Doomed Nation

Sounds For The Lost Generation

Katla share a music video for the track »Hvítamyrkur« from their second full-length album, »Allt þetta Helvítis Myrkur«

Icelandic atmospheric dark/doom metal duo Katla featuring ex-Sólstafir drummer and visual artist Guðmundur Óli Pálmason and singer/multi-instrumentalist Einar Thorberg Guðmundsson (Fortíð, Potentiam) share a music video for the track »Hvítamyrkur« from their second full-length album, »Allt þetta Helvítis Myrkur«, released on November 13th, 2020 via Prophecy Productions.

“A ‘new’ video to our song »Hvítamyrkur«. Actually shot on February 8th, 2019 by my wife and myself while driving home on a rough winter day. Hope you enjoy.” adds Einar.

Courtesy of Prophecy Productions:

The infamous Icelandic low is defined as a large and persistent atmospheric low-pressure centre that forms between Iceland and Greenland and is often the cause of strong winter winds over the North Atlantic. Katla artistically translate this meteorological depression into dark doom-infused metal and deep musical emotion. An urgent sense of darkness and inner turmoil drives »Allt þetta Helvítis Myrkur« (»All This Damn Darkness«), the second full-length of the Icelandic duo. The soul crushing heaviness fueling this record makes Katla’s melancholic debut album »Mó∂urástin« appear nearly light-hearted by comparison. Some of this album’s core composition reach back in time for more than a decade and were born out of spontaneous rehearsal room-sessions that were only now given final shape. The result is a cinematic musical stream of consciousness, in which many of the songs intertwine and flow into each other.

Katla is the conceptual and musical brainchild of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Einar Thorberg Gu∂mundsson (Fortíð, Potentiam) and former Sólstafir-drummer and visual artist Gu∂mundur Óli Pálmason. The duo deliberately took their name from one of the most active and feared Icelandic volcanoes to manifest that the external part of their inspiration relates to the islands ever-changing landscapes and subpolar climate. “The outer landscapes are as important to us as the inner darkness,” tells Einar. “Katla is as much a product of our environment as derived from our state of mind.”

Katla take their art very personally even beyond musical aspects. Cover art, photography, and the handwritten booklet – everything about »Allt þetta Helvítis Myrkur« has either been created by the duo or by their relatives and close friends. “We like to keep things in the family,” Gu∂mundur points out. “Everything is homemade yet up to our high standards.” This DIY-approach also applies to production as Einar was responsible for all recordings, mix, master, and cello-samples. The result proves the Icelanders right: »Allt þetta Helvítis Myrkur« is an emotional tour de force – cinematic, dark, heavily emotional, and utterly mesmerizing.

Bojan Bidovc // music enthusiast, promoter, misanthrop and sometimes a journalist as well

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