Italy's SpazioRock.it recently conducted an interview with Mikael Åkerfeldt and Fredrik Åkesson of Swedish progressive metallers OPETH. You can now watch the chat below. A couple of excerpts follow (transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET). On where OPETH stands in the metal scene today: Mikael: "It's easy in the metal world especially I mean, I don't know anything else than the metal world, because that's where we are, if you know what I mean. But we're trying to push the boundaries a little bit. But mostly musically, but also sound-wise. And to be on our own. We don't like to belong in a group. We wanna be on our own. But we are okay with being defined within the metal scene, because that's our origins. Our roots come from real extreme metal, and then gradually I guess we have moved away from that. But we still feel that we belong to the metal scene, so to speak, but we don't feel an affinity with bands in the metal scene, and definitely not the sound from the metal scene of today." On whether metal fans have embraced OPETH's more recent albums: Mikael: "The metal scene is
It's something I've been thinking about and talking about a lot, it's very hard for me to define what it is., really. I know that if you listen to brutal death metal, you might have a problem with what we're doing today. But that is not the definition of metal. I think the definition of metal is very blurry, and I'm not sure if you can define what metal is. But, like I said, that's our roots, so I feel that we still belong. I still feel many of our fans have probably made this type of journey with us. They've grown up. Maybe they listened to the same stuff that we did. Maybe it's easier for them to understand what we're doing now." On how OPETH's 2008 album, "Watershed", paved the way for 2011's "Heritage" and 2014's "Pale Communion": Mikael: "I think [doing 'Watershed'] was necessary [to bring us to this point]. I didn't have to struggle a lot to push us forward. Once I started writing for 'Heritage' for real, so to speak because I did try and kind of latch on to the 'Watershed' style for some time, and then I just [went], 'Ah, fuck it. Let's do something new.' And then it was easy, if you know what I mean. And by doing 'Heritage', even if a lot of metal fans, so to speak, don't like that album, I think it gave us a future. I love that album. I think it's unique. We couldn't repeat it if we wanted to, but we can build on from it. It gives us a future. And I think we would stagnate if we tried to latch on to the sound that made us popular, so to speak. And I still think if you compare 'Heritage' and 'Pale Communion', you can only compare it to OPETH, I think. You can't compare it, really, to anything else. People are saying we're trying to sound like KING CRIMSON, but they don't really know what they're talking about, because it doesn't sound anything like KING CRIMSON. It's just an inspiration for us."
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