Before the closure of the Hard Club late last year, Katatonia playing
in Porto would have almost certainly meant a visit to that riverside
venue. In its place, an old theatre in the city centre is used: the Sá
da Bandeira, originally built in the early second half of the 19th
century.
This is a theatre that has seen a lot during its long history -- from
hosting plays of great prestige and vying for the title of best
theatre in Porto, all the way to showing porn movies. Lately it has
recovered to some extent, now regularly hosting popular plays as well
as the odd concert. Katatonia were not the first metal band to play
there, but it was my first time at the venue, so I had little idea of
what to expect.
The theatre has a spacious room, with two levels of balconies and a
large stage. Ornaments that are probably quite old still remain in the
walls, although there is an air of persistent decay about them.
Regardless of being much closer to rundown than pristine, the venue is
still adequate. What's best, the opening chords by Portugal's own
Process of Guilt that inaugurate the night leave little doubt that the
sound will be potent and sufficiently clear.
Process of Guilt started playing in front of a nicely sized crowd: the
venue was nearly full, but not uncomfortably so. The band managed to
squeeze all of four songs into their set -- not bad, considering they
all tended towards the ten minute mark.
Having released one of the top doom metal albums of 2006 with
_Renounce_, they did not disappoint live. This is a band that does not
compromise their vision of doom/death metal, with slowly evolving and
almost hypnotic passages that go on for as long as they feel right.
Process of Guilt reveled in thunderous storms of doom/death and
basked in the tranquil calm that ensued, only to slowly build the
tension back to a point of inevitable release.
With a drummer that is consistently able to prove that doom metal
drumming doesn't have to be the least bit boring, both guitars and
bass went about their business with feeling and abandon in each
prolonged note and crushing riff. This was completed with vocals that
alternated softly sung or spoken passages and a vast, emotional roar
that fitted the doom/death sequences perfectly. The sound mix was
generous in the low-end, which also suited their style.
All of the three tracks they picked from _Renounce_ were very well
chosen, starting with album opener "Motionless", followed by "Window"
and "Becoming Light". They concluded their set with what I was told
was a cover of This Empty Flow, which I was neither expecting nor able
to recognize at the time.
This was a strong performance from a young band that is already one of
Portugal's premier doom metal outfits, and Process of Guilt proved
they deserve similar opportunities to show their potential outside the
country.
For the second year in a row, I had the chance to see a live
performance by the authors of CoC's reigning album of the year. In
2006 I saw Primordial after their triumph with _A Gathering
Wilderness_, and now it was Katatonia's turn, after winning the prize
with _The Great Cold Distance_. They entered the stage to great
applause from a crowd that would remain highly enthusiastic and
responsive from start to finish, despite the lack of any stage banter.
On stage, Katatonia make an eclectic visual combination these days.
With Daniel Liljekvist all but hidden behind his drum kit, and Jonas
Renkse (as usual) remaining quite low-key in that respect, the
remaining three members could hardly be more visually distinctive:
Anders "Blakkheim" Nyström with his long-haired all-metal guitarist
style; Fredrik Norrman on a short-haired combat gear and baseball cap
note; and his brother Mattias looking every bit the goth bass player.
Enough side notes. Katatonia played a sixteen-song set, including one
track as encore. The sound was quite good, and soon improved. This led
to a powerful sound mix that didn't sacrifice too much clarity.
Renkse's vocal delivery, which started out with some uncertainty, also
improved rapidly. They opened with solid renditions of "Leaders",
"Wealth" and "Soil's Song" off their last couple of albums, _The Great
Cold Distance_ and _Viva Emptiness_. In retrospect, these songs were
almost a warm-up for the rest of the show, as the quality and
intensity levels increased across the board.
A change of guitars heralded older material, with "Deadhouse" and
"Cold Ways" providing a welcome return to _Discouraged Ones_. These
two sandwiched the outstanding "Teargas" from _Last Fair Deal Gone
Down_, which got an especially warm welcome from the audience. At this
point, it became clear to me that this gig might actually surpass my
expectations.
With this fine triumvirate out of the way, a major sing-along
occurred during the very well received "Ghost of the Sun" from _Viva
Emptiness_, thanks to its simple lyrics and catchy chorus, punctuated
by Nyström's shrill screams. "Criminals", from the same album,
followed successfully, despite making much less of an impression.
"July" then brought us back to their latest effort, and it turned out
to be an especially powerful rendition -- the second half pretty much
tore the house down.
A return to _Last Fair Deal Gone Down_ ensued, with two fine songs in
the form of "The Future of Speech" and "Tonight's Music". _Tonight's
Decision_ then got its chance, with album opener "For My Demons"
joining the numerous songs that sparked a sing-along
(though none as much as "Ghost of the Sun").
Back to _Viva Emptiness_ with "Sleeper" and _The Great Cold Distance_
with its first single "My Twin", before the regular set was closed
with "Evidence", again from _Viva Emptiness_ -- a track that works
very well indeed as set closer, thanks to its excellent final section.
After a brief break, Nyström came back alone and teased the opening
chords of "Murder" from _Brave Murder Day_ on his own for a while,
before being joined by the rest of the band. While this probably left
many of their newer fans bewildered, others will have welcomed it as
cathartic. I felt Renkse held back a little on his growls at times,
but nothing came near to damaging their superb rendition of this
outstanding choice for an encore.
A nicely balanced set, very well delivered by the band, with good
sound quality, a very enthusiastic crowd and a decent enough venue.
All things considered, a damn good night out.