
Fresh on the crushing heels of their ninth album Gospel of Bone, today, Funeral are returning with a new companion EP. The Funereal displays all the markings that made this band pioneers of funeral doom: glacial riffs, poisoned harmonies, slow-burning solos and deep, pained growls. At its cold heart lies âGamalt ljĂłsâ, a towering 18-minute centerpiece that digs deep into the psychological toll of emotional entrapment. Â
The Funereal EP comes out today and is available on all digital platforms.
Stream:Â https://funeral.fanlink.tv/TheFunerealEP
Listen to âGamalt ljĂłsâ
âGamalt ljĂłsâ is one of the most introspective and heavy songs in Funeralâs decades-long career. Sung entirely in Faroese, the song translates in English as âOld Light,â a poetic reference to the fading glow of past hopes and unreachable absolutes. As its triptych structure unfolds, the emotional intensity escalates, navigating Kantian philosophy, spiritual longing, violent imagery and personal grief. “RĂłpi ĂĄ gamalt ljĂłs” (âI cry for old lightâ) emerges as its aching refrain.
The Funereal EP also includes an acoustic reinterpretation of âNĂ„r Kisten Senkes,â a standout track from Gospel of Bones. Stripped of the originalâs orchestral weight, this new version lays bare the songâs stark mourning and lyrical gravitas. The result is a subdued yet devastating lamentationâan intimate reflection on death, grief, and finality, rendered in delicate acoustics and hushed despair.

Tracklist:
- Gamalt ljĂłs – Pt. 1 (6:40)
- Gamalt ljĂłs – Pt. 2 (5:16)
- Gamalt ljĂłs – Pt. 3 (6:08)
- NÄr Kisten Senkes (Acoustic) (8:16)
Full runtime: 26:20
Melancholy. Pain. Loss. Solitude. Those had been just some of doom metal main themes ever since bleak pouring rain and the sound of church bell in the distance gave birth to the genre on BLACK SABBATH self-eponymous debut over five decades ago. But how many musicians have actually been bearing in their very flesh those gut-wrenching feelings?
Anders Eek â FUNERALâs founding member, drummer and undisputable leader since 1991 â doesnât particularly see it as a badge of honour, but heâd be the first to admit that somehow, the âdeath and loss we had to go through over the years were extremely painful yet inspiring, as a musician and as a human being.â And indeed, ever since their very first rehearsal in a basement in their hometown of Drammen, just outside of Oslo, Funeral had been ridden with problems and tragedy. Originally inspired by CATHEDRAL and CANDLEMASS, they very quickly set out to create the most depressing and slowest form of doom/death possible at a time when their home country was being hailed as the birthplace of black metal. They went through several labels over the years, only to see them bust soon afterwards. Plagued by recurrent line-up problems, they even lost two of their key members Einar AndrĂ© Fredriksen (bass) and Christian Loos (guitar) in 2003 and 2006, respectively, to suicide and overdose.
But somehow, Eek never surrendered, but instead overcame all those obstacles by releasing over the years a slab of classics, each with its own, distinct personality, from the utter misery of the delicate yet none-so-extreme 1995 debut album âTragediesâ to the more melodic and accessible 2001 gothic/doom masterpiece âIn Fields Of Pestilent Griefâ or 2012 symphonic masterpiece âOratoriumâ. Still, after the band most recent performance in Antwerpen on February 3, 2018, âlife got in the wayâ as Anders puts it. âSome of us had kids, others moved out. Even I had quite a lot of things going on in my personal life and, at least for a while, maybe less drive to keep on carrying on the weight of the band on my shoulders. I never stopped writing music though because itâs something Iâve always done anyway. But there were less things happening you know. During that nine-year gap, I could have written ten albums but I only wrote two ah!â
The beast did sleep less than two years though as the following year singer Sindre Nedland, who had joined FUNERAL for âOratoriumâ, âwoke up from his slumber and told me he was ready to focus music again. I had the whole music demoed and ready, so it quickly snowballed from there.â For the first time ever, not only are the lyrics fully in Norwegian but they were also written by an outside collaborator, a âpersonal friendâ of Anders who happens to be a psychologist. âHeâs both a close friend and a fan of the band. So, he knows exactly how I roll and what the band is all about. I knew he was writing on the side so one day about five years ago, I asked him as a joke almost âhey, why donât you write lyrics for my band instead?â and within five months, he did! His lyrics are more or less his take on philosopher Emmanuel Kantâs work. Initially, I thought about maybe translating them to English, but it would have meant redoing them so in the end, we choose to keep them as they were. The booklet will include a little text explaining what theyâre all about for those who donât speak Norwegian.â
Musically, Anders describes âPraesentialis in Aeternumâ (something along the line of âhere eternallyâ) as a ânatural progression. I know we have some fans who are only into the first albums and those who discovered us in the early 00âs but this new opus has a little bit of everything for everybody. The symphonic elements are far more bombastic yet much well more done, thanks to the evolution of technology since âOratoriumâ. Itâs in a way a mixture of our three last albums yet our most diverse work yet, with both quite concise and very epic pieces. As a matter of fact, we recorded something like ten songs but vowed to choose only the six best to get the best album possible.â Among them youâll find one originally written during their third album |From These Soundsâ session, one co-written with former founding member Thomas Angell (who left in 2000) and, in the deluxe version, a CANDLEMASS (âSamarithanâ) cover version originally recorded back in 2005 with their then singer Frode Forsmo, thus linking âPraesentialis in Aeternumâ with the bandâs past history. Also guesting on âĂ nd,â the first single off the record, is Lars Nedland, Sindreâs own brother of BORKNAGAR and SOLEFALD fame. Itâs also the first album for their new partner, Season of Mist.
Since the album was completed, the now septet has welcomed for the first time ever a full-time violin player âto perform live most of the strings you can hear on our albums as soon as weâll be able to go back on stage.â In the meantime, Anders confesses the next album is more or less âfinished. âPraesentialisâ could have been released earlier if we hadnât to face all those COVID-related problems. We couldnât meet in person, let alone rehearse or even just take promo pictures⊠But now we have a new label, a new line-up and a totally renewed sense of energy so why stop there? FUNERAL started thirty years ago be truth be told, itâs never been stronger. So, doom on!â
Recording Lineup:
Jon Aldara
Anders Eek
Morten SĂžbyskogen
Ingvild Anett StrĂžnen Johannessen / Sareeta
Anders Langberg
Production Credits:
Recorded at Strand Studio, Stabbek, Norway.
Produced, mixed & mastered by Marius Strand at Strand Studio.
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Guest Musicians:
Jon Aldara â Vocals
Stian KrĂ„bĂžl – Classical Guitars
Cover Art:
Tristan D.
Follow Funeral:
Facebook:Â https://www.facebook.com/funeralnorway/
Instagram:Â https://instagram.com/funeralnorway
YouTube:Â https://www.youtube.com/@DirgeofMourning
Bandcamp:Â https://funeraldoom.bandcamp.com/
Spotify:Â https://open.spotify.com/artist/0q3guqlmd8oVaz5v2Fqy3q
Apple Music:Â https://music.apple.com/artist/funeral/208973684
Deezer:Â https://www.deezer.com/artist/194130
TIDAL:Â https://tidal.com/browse/artist/23777





