool riffs so that they’d still want to join the band!”
The force and fearlessness throughout Nightmares… is clear from the start of the very first track, ‘Thrice’. Thunderous chords give way to an ambient verse, before the music builds back up to a wall of open-string chugs. On ‘The Light Which I Bleed’, Nico and Sebastian lead a loose, proggy jam that ratchets into a hard-hitting doom riff. ‘Wind of No Change’ even bridges the present and Katatonia’s earliest past, bassist Niklas Sandin and drummer Daniel Moilanen laying down a goth pulse while Jonas croons “Hail Satan” in a throwback to the band’s extreme metal roots.
“I just had this riff going, and I thought it had a bit of a heavy metal feel to it, or even a Slayer vibe,” the frontman explains. “And then I thought, maybe I should write something Satanic, because I haven’t really touched that with Katatonia since we did our first demo.”
In the lengthy Katatonia tradition of keeping listeners on their toes, Nightmares… also packs songs which rebel against the rest of the album. The verses of ‘Departure Trails’ de-emphasise the six-string, with the ballad stacking layers of keyboards and synths to near-symphonic levels. Meanwhile, ‘Warden’ boasts one of the most pop-friendly choruses in their catalogue.
Jonas calls his band’s ongoing rejection of musical rules “subconscious”. He adds, “Touring is great, but it gets tedious if you play the same old style of songs all the time. You want to change it up in some way, and I think it’s the same with the records.”
Katatonia started writing what would become Nightmares… in October 2023. Nico was already in the touring lineup at that point, and Sebastian was brought in the following June, effectively ending Anders’ near-35-year membership of the band he helped start.
“I haven’t really spoken to him about it but, in my way of seeing it, he wasn’t happy with being in a band, at least not this band,” Jonas says to explain his former musical partner’s exit. “He didn’t want to tour. He didn’t write music for a long time. He wasn’t very interested in band stuff: meetings, rehearsals. He wasn’t really there.”
In October 2024, Katatonia holed up in a converted church in rural Sweden owned by Tore Stjerna (Mayhem, Watain, Tribulation) to track drums, then recorded the rest of the instruments in their own studio in Stockholm. All the while, Jonas was getting closer and closer to his 50th birthday and found himself in a reflective mood. “I’ve been like that for the last couple of years, especially last year,” he admits. “50, it’s a big number, and I’ve been doing this for so long now.”
That introspection manifests across this new set of songs. After coming up with the album’s title, Jonas penned ‘In the Event Of’: the climactic finale narrates a nightmare he had more than 10 years ago, with a soundtrack of ominous synths and sorrowful chords. The artwork of Nightmares… is a direct illustration of those lyrics.
“It was supposed to be day, but it was super dark,” Jonas remembers of his haunting dream. “Looking at the sky, you could see flashes of fire behind dark clouds. And there were chains coming from the sky. The last line of the song is, ‘Mothers waiting in rows for the shadows of their children.’ I could see fences, a place where you would keep people captured, and mothers standing there, waiting for their children to come back.”
Just as soul-bearing, if not more so, is lead single ‘Lilac’, which voices a desire to forget painful memories. Jonas also sings in his own language for just the second time ever during ambient piece ‘Efter Solen’, which he co-wrote with Joakim Karlsson, a close friend and collaborator in synth-rock project Korda.
He reveals, “It’s the first song we ever worked on together, and it wasn’t done. While I was writing this album, Joakim was on to me, saying, ‘We should finish that song! I want it finished because it’s so good.’ I said, ‘Yeah, but maybe we should use it on the new Katatonia album.’ When I was finishing the song, I was so used to hearing it in Swedish that I had to write the rest of the lyrics like that.”
Now more than a dozen albums deep into a 30-year-plus career, Katatonia’s well of inspiration still hasn’t run dry. If anything, Nightmares… is one of the bravest and most vulnerable releases to bear their name. And, going forward, the band’s confidence will only continue to grow, thanks to the new blood in their ranks.
“This is a great place to be in,” Jonas says of the Katatonia of 2025. “Inspiration-wise, it’s so good to be surrounded with people that come in with energy and ideas and a strong will to take part, to take the band further. I want people to feel at home in this band and feel like we’re making a difference together.”
– Matt Mills, March 2025
Following the immediate anthem-making of City Burials (2020) and Sky Void of Stars (2023), Katatonia’s 13th album gets more experimental and more metal without holding back on catchiness. The dark hooks and tender vocals remain, yet the band also drive in unpredictable directions while delivering their hardest riffs in years. It’s an indelible introduction to new guitarists Nico Elgstrand and Sebastian Svalland, who replace longtime member Roger Öjersson and co-founder Anders Nyström.
“Nightmares… is a very riff-based and very guitar-heavy album,” says Jonas. “When I was writing it, I knew that we would have a couple of new guitar players coming in. And, if you have two guitarists joining, you don’t want to present them with songs that are 60 percent keyboards. Maybe I subconsciously felt that I had to come up with some cool riffs so that they’d still want to join the band!”
The force and fearlessness throughout Nightmares… is clear from the start of the very first track, ‘Thrice’. Thunderous chords give way to an ambient verse, before the music builds back up to a wall of open-string chugs. On ‘The Light Which I Bleed’, Nico and Sebastian lead a loose, proggy jam that ratchets into a hard-hitting doom riff. ‘Wind of No Change’ even bridges the present and Katatonia’s earliest past, bassist Niklas Sandin and drummer Daniel Moilanen laying down a goth pulse while Jonas croons “Hail Satan” in a throwback to the band’s extreme metal roots.
“I just had this riff going, and I thought it had a bit of a heavy metal feel to it, or even a Slayer vibe,” the frontman explains. “And then I thought, maybe I should write something Satanic, because I haven’t really touched that with Katatonia since we did our first demo.”
In the lengthy Katatonia tradition of keeping listeners on their toes, Nightmares… also packs songs which rebel against the rest of the album. The verses of ‘Departure Trails’ de-emphasise the six-string, with the ballad stacking layers of keyboards and synths to near-symphonic levels. Meanwhile, ‘Warden’ boasts one of the most pop-friendly choruses in their catalogue.
Jonas calls his band’s ongoing rejection of musical rules “subconscious”. He adds, “Touring is great, but it gets tedious if you play the same old style of songs all the time. You want to change it up in some way, and I think it’s the same with the records.”
Katatonia started writing what would become Nightmares… in October 2023. Nico was already in the touring lineup at that point, and Sebastian was brought in the following June, effectively ending Anders’ near-35-year membership of the band he helped start.
“I haven’t really spoken to him about it but, in my way of seeing it, he wasn’t happy with being in a band, at least not this band,” Jonas says to explain his former musical partner’s exit. “He didn’t want to tour. He didn’t write music for a long time. He wasn’t very interested in band stuff: meetings, rehearsals. He wasn’t really there.”
In October 2024, Katatonia holed up in a converted church in rural Sweden owned by Tore Stjerna (Mayhem, Watain, Tribulation) to track drums, then recorded the rest of the instruments in their own studio in Stockholm. All the while, Jonas was getting closer and closer to his 50th birthday and found himself in a reflective mood. “I’ve been like that for the last couple of years, especially last year,” he admits. “50, it’s a big number, and I’ve been doing this for so long now.”
That introspection manifests across this new set of songs. After coming up with the album’s title, Jonas penned ‘In the Event Of’: the climactic finale narrates a nightmare he had more than 10 years ago, with a soundtrack of ominous synths and sorrowful chords. The artwork of Nightmares… is a direct illustration of those lyrics.
“It was supposed to be day, but it was super dark,” Jonas remembers of his haunting dream. “Looking at the sky, you could see flashes of fire behind dark clouds. And there were chains coming from the sky. The last line of the song is, ‘Mothers waiting in rows for the shadows of their children.’ I could see fences, a place where you would keep people captured, and mothers standing there, waiting for their children to come back.”
Just as soul-bearing, if not more so, is lead single ‘Lilac’, which voices a desire to forget painful memories. Jonas also sings in his own language for just the second time ever during ambient piece ‘Efter Solen’, which he co-wrote with Joakim Karlsson, a close friend and collaborator in synth-rock project Korda.
He reveals, “It’s the first song we ever worked on together, and it wasn’t done. While I was writing this album, Joakim was on to me, saying, ‘We should finish that song! I want it finished because it’s so good.’ I said, ‘Yeah, but maybe we should use it on the new Katatonia album.’ When I was finishing the song, I was so used to hearing it in Swedish that I had to write the rest of the lyrics like that.”
Now more than a dozen albums deep into a 30-year-plus career, Katatonia’s well of inspiration still hasn’t run dry. If anything, Nightmares… is one of the bravest and most vulnerable releases to bear their name. And, going forward, the band’s confidence will only continue to grow, thanks to the new blood in their ranks.
“This is a great place to be in,” Jonas says of the Katatonia of 2025. “Inspiration-wise, it’s so good to be surrounded with people that come in with energy and ideas and a strong will to take part, to take the band further. I want people to feel at home in this band and feel like we’re making a difference together.”
– Matt Mills, March 2025
Show More
Genres:
Alternative Rock, Alternative Metal, Heavy Metal, Progressive Metal
Band Members:
Sebastian Svalland, Niklas Sandin, Daniel Moilanen, Jonas Renkse
Hometown:
Stockholm, Sweden
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