Katatonia have  always remained,  throughout their  now ten-year long career, a truly mesmerising band, musically thriving in darkened woe, heart-breaking  bleakness and majestic delusion.  The CD release of  Katatonia's  demo,  _Jhva  Elohim Meth...  The  Revival_  (1992), followed by the magnificent,  enrapturing manifest _Dance of December Souls_ (1993) disclosed them as a doom-laden, melancholic and melodic act ingrained in the growing Scandinavian blackness at that time. Far from the many a time  efficient, yet uncannily predictable careers of many acts reveling in the northern scene in the early '90s, Katatonia then followed an evolution which  always maintained them ahead of the growling, occult packs with whom they shared the scene.
In the  space of two  consecutive releases -- the  _For Funerals to  Come_ MCD  (1995)  and  the hermetic  _Brave  Murder Day_  (1996) --,  Katatonia had  already foreshadowed  significant changes  in the bleakness  of their  works to  come, with  the appearance  of Opeth's impressive  singer  Micke  Akerfeldt   on  vocals,  and  their  music following an increasingly gothic, incantatory slant. With the release of the beautifully desolate _Sounds of  Decay_ MCD in 1997 [CoC #28], the moody  Swedish three-piece  already seemed to  be writing  a sad, frosty end to a chapter of their own history.
 Indeed, as  the very  confidential and  limited _Saw  You Drown_ MCD  was disclosed  in  the  same year,  foretelling  the release  of Katatonia's  third full-length,  the aptly  named _Discouraged  Ones_ [CoC #31],  the band's following  was left bewildered  and perplexed. Their music  became tangibly  more gothic,  owing to  more mid-paced, linear compositions and, undoubtedly the  most unnerving shock at the time,  Jonas  Renkse's  clear  vocals  replacing  all  the  forms  of beautifully grim, literally tantalising death metal rasps featured in Katatonia's earlier works.
 As  the initial  startled  reaction to  this change  dissipated, though, it became obvious that  the poignant despair and subdued pain that characterised  Katatonia were still  there, in a  more channeled form which  appeared in  even more  focused ways  with the  sequel to _Discouraged Ones_,  the ambiguous  and rather uneasy  fourth chapter _Tonight's  Decision_ [CoC  #42]. Regardless  of their  quality, both these releases nonetheless bore the stigmata of transition works, and it seems that only now, anno  2001, with the release of the _Teargas_ EP  and their  fifth album,  _Last Fair  Deal Gone  Down_ [CoC  #52], Katatonia have finally succeeded in  crafting a sound with which they seem constantly  at ease,  and have  opened an  additional insightful breach into their despaired world, writing another beautiful, refined chapter of their evolution.
     With this  brief history of the  band spoken, it is  now time to unveil  the massive  interview with  Katatonia's brooding,  quiet and enigmatic vocalist Jonas  Renkse that no less than  three CoC writers have prepared for you.
 In a way,  the first part of this article  is like vintage wine, as  it relates  David's conversation  with Jonas  for the  release of Katatonia's  former  album,  _Tonight's Decision_.  The  second  part consists of  the merging  of Pedro's  and Adrian's  recent interviews with Jonas, both of which took place shortly after the release of his band's latest record, _Last Fair Deal Gone Down_.
 Please  read  on,  as  Jonas   Renkse  reveals  more  about  the quintessential  sorrow  off   which  Katatonia's  majestic  evolution feeds...
Part 1: FEEDING OFF A DARKNESS COMING  (shortly after the release of _Tonight's Decision_) 
by: David Rocher
CoC: So,  how would you  introduce Katatonia's new  album [_Tonight's      Decision_] to me?
Jonas Renkse: Well, it's...  a dark journey, basically.  It's quite a               personal album,  of course, because as  you might know,               we were doing  the "death metal" thing  earlier, but we               have been going up quite  a lot musically over the last               couple  of years,  and here  we are  now, you  know? --               doing the  normal vocals, and... it's  a new direction,               basically.
CoC: Do  you  actually  feel  as  though  there's  been  a  break  in      Katatonia's history, or  do you view your  successive albums and      MCDs as a natural evolution, like growing up?
JR: Yeah, I  think it's about  growing up, but  I feel that  with the     previous albums, _Discouraged  Ones_, we opened up  a new chapter     for Katatonia, with us trying the normal vocals.
CoC: You'd  already  had  a  try at  these  on  the  track  "Scarlet      Heavens"...
JR: Yeah, we  did. But it was  just... an attempt, we  just wanted to     try it  on one song, and  we never intended to  release that one,     but it was released later. But I think "Scarlet Heavens" is quite     different,  it's  not what  we're  doing  today  -- it  was  more     goth-related, you  know? I think  what we're doing now  really is     what we want to do.
CoC: Don't you believe that what  you're doing now is goth-related at      all?
JR: Yeah... <chuckles> I mean, it's  goth-related, but I don't really     call it "gothic". I can understand  people wanting to put a label     on the music,  and that's totally okay with me,  but I don't know     what to call our music... but it's kind of "goth-related", as you     say. I mean, that's the closest you can get.
CoC: I guess  so. When you first changed vocal  styles, what were you      trying to create?
JR: I  think that  we were  talking  about trying  the normal  vocals     because  we felt  it would  give  the music  an extra  dimension,     basically. There's so  many more ways now we can  vary our music,     not being  limited by the  death metal  vocals with no  melody in     them or  anything. So doing  the normal  vocals, we can  put more     melody into the  music, make it more  interesting, basically. And     when we started to do the  normal vocals, we were forced to strip     down the song structures quite a lot -- you know, doing the usual     verse-chorus songs, which was kind  of hard in the beginning, but     very interesting to work with.
CoC: As it went with  "experimenting", is _Discouraged Ones_ an album      you were satisfied with?
JR: Yeah!  Very  much  -- I  think  it  came  out  very good  at  the     time,  because I'd  never been  singing "for  real" until  we did     _Discouraged Ones_, so I'm very satisfied with it. I think it's a     good first attempt towards this new style that we're doing now.
CoC: I'm a  bit puzzled about  this: the  first time you  tried using      clear vocals, on  the _I Saw You Drown_ MCD,  it happened almost      secretively -- it was like a "shy" release...
JR: Yeah, it  was. First of all,  it's a limited edition,  but we did     want to  try releasing  something before the  album, just  to get     people to get a picture of what  we were going to do on the album     -- but we didn't have any hopes that it would be a big seller, so     we wanted it  as a limited edition, and it's  always cool to have     an  unreleased track  on it,  you  know? It's  the "Quiet  World"     track.
CoC: "Scarlet Heavens" was almost unreleased, too.
JR: Yeah, almost. But it was just a cool thing to do.
CoC: You  mentioned  sales  --  saying  that  you  weren't  expecting      _Discouraged Ones_ to  be a big seller. But  were Katatonia ever      big sellers?
JR: No, not really. Not as far as I'm concerned. I think _Discouraged     Ones_ has sold, all  in all, 20 000 copies, which  for me is very     good. It means many people have  bought the album, which makes me     proud...  but compared  to  other metal  bands,  it's not  really     anything  special. I  still think  that it's  very good,  because     _Discouraged  Ones_ was  released on  Avantgarde Music,  which is     still kind of a small label, and they've done some very good work     to promote  it and everything.  I hope _Tonight's  Decision_ will     reach out a little bit more, due to the new label we have.
CoC: How did you sign to Peaceville?
JR: We got this letter from Hammy [Peaceville owner -- David] when we     released _Discouraged  Ones_. He just  wanted to tell us  that he     liked  the  music very  much;  he  didn't  tell  us that  he  was     interested back then, he just wanted  to say "hey, it's a hell of     a good album".  And then we got  in touch with him  and said that     our contract  with Avantgarde  had expired, and  he was  like "oh     shit, this is good -- I want  to sign you guys". It was very cool     that he just got in touch to  tell us that he liked the music and     nothing else,  and that he then  wanted to sign us  when he heard     that we didn't have a contract  at the time, because we had other     labels interested at the time, but they heard that we didn't have     a contract and then got in  touch. Peaceville seems to be very...     <ponders>
CoC: More sincere?
JR: Yeah, very much.
CoC: One of  Katatonia's endemic  features is  the sadness  and gloom      that appear throughout all your releases, so how do you feel the      change in vocal styles reflects this?
JR: I think it's  much easier to relate to the  lyrics when I'm doing     the vocals [as  opposed to Akerfledt's death vox  -- David]. When     you're using a normal voice, it's easier to perform the lyrics in     a more sincere  way. So I think doing the  normal vocals can only     take the music further, even in  the sad and gloomy style that we     have, so  I think  it can only  get worse,  basically <chuckles>,     with our new  vocals. There's so many ways that  you can vary the     songs with these vocals, so I think it's a very good move.
CoC: Actually, I  think one of  Katatonia's typical features  is that      even  when you  were using  the  death metal  vocals, they  were      inflected, and very emotional...
JR: Yeah,  yeah,  I  think  so  too. I  did  [that  kind  of]  vocals     on  the  first  album,  _Dance of  December  Souls_,  and  people     are  always  telling  me  how  they think  the  vocals  are  very     desperate-sounding... I think the vocals  on that album are still     very cool. I  don't know how I  got that voice, but  it felt very     natural when  we did  the album.  I'm still  proud of  that first     record, but I  think what we're doing now is  far more... mature,     yeah, exactly.
CoC: What about the releases after that, how do you feel about those?
JR: Well, I'm proud  of everything. I think the first  record is kind     of stressed; we were very young,  but I'm still proud that we got     to do an  album. <chuckles> When I think about  it, it would have     been  better  if we  had  waited  like  one  more year,  if  we'd     practiced a  little bit more  and had a  little more time  in the     studio, but  I think it's still  a worthy debut. The  rest of the     albums, well  -- I'm  proud of everything  we've done,  I'm proud     that we've released those albums. _Brave Murder Day_ is a special     album to me, because we found  something new on that one, that we     still keep in what we're doing today.
CoC: _Brave Murder Day_ was the most repetitive and "painful" of your      albums -- I suppose this  was when your gothic influences really      started showing through  after the death metal  sounds on _Dance      of December Souls_, so how have your influences changed over the      years?
JR: The  influences have  changed quite  a lot,  because when  we did     the  first album,  we were  mainly influenced  by Paradise  Lost,     essentially, and Tiamat  as well. On _Brave Murder  Day_, I'm not     really sure, but I don't think we had many influences when we did     that album.  It was more like  we wanted to try  something really     new for  us, which  led to  this very  repetitive sound,  which I     think is very dark. But I  would say that the influences now come     from more  alternative music, because  I think it's very  good to     bring in influences from other kinds of music and bring them into     our sound. It's very healthy for the band and for the music -- so     we listen to more alternative music  now, not so much metal music     anymore;  bands like  Jeff Buckley,  who we  did a  cover of  [in     _Tonight's Decision_],  bands like  Radiohead and stuff.  I think     it's a cool thing to indulge in, with our material.
CoC: So although you're proud of  your previous albums, am I right in      supposing you could never write the same albums again?
JR: I think so. We could never  do another _Dance of December Souls_;     it would be impossible, because we're such different persons now,     if you compare us  to what we were back then.  Now, we have grown     more mature,  and our music  has as  well. I understand  what you     mean,  really. I  don't think  we will  do another  _Brave Murder     Day_, with the death metal vocals and everything...
CoC: Would  you consider  mixing death metal  vocals with  your clear      vocals?
JR: No, I don't think it would sound very good. Some bands can do it,     but now that we've released two albums with normal vocals only, I     wouldn't like to go back to  the death metal thing again. I mean,     it's not that I  don't like death metal, I still  love it, but it     doesn't fit us any more, because we have regular songs on the new     album,  with verse,  chorus and  everything --  putting in  death     metal vocals would  sound a bit awkward, it would  sound a bit...     funny.
CoC: Although  there  are  no   death  metal  vocals  on  _Tonight's      Decision_, Micke Akerfeldt still produced the vocals...
JR: Yeah. He  did it on _Discouraged  Ones_ as well. He's  very, very     talented  and very  musical,  and he  has a  good  ear for  vocal     melodies, basically, so while we were recording the vocals on the     new album,  we just invited him  to the studio, and  he was there     with us, recording and producing the vocals, and coming up with a     lot of  good ideas, good  melodies. And  also, I think  it's very     good to have someone who's not in  the band and can be there with     a fresh  mind, because we were  in the studio for  so long, doing     boring things like the drum takes and the guitars and everything,     so when someone comes in with a  fresh mind and has a lot of good     ideas, it's very easy. So it's  a very cool thing, and especially     with Micke, we're very good friends, so it was a good experience.
CoC: On the  drums, you had Dan Swano, with  whom you've been working      for a really long time now -- how are things going with him?
JR: It's going well, but the thing is that he didn't have anything to     do  with the  album  except for  the drumming,  so  he just  came     down...  actually, the  album was  recorded at  Sunlight Studios,     here in Stockholm, so we just called  up Dan -- we know that he's     a very talented  drummer, and we're good friends  with him, since     we've been working so much with him in the past, so we called him     up and asked him if he could  come down to Stockholm and lay down     the drum tracks. I think it was a very good idea.
CoC: What's  he up  to these  days? Not  much is  heard of  him these      days...
JR: I think he's doing the new Nightingale album; I think he's mixing     it right now. He works in a music store now -- he closed down the     Unisound studios,  because of his  family and everything.  But he     still has  a smaller studio  where he  records his own  stuff and     other people's projects,  so he's still very much  into the sound     thing. He  also intends to  release another album under  the name     Dan Swano,  so that'll  be more  of a death  metal album  -- he's     still very active.
CoC: Okay, back to Katatonia -- precisely  at the time when all these      bands were  recording at Unisound  studios, what do  you believe      made you stand apart from the masses?
JR: Well, I'm  not sure -- it  might have been that  we had different     ideas about  our music, that most  bands don't have when  they go     into the studio;  they just want to have the  same sound as their     favourite album,  or things like that.  But I think that  when we     went into the studio, we  started from scratch, really, and tried     to work out the best sound for  us. And I think it's good for Dan     and  for other  engineers to  have someone  who is  interested in     getting an own identity -- then  you can work very well together.     And I think we worked very  well with Dan, he's very friendly and     everything. But  the last  two albums  were recorded  at Sunlight     Studios  [three now,  including  _Last Fair  Deal  Gone Down_  --     David], and it's  the same thing, really -- if  you have the time     and the will to do something of your own, you can really do it.
CoC: The  title  of  an  album  such as  _Discouraged  Ones_  has  me      believing that the true meaning of Katatonia has slipped through      most people's fingers, even among  your early followers, who may      not be with  you anymore since _Discouraged Ones_ --  how do you      feel about this?
JR: Uh... I'm  not really sure.  The only thing  is that I  hope what     people understand what  we're doing today, because  we still have     the same  vibes as always,  we still  have the same  interests as     before,  and I  hope that  people can  reach a  point where  they     understand what we're doing today, and look upon the old stuff as     we do -- it's the old material  which has got us here, and that's     the  most  important thing.  We  would  never have  sounded  like     _Discouraged Ones_ when we started the band, that's impossible --     we had to go through all the stages and everything.
CoC: How would you say your visual identity, which has always been an      important part of Katatonia, has evolved?
JR: Well,  I guess...  <hesitates>  when we  started  with _Dance  of     December Souls_, we were more  into having a "black metal" image,     but nowadays, for me it's like... the way we picture ourselves to     the outside is not important at all, because I think the music is     far  more important.  So we  don't  have an  image, like  Marilyn     Manson does or whatever. We just wanted to make music that people     can relate to, that people can  love -- that's the most important     thing.
CoC: And how did you land the cover concept for _Tonight's Decision_?
JR: Basically, we  just wanted to  have something that would  fit the     title, so we  got in touch with this artist  called Travis Smith,     from the  States -- we'd seen  some of his work  before, and that     was very, very cool.  We got in touch with him,  and told him the     title, _Tonight's Decision_,  and we said that we  wanted this to     be done  with blue colours,  we wanted a  railway -- and  then he     came up  with this picture, and  we said -- directly  -- "this is     the one". It's a very cool picture, it's very dark, and fits very     well with the music.
CoC: Okay, since we're talking about  artwork, what was the cover art      to _Sounds of Decay_?
JR: Uh, it's from a film, it  was Roberto from Avantgarde who came up     with the picture  -- you know, he has kind  of morbid tastes, and     he was  like "I've got a  perfect picture for you!".  It's from a     movie  called  "Begotten",  I  think, and  that  picture  is  God     committing suicide,  and we thought  "Whoa, this is cool",  and I     think it's very, very dark. It's kind of morbid!
CoC: How did you like Christian Death's artwork on which Jesus Christ      was giving himself a fix?
JR: I think that  sometimes it's kinda cool. I don't  see myself as a     religious person at all, so that kind of mockery, you know, Jesus     Christ  getting  a  fix  is something  that's...  <pauses>  still     tasteful.  I mean,  just picturing  Jesus Christ  on an  inverted     cross  with knives  in  his  body and  things  like that  doesn't     interest me -- it's too obvious and cheap. But that kind of other     artwork is cooler -- I don't think it's bad or anything.
CoC: Hm,  I actually  thought it  was  a really  powerful cover.  One      question  that comes  to my  mind now  is: what  about Katatonia      live? 
JR: Okay, well, we haven't been playing  that much at all, really. We     did  one tour  in  1996, for  _Brave  Murder Day_  --  it was  an     European tour, a small tour. I think we had something like twenty     dates with a Norwegian band called  In the Woods... So that's the     only tour we've  done, and then we've been playing  some shows in     Sweden, but  this was a  long way  back. We haven't  been playing     live for a very long time.
CoC: What memories do you have of the tour with In the Woods...?
JR: Even  though  the  conditions  were  very  bad,  it  was  a  good     experience for us, because we have to play live -- I reckon there     is some  demand for it. We're  going on a Scandinavian  tour next     week with Paradise  Lost, so it's our first  appearance since our     last show  in Sweden for _Brave  Murder Day_ -- so  we're kind of     nervous! We have a new line-up with  a new drummer and a new bass     player, so we have to try them out.
CoC: Will you be playing material only off the last two albums?
JR: Yeah. Because we're opening for Paradise Lost, we don't have very     much time  to play,  so it's  good promotion  for the  new album,     basically. We're going to concentrate  on songs from the two last     albums, because I want  to keep my voice -- I  don't want to sing     death metal  in between and  ruin my voice. Maybe  if we go  on a     bigger tour,  we can  figure something  out to  play some  of the     older material, because it would be  a very cool thing to do. But     right now, I  think we'll concentrate on this because  we have so     little time on stage, and we have to find out how we should solve     the vocal  problem -- because I  lost my ability to  [growl], you     know?
CoC: Are you  looking forward  to touring  with Paradise  Lost? I've      heard that they're kind of egotistical guys...
JR: Yeah. <sighs> I don't have any hopes for the tour, but it's still     a very  good opportunity. I  don't expect it  to be a  treat, I'm     just expecting the worst, and we'll see what happens! <chuckles>
CoC: Okay Jonas, I have one last question: how do you think you would      have reacted,  back in '92,  if someone had  come up to  you and      played _Tonight's Decision_?
JR: <chuckles> Yeah, I've been thinking about that a couple of times,     recently. I would probably have been  shocked, and I think that I     would have  been thinking  "oh shit, we're  gonna sell  out!" <we     both laugh>,  because in  '91 and  '92, I  was really  into death     metal, it was the only thing I would listen to, I hated all other     kinds of music. So I would  probably think that the music's shit!     <chuckles>
CoC: Okay,  the last words  are yours! Thanks  and all the  best with      your new album!
JR: Oh -- thanks for the interview!
Part 2: DEPEND ON DARKNESS (shortly after the release of _Last Fair Deal Gone Down_)
 by: Pedro Azevedo and Adrian Bromley
     Katatonia's latest  effort _Last Fair  Deal Gone Down_  sees the band greatly  consolidating the sound  they have been  developing for the last three full-length albums in  this clean vocal era of theirs. The record seems to be meeting critical acclaim virtually everywhere, and Peaceville have even placed a sticker on the package saying it is possibly the best  record the label has ever released.  Coming from a label that has released albums by  such influential bands as My Dying Bride and Anathema (and in other  genres At the Gates, Darkthrone and Autopsy), that has to be quite a compliment.
 "It feels good, of course",  acknowledges Renkse. "We didn't ask Peaceville to  do that, though,  we only saw  it when the  album came out. But I am very satisfied with _LFDGD_. Musically it's superior to anything else we've done;  we have put down a lot  of time giving the material its  special edge.  It's more  diverse and  that makes  it a little  easier to  listen to.  I  think it  matches the  sound I  was looking  for and  hoping we'd  be able  to do  when we  first started working on song demos. _Tonight's  Decision_ might have been a little darker, but on the  other hand it was more of a test  for us, we were trying out different things on that one."
 For _LFDGD_ Katatonia have recruited  two new band members. Fred Norrman's role in the band has changed from bassist to guitarist, and so his  brother Mattias was brought  into the fold to  replace him on bass duties. Meanwhile, Jonas  Renkse now concentrates exclusively on his vocals, leaving the drum kit for new member Daniel Liljekvist.
 "They  have  adapted extremely  well  to  Katatonia", Renkse  is pleased to  report. "The  new bass player  is Fred  Norrman's younger brother, so  we knew him  from before.  The drummer, Daniel,  is very cool,  very easy  to work  with as  well. I  think they've  put their personal touch to whatever they did on the record and that's good for our sound. I also  think the fact that we were able  to rehearse as a full  band made  us  sound better  when we  eventually  got into  the studio."
 Speaking of which, Katatonia's work  at Sunlight Studios was not without its difficulties  this time around. Jonas  explains: "It took some  time  to make  and  record  this  album,  because we  had  some financial troubles which  didn't allow us to be in  the studio all of the time. It was  a very troublesome period for us, but  in the end I think  it may  have  been good  for  us. We  recorded  from April  to December last year, in small parts all  of the time, and when you are away for a couple of weeks you  can come back and sit down, listen to what you  have done and decide  if it is  good or not. If  there were some guitar  parts we didn't  like, we could  take the time  to think about whether it belonged there and either fix it or omit it from the album. I think we actually gained something from all of this mess, so it is cool.  It is getting a  lot easier for us to  achieve the sound and vibe of what we want in each  Katatonia record. I am a big fan of being in  the studio,  I am  happy with  our studio  experiences." He adds: "We knew  that the record was eventually going  to come out, it was just a matter of time. We weren't worried about it being delayed, it was just something that came out from our problems with the studio and the finances."
 Katatonia's  songwriting process  is  not a  linear one  either, according to Jonas.  "I think it's different in  every record. Anders [Nystrom, guitarist] is the band's  main songwriter and he can really do a lot when  it comes to making music, but it  comes in spurts. One day he'll be all  over the place writing music and  the next he'll be struggling  to get  a part  down. Sometimes  it'll be  three or  four months before we hear new stuff.  This album we started to write once the last  record _Tonight's Decision_ came  out [in 1999], so  it was about six or seven  months of writing. It was a lot  of hard work for us."
 _Last Fair  Deal Gone Down_  is both  a varied record  and still strongly Katatonia, and the  material contained therein provides vast subject for discussion. Jonas reveals  that his favourite tracks from _LFDGD_ are "Clean Today", "Tonight's  Music" and "Passing Bird", and explains the  story behind the  _Teargas_ EP (which came  out shortly before _LFDGD_)  and its title  track. "It wasn't a  label decision", states Renkse. "We sort of knew when  we wrote the song that if there should be a single from the album, "Teargas" would be excellent. It's short but effective. The decision to  release an EP was ours as well: we had a  few leftover tracks that  wouldn't be on the  record, so we wanted to  release them  as well, and  then the idea  to put  out the _Teargas_ EP came up."
 A  few of  the  tracks  on _LFDGD_  deviate  somewhat from  what one  might expect  from  Katatonia  in some  ways;  most notably  the electronics  on "We  Will  Bury You".  Jonas  offers some  surprising revelations about that:  "Well, we had to use the  electronics on "We Must  Bury You"  since  our drummer  lives in  another  town and  had already left when Anders came down  to the studio saying "I made this new song  last night". But  I think that's  cool, it gives  the album more diversity  and that's quite  important. Also, it's a  very short song, so it's not like we've changed our sound completely."
 "This is  something we  have worked really  hard to  achieve, to make each song  a lone chapter or sound", Renkse  adds. "Our previous albums, especially _Discouraged Ones_, they  are all very much alike. So, we wanted  to go away from  that and have each song  have its own identity, and I think we pretty much succeeded there. A lot of people tell me this is quite the diverse record and I am happy to hear that. That was the plan all along, to have this sound good and be diverse."
 Renkse continues:  "I think we  have a wide range  of influences and that doesn't just come from other types of music. A lot of things happen  around you  and that  tends  to get  into the  music and  the lyrics.  Musically speaking,  we  have  been listening  to  a lot  of different things over  the last little while and I  think it shows up quite a bit on this record. People  say we aren't metal anymore and I don't know how I feel about that.  I think we still play heavy music, but it is  really hard to shake  our death metal roots.  We have been listening to a  lot of stuff, but  not really metal or  doom music. I think Tool has been a big influence on us one way or another."
 "Looking back,  I am  not sure  what we wanted  to do  with this sound, but  it just seems to  have been the way  for us to grow  as a band and  explore new things. When  this band started ten  years ago, and we  were playing death  metal, I  couldn't have foreseen  what we have become and the music we are playing. It is very far from what we started out doing, but  as we grow older I think we  all want to make music that our parents want to listen to", he quips.
 Renkse  and  his  bandmate   Fred  Norrman  have  also  produced something far less parent-friendly since Katatonia started to develop this new sound of theirs, a sound  which is far from the raw emotions of _Dance of December Souls_ and the harshness of _Brave Murder Day_. This project goes by the name  October Tide, under which guise Renkse and Norrman released  two full-length records [CoC #30  and #41], the second of which  with Marten Hanssen (of the now  deceased A Canorous Quintet) on  vocals. This dark and  doomy project has now  come to an end, however.
 "Basically  we did  it because  we thought  it was  fun to  play guitar  together, coming  up with  cool --  and especially  for _Grey Dawn_ --  awkward riffs", Renkse  explains. "There was  no philosophy behind the  band, and thus  we couldn't really  continue. Inspiration ran dry and  we decided to fully concentrate on  Katatonia instead. I do especially like _Grey Dawn_, because it's very different, I'd say; we wanted to do something that had not already been done, and I think that we succeeded in that at least. But there will be no more October Tide albums, we  are fully occupied with the duties  in Katatonia and we'd rather save our ideas for the main band."
 None  of the  October Tide  records included  lyric sheets,  but Jonas does produce  plenty of emotional and  intensely personal words for Katatonia.  "I write  all the  time", he  affirms. "I  keep small notes everywhere  and when  it's time  to do  a new  album I  have to collect those small  pieces and try to see what  I was thinking about at the  time --  it's sort  of a  puzzle to  make them  fit together. Luckily my lyrics often deal with  similar subjects, so it's not that hard after all. Some  of the lyrics for this new album  I had to make up, though, since  I found everything being more or  less in the same style. As you say, intensely personal.  And after a while I feel that it might be too much to just read about my damn problems... So "Sweet Nurse" and "We Must Bury You" especially are more fiction rather than personal lyrics. The latter coming from  an article I read about some people committing an accidental murder and they had to get rid of the body. I tried to see myself  in their situation, with all their fear, regret, excitement."
 Jonas  is not  very keen  on  describing the  kind of  emotional qualities of  his vocals,  however. He explains:  "It's hard  to tell since I don't really try to achieve something special with my vocals, I just try to make them work  together with the lyrics. And since the lyrics are  so personal,  I guess it's  just me in  the end.  I guess there is some  desperation in the vocals, if you  listen close... and troubles."
 As  the subject  of performing  live is  brought up,  Jonas soon reveals he is  not very comfortable with those situations.  "I am not really fond  of playing live", he  admits. "It is like  my nightmare, really. I am  a bit shy and the  stage fright just hits me  when I am playing. I  get real nervous, because  now I am singing  for the band and the  focus is  on me.  I used  to be  the drummer,  but now  I am leading the band and it puts  me in a totally different position. The reason why I make an attempt to get past the nervousness is because I like the  vibe and feelings  I get when I  play live. I  like meeting people who  have and continue to  support my band. I  usually drink a beer or something like  that before a show to kind  of make me relax. Once I get on  stage it all changes: I start  to hear everything come into place  and everyone is  playing together as  one and I  start to feel in  control. I  tell you,  those five minutes  before you  go on stage are the worst feeling for me.  It is terrible, but I am getting used to it. It is all I can do."
 Katatonia recently  played three  dates in England,  Belgium and Holland [CoC #52]  with all four of the other  bands that were signed to Peaceville at the time (Akercocke have also joined the label since then).  Despite the  stage fright,  Jonas reckons  it was  a positive experience. "It's  good to play  live, we  need to practice  our live performance  since we  haven't been  very active  on the  live front, mostly due to our  line-up problems. So it was good,  it was good for Peaceville  as well,  I  think, to  show that  they  are still  going strong. The gigs could have been better, I guess, but at least two of them were cool."
 On  a  different  subject,  the artwork  has  been  consistently remarkable on  every Katatonia full-length since  _Brave Murder Day_, and Jonas  comments on  that particular record  first. "We  found the front and  back cover pictures in  an archive here in  Stockholm", he recalls.  "They have  tons of  good --  and bad  -- pictures,  and we instantly fell for those two as both of them represented what we were doing  at  the time.  The  band  picture is  also  cool,  we had  the photographer shoot our reflections in a  pool of oil in an industrial area -- I think that gives the  picture a darker shade than if it was just an ordinary photo."
 More  recently, renowned  artist Travis  Smith has  created some impressive artwork for the last two Katatonia records; Jonas seems to be quite  pleased. "This  time it  was a  bit different,  because for _Tonight's  Decision_ he  did most  of the  work in  the computer,  I think, but this  time he actually had  to go out and  shoot the right pictures  for  us. We  told  him  what  atmosphere  we wanted  to  be displayed through the  layout and he had to get  down to those shitty places, like ghettos, to catch that urban decay feeling. The cover is from inside an  old shack that he  had to break into,  and there were beds there,  with blood on  them and  ratty curtains and  things like that. And then he found this bathroom  and it was excellent to use as a cover.  I personally like  the picture  with a sign  saying "closed ahead"  because that  somehow reminds  me of  how my  life can  be at times."
 Jonas has  little to reveal about  the future, but he  does give some idea of how the band  is feeling. "We haven't been talking about a new album yet.  I think it can turn out  different, though, we have to develop  all the time  and now we have  made three albums  more or less in  the same style.  I don't think  we will get  more electronic than we already  are, though. The songs are the  most important thing for us, a good song is always a good song, and if it sounds good when you're writing it, it  can only get better. So I  think we will focus on that, the songs. And then think of new ways to surround them."
 Renkse ends  the interview with some  words on what his  role in Katatonia does for  him. "This just acts as a  real cleansing feeling for me. To be able to write  music, write lyrics and work on an album is a great feeling. Making things  happen and watching them grow into such  powerful pieces  is just  such an  awesome feeling.  I need  to create music to be happy, 'cause if not I'd be so restless I wouldn't know what to do with myself."
 Let us hope things stay that way in Katatonia for a long time to come.