After Sweden’s PAIN OF SALVATION continue their ever-progressing, highly sophisticated musical journey with a
double album project, “Road Salt”, which showcases this outstanding band at its most emotionally intense,
but also leaning towards a more classic, yet extremely colourful 70’s Rock style.
In a world governed by increasingly rigid rules and conformist conceptions of art, PAIN OF SALVATION have
created their own niche on the international music scene. Their intelligently composed and cleverly
arranged songs have mixed metal, pop, funk, disco, blues, goth and folk with Arabian and Oriental
influences plus other more or less extreme musical styles into a homogenous whole. PAIN OF SALVATION
consciously do without any kind of artistic compromise, the only criterion for their compositions being top
quality and profound contents. “Skills and complexity should be part of the machinery, not the
functionality or design,” says the band’s frontman Daniel Gildenlöw, “so I try to hide it away where the
engine is supposed to be – under the hood of a machine built mainly to process ideas and emotions.” This
is precisely why their albums go down so well with fans and media from a variety of camps, from the
progressive metal scene through nu metal to prog rock and even world music.
Since the foundation of his first significant band, Reality, in 1984, mastermind and bandleader Daniel
Gildenlöw has consistently followed his own concept of diverse, technically accomplished and bordertranscending
progressive rock. He renamed the band to PAIN OF SALVATION in 1991 and has ever since
released six studio albums and one unplugged recording, among them classics such as “Scarsick” (2007), “BE” (2004) and “Remedy Lane” (2002). Each of these releases has impressed as a multi-layered concept
album, dealing with tough socio-political themes, while manifesting very intimate, individualist views at
the same time.
PAIN OF SALVATION’s latest release in November of 2009, the “Linoleum” EP, marked the advance
introduction of the “Road Salt” double album project and served as small forecast of greater things to
come. The band backed up the launch of the EP with a string of headlining tourdates throughout Europe
and Russia, a run of support shows for Dream Theater in Australia as well as with the participation in the
Swedish Melodifestivalen, the national competition for the Eurovision song contest, an event followed by
Millions of viewers in national TV. PAIN OF SALVATION appeared in the contest with the new album’s
atmospheric title track ‘Road Salt’ and the quality of the song as well as its performance not only left an
impressing note with the audience despite the band’s rather untypical character for such event, but also
catapulted the band into mainstream media attention. The band successfully moved into a “second
chance” next round of the event but in the end didn’t manage to qualify for the finals. Nevertheless, the
song ‘Road Salt’ acquired massive praise from all corners within Sweden, climbed the national single charts
up to # 12 (as digital only release!) and consequently sets a great pace to kick off the new album’s release.
“Road Salt One” (previously also referred to as “Road Salt Ivory”) includes not only the album’s magnetic
title track alongside the previously mentioned ‘Linoleum’ EP track (for which the band shot an energetic
performance video clip), but also features other instant highlights like the captivating opening song ‘No
Way’, the awe-inspiring ‘Sisters’ (which will serve as second single release) or the acute ‘Where It Hurts’
(which will be the second video clip), making “Road Salt One” a creative rollercoaster of the highest
quality and strongest impact, sure to once more please the band’s committed followers but also likely to
reach new listeners due to the music’s versatility and its richness of texture as well as lyrical depth.
Gildenlöw further comments: “Road Salt One is twelve tracks of sweaty gravel, asphalt butterflies,
untrodden paths and brave decisions. It will not beg for your liking, it will not make excuses, it will not
carry you safely across the dangerous waters. If you don't pick up its pace it will leave you stranded at the
curb of the road. Yes, Road Salt One might indeed be a harsh lover, but if you have the guts to follow it
whole-heartedly and dare to surrender to its voice, it will take you places you need to visit.” |