Dark Tranquillity's history, akin to that of In Flames or At the Gates,  is  intimately  meshed  with  the  history  of  the  infamous Gothenburg death metal  genre  itself;  indeed,  Dark  Tranquillity's vintage 1993 _Skydancer_ and 1996 classic _The Gallery_ --  alongside milestones such as _Slaughter of the Soul_ or _Subterranean_ (both of which were released  in  1995)  count  among  the  referential  death metal landmarks which  most  eminently  contributed  to  forming  and crystallising the essence of the "Gothenburg sound", which  countless formations throughout the whole world now thrive on.
 As the now six-headed Dark Tranquillity were poised  to  release their new album,  heir  to  their  much-debated  electronic  offering _Haven_, I was offered the rare  opportunity  to  discuss  the  past, present  and  future  of  an  inevitable  and  quite  simply  crucial component of the melodic death metal scene's  history  --  for,  with no  less  than  five  full-length  recordings  in  their  bags,  Dark Tranquillity are, beyond  any  doubt,  one  of  the  most  emblematic formations the Gothenburg scene ever produced.
 Calling from his apartment in Gothenburg, Mikael seems extremely restless and enthused in his reply to my altogether rather banal  and predictable opening interrogation  regarding  the  album's  impending release -- "yeah, yeah, exactly, finally!", he voices. "It's  been  a hard wait. It's still frustrating to finish it off and just wait  for the release, but we know that it's finally recorded."
 Judging from Mikael's underlying exasperation, I can only  guess that _Damage Done_ has been hammered on reels  for  quite  some  time now, so what might Dark Tranquillity's  energetic  frontman  care  to tell me about it? "The recording was finished on the  first  week  of March", he explains; "it's been one and a half years  in  the  making -- that was the  most  focused  writing  period,  because  we'd  been experimenting before. We had two new members  in  the  band,  we  all wanted so many different things to be on the album, so  you  kind  of reach in all directions all the time, and eventually you  come  to  a compromise."
 With  two  new  band  members  indeed,   the   walls   of   Dark Tranquillity's rehearsal haven would most likely  tell  the  tale  of renewed conflicts arising from the proverbial musical differences and of all-out musical blanket-tugging; so how did the whole  songwriting process figure out in time, in Mikael's opinion?  "With  this  album, after two or three songs were written, we kinda realised that was the way to go, and everybody had the same image of how the  album  should sound, and where we were heading", comes the  reply.  "It's  a  great experience, being on the same page, and really focusing on making the songs, and making it as intense and as perfect as possible" -- which, beyond all doubt, explains why _Damage Done_ has been  in  the  works for so long, Mikael? "It takes some time, as we all had to  agree  on everything before moving on to the next part", comes the almost weary reply; to which the frontman follows, on a more enthused  note,  "but you know, it sounds really good!"
 Agreed, the sound on _Damage Done_ really  is  huge,  definitely one of the most ample worlds of sounds ever to emanate from the famed Fredman studios -- so is there  anything  I  should  know  about  the recording process per se? "The recording stuff was just one month  of putting it down on tape, you know -- boring as hell!".
 A release as unexpected and  discussed  in  Dark  Tranquillity's career -- and an event whose similarity in style to  the  release  of _34.778%... Complete_ in My Dying Bride's existence is quite striking to my eyes --, the distinctly electronic-tinged _Haven_ welcomed,  as Mikael earlier evoked, two new members to the Dark Tranquillity fold. But what exactly occurred within the band, I wonder? "Well",  replies Mikael, "Fredrik [Johansson (guitars), who first appears on  the  _Of Chaos and Eternal Night MCD -- David] didn't really work out,  so  we had to tell him to leave the band -- which was sad, but necessary. We needed another guitar player, so Martin [Henriksson], who played bass before, went over to the guitar, so then we needed a bass player!"
 Ah,  the  enrapturing  thrills  and  spills  of  musical   chair sessions within a band... The competition among enthusiastic bassists auditioning for a slot in Dark Tranquillity must have been of  untold fierceness, but how did the Swedes finally  come  across  a  suitable replacement for Fredrik Johansson on bass? "We tried some  [bassists] out, but the obvious choice was an old friend of ours, who's  been  a fan of the band for ever", replies Stanne.
 So much for the band's low-end issues, then -- but how  did  the enrollment of  full-time  personnel  on  electronics  occur?  "[It's] something we'd wanted for many years", comes  the  unexpected  reply; "[we] just couldn't find someone who'd fit in."
 As it occurs, the discreet Martin Brandstrom is an old friend of the band's, who had been  helping  out  with  recording  sessions  on several occasions, so... "we asked him if  he  wanted  to  join  full time, and he said  yes!"  But  the  question  that's  on  every  Dark Tranquillity fan's lips is, "what's with the keyboards in  the  first place?"
 "Oh, it's just [for the sake of] having  another  instrument  to play around with. Adding a new  layer  of  sound,  and  experimenting further. We always used  keyboards  to  some  extent,  so  it's  just something that would eventually happen anyway", Mikael explains.
 Is Dark Tranquillity about experimenting with  sound,  then,  or does this tampering just of occur more or less unwittingly? "There is of course a will to experiment and  expand.  We  won't  keep  playing unless we find it intriguing, or exciting and  challenging",  replies Mikael. "After touring for an album, doing all the stuff, and  coming back and writing new stuff, we tend to wipe the slate clean and start off anew, start off as fresh as possible and see what happens. If  it feels good, we continue, and if it doesn't, we'll wait until the spot comes, until the inspiration comes."
 True enough, Dark Tranquillity always seemed to take their  time in preparing new material from the confines of their  rehearsal  room and, love them or hate them, each of their consecutive  releases  has found them pushing the boundaries of their previous recordings, in  a way or another. "There's always a  long  time  between  the  albums", Mikael concedes, "but we need to find something new to do,  something different that will challenge us musically and lyrically."
 Experimentation also obviously takes it toll at  some  point  -- Dark Tranquillity's inclination to tamper with their  own  sound,  in particular on their two previous releases (_Projector_  and  _Haven_) has estranged them with the more rabid fringe of the  hardened  death metal pack following  their  every  move.  Having  not  thought  that much  of  _Haven_  at  the  time  of  its  release,  I  am  eager  to learn about  the  forms  of  pressure  that  may  have  built  up  in the  wake  of  Dark  Tranquillity's  first  "electronic"  venture  -- which incidentally happened to be released consecutively  to  another tentatively "experimental" masterpiece, namely _Projector_.
 "A lot of people who listened to this album [_Damage Done_] said they were expecting something totally different, and expected the new album to be more electronic, perhaps",  muses  Stanne  --  and  quite rightly so. However, much as _Damage Done_ is  still  heavily  loaded with synthetics, it also presents a harsher, distinctly  more  rugged edge, quite typical of a Gothenburg death metal act.  "We  just  went where we felt right and did what we wanted to do, so we  didn't  feel any pressure. And after a while, we realised it was something  people might get into; it was something a lot of people had been asking  for for years, something that would perhaps remind them of _The Mind's I_ or _The Gallery_ -- more in tone with the aggressiveness, and  speed, and intensity [on those releases]."
 _The Gallery_, as you may  recall,  turned  out  to  be  one  of the more surprising  releases  from  the  cult  French  label  Osmose Productions back at the time and,  I  guess,  certainly  the  release which set Dark Tranquillity on their stellar course to recognition. I feel compelled to question Mikael about those good old times  on  the thriving Osmose roster, back at the time of _The  Gallery_  and  _The Mind's I_; it must after all have been quite  a  strange  period  for Dark Tranquillity, who were, as it seems, one of  the  few  bands  on Osmose not to be decked out in corpsepaint and studded leather attire -- and also one of the few acts on the Osmose  roster  not  to  pride themselves in a terrible "true" sound!
 "Oh yeah, it was kinda weird", Mikael  chuckles;  "but  I  don't recall it as being -that- odd; it's  just  that  after  a  while,  we thought we didn't really fit in, so to speak, and I guess that's when we switched labels", he explains about to the changeover to Germany's Century Media, who  released  all  of  Dark  Tranquillity's  material posterior to  the  _Enter  Suicidal  Angels_  EP  (including  _Damage Done_). "But that was a good  time,  you  know",  he  concludes.  "We released two albums and a MCD; they worked well, and the company  did everything in their power to promote them."
 After this brief trip down memory lane, I return to one  of  the new CD's more intriguing points -- its very title, _Damage Done_. "It has to do with the lyrics,  and  also  the  whole  writing  process", Mikael explains. "We spent so much time making everything's  perfect, defecting every single note...", he trails off; "eventually, you  put it down on tape, and it's there --there's no way  you  can  go  back. Then we move on to the next phase, [on to the] next songs."  So,  the expression "damage done" alludes, at least in part, to the anguish of leaving the studio with your new release on tape,  and  knowing  that the next people to hear it will be the grouchy critics and demanding, starving fans -- but there's more to it, as Mikael continues: "as for the lyrics... most of  the  songs  [deal  with]  that  thing  --  old choices and old failures, things that you missed in  your  life,  the irreversible nature of things. There's no going back, and rather than dwelling on the past and the mystery of things that you've done,  you might as well look ahead, forget about it and move on. It's the  kind of one-way thinking that the album deals about."
 As the introspective nature of Mikael's lyrics becomes apparent, I ponder on whether the  mistakes  he  mentions  also  encompass  the band's evolution in itself -- "no, there are really no  regrets  when it comes to the band. It's more on a  personal  note,  things  around us... stupid mistakes; stupid life choices people have made, based on inexperience and lack of insight, and lack of knowledge,  I  guess... and that could be avoided."
 Although I'm not altogether swept off my feet in surprise  as  I learn about the brooding yet forward-looking  thoughts  that  animate Dark Tranquillity, I'm quite intrigued by the contrast  that  appears between the generally intense music on _Damage Done_ and the  lyrical contents it conceals. As a matter of a fact, I venture,  the  darker, moodier material on _Projector_ might have befitted such topics  with maybe even greater accuracy. "Yeah, that could  be!",  Mikael  laughs good-heartedly; "yes, it would [fit]; it could work equally, I guess. [_Projector_] kinda deals with some of the same things",  he  ponders -- which brings me to voice another interrogation  lingering  at  the back of my mind. _Projector_ -is- a damn strange title for  a  heavy, melancholic death metal album, isn't it?
 "We wanted it  to  be  different,  but  we  also  wanted  it  to represent the whole album, how the whole process  of  writing  felt", Mikael explains; "the blowing up of every single  little  thing,  the sleepless nights and problems and anxieties that came with it -- it's suddenly like all projected on a  big  screen,  and  you  can  defect everything, take it apart, and  put  in  on  paper;  and  eventually, scream your lungs out to it", Mikael comments with  a  smile  in  his intonation.
 It's funny, then, how titles such  as  _Projector_  and  _Damage Done_ reflect a definitely unsuspected and rather surprising sense of insecurity coming from the band -- the pressure on Dark  Tranquillity can't be that insignificant, after all.  But  further,  how  do  they relate in contrast to a "reassuring" tile, such as _Haven_?
 "That's where our music comes from, explains Mikael;  "we  write out of a most safe  place,  I  guess  --  our  rehearsal  rooms,  our bedrooms... And when we're together in our rehearsal room, that's our haven; we just shut everything out from there. It's great to get  out of everything -- it's a quiet place where we can make  loud  music!", comes the reply.
 Having more or less assessed all I need to  know  about  _Damage Done_, I turn to a lighter topic and broach Dark Tranquillity's  stay at  the  2001  edition  of  Germany's  "Kult"  festival,  the  Wacken Open Air, at which the Swedes  made  a  very  lively  and  successful appearance. At the time, their performance had struck me  as  lacking the energy inherent to the death metal  genre,  yet  also  possessing something that death  metal  couldn't  offer  --  a  more  aesthetic, emotional sensation, quite typical of Dark  Tranquillity's  material, but nonetheless quite difficult to pinpoint. And precisely as  I  was dwelling on a  mitigated,  unsatisfactory  sentiment  consecutive  to their show that  day,  some  nearby  Germans  coined  the  expression providing the key to unlatch the irritating feeling my mind failed to point out by itself  --  they  had  found  Dark  Tranquillity's  show "wunderschon" -- wondrously beautiful.
 I am of course tempted to ask Mikael  what  he  thinks  of  this opinion voiced on their performance at the W.O.A. "Wunderschon? Ja!", he laughs. "Well, my  impression  of  the  show  is  that  it  was  a wonderful thing -- just playing that early [1:00pm on August  4th  -- David], and getting people up out of their tents... A wonderful stage like that, and all these beautiful people who'd come around to see us -- we couldn't have been happier.  The  whole  festival  was  just  a blast, it's a wonderful experience", Mikael fondly recalls.
 The interview now draws to its good end, so I ask Mikael for any closing words. "I'm anxious to get out and meet all the  people  that have been so cool to us over the years",  he  replies  with  tangible impatience in his voice. "Now, we're going  to  player  longer  sets, with all the songs people have been missing for three years... I hope you people will get into the album -- at least give it a chance",  he fervently continues, obviously aware that the album has a foot set in at least  two  different  musical  worlds,  and  that  some  of  Dark Tranquillity's fans will most likely fail to adhere to their sense of musical compromise.
 But there is  still  time  for  one  most  crucial,  existential question -- "Mikael, what do you think the  guys  in  Septic  Broiler would have thought of _Damage Done_?" After  a  resounding  burst  of good-natured, low-case laughter,  Mikael  confidently  voices,  "They would have probably -loved- it."