Six years after its raging debut, Kvelertak's metal-spiked punk still yields lots of larger-than-life, beer-hoisting songs, with an occasional curve ball thrown in. The Norwegian band's self-produced third album, Nattesferd ("Night Traveller"), likely won't deviate far from the party, but if the first song is any indication, there's a little less bottle-smashing and a lot more boogie going on.
![Nattesferd Nattesferd](http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2016/03/08/nattesferd_sq-feb8a168db062daa594f1838260c873f0c0553a9-s300.jpg)
"1985" does a lot of what Kvelertak does best — big guitars with huge, grinning riffs out of the Thin Lizzy songbook — but channels a sunny disposition into a classic rock song that's just that. There's no violent blood-burst of blast beats and buzzsaw guitars, just something your old man might jam on a Saturday afternoon, complete with bright guitar solos and frontman Erlend Hjelvik's unmistakable croak. For those of us who don't speak Norwegian, a statement from the band reveals that "1985" is about living in a surveillance state, where even Kvelertak remains committed to the boogie:
Think of George Orwell's 1984 instead of Taylor Swift's 1989. Its lyrics depict a cold and (not so) distant future where technology and surveillance have erased all forms of individuality and critical thinking. Needless to say, everything was better before — can somebody hit the rewind button already?
Nattesferd comes out May 13 on Roadrunner.
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