Prog

KATATONIA

Mnemosynea­n PEACEVILLE

- DOM LAWSON

Stockholm’s dark prog icons empty the cupboards.

When bands start to rummage around down the back of the sofa for rarities and out-takes, the resultant collection­s are nearly always, and inevitably, a little sketchy. Not so here, as Katatonia plunder the vaults, and reveal that the Swedes’ ruthless quality control extends to all the stuff we haven’t heard too.

With more than two hours of B-sides, EP deep cuts, collaborat­ive remixes and unheard album songs, Mnemosynea­n is a generous treasure trove for die-hard fans, but it works equally well as an introducti­on to the band’s oeuvre in its immersive entirety. It spans their entire career, from 1994’s 10-minute, gothic metal monolith Scarlet Heavens (Katatonia were definitely big Cure fans!) to unreleased songs recorded during sessions for 2016’s The Fall Of Hearts, and features just as many heart-stopping moments as those revered studio records.

Those off-cuts from The Fall Of Hearts are worth the price of entry alone. Vakaren, Wide Awake In Quietus, Night Comes Down and, in particular, Sistere are among the most beautiful and memorable songs Katatonia have ever recorded and certainly deserve to be reconsider­ed here. Similarly, it’s hard not to chuckle at the audacity of having songs as potent and sophistica­ted as The Age Of Darkening and Ashen and, originally at least, releasing them only as bonus tracks (on 2016’s Dead End Kings). In this context, all of these dusty gems are finally allowed to shine, and even though this is a patchwork of material from different eras and different studios, Katatonia’s gift for refined, melodic melancholy has been a constant presence.

Arranged chronologi­cally backwards, with those remixes tagged on the end, Mnemosynea­n may be many fans’ introducti­on to the earliest days of the band. Songs such as the elegantly unnerving Help Me Disappear, recorded 20 years ago, are clearly a little rough around the edges in comparison with the bigger-budget perfection of recent recordings, but they each confirm that Jonas Renkse and Anders Nyström hit top songwritin­g form early and just kept going. Meanwhile, Swedish electro-guru Krister Linder’s remix of Soil’s Song is a mesmerisin­g trip hop fever dream with oscillatin­g bottom end that will haunt your dreams, while My Twin (Opium Dub Version) dismantles its source material, rebuilding it before a grand backdrop of somnambula­nt beats and gurgling synths.

An excellent stopgap-cum-companion piece to 2020’s City Burials, Mnemosynea­n is what happens when great musicians realise, to their great delight, that they keep making great music and simply don’t know how to stop. What a band.

THEIR GIFT FOR REFINED, MELANCHOLY HAS BEEN A CONSTANT PRESENCE.

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