Koloss
Koloss are a race of towering, blue-skinned humanoids inhabiting the planet Scadrial in Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn series of epic fantasy novels. Created by the immortal ruler known as the Lord Ruler through the use of Hemalurgy—a branch of the world's magic system that involves stealing attributes via metal spikes driven through the body—koloss were engineered as mindless, aggressive soldiers to enforce his empire.[1] Their creation process requires sacrificing four humans by piercing their hearts with iron spikes, which are then implanted into a fifth individual, granting immense physical enhancements at the cost of diminished intellect and emotional capacity.[1] Standing up to twelve feet tall with loose, tearing skin that exposes raw muscle as they grow, koloss possess red eyes, reduced sensitivity to pain, and the ability to subsist on nearly any substance, including dirt and leather.[2] During the era of the Final Empire, as depicted in The Final Empire, The Well of Ascension, and The Hero of Ages, koloss formed a brutal backbone of the Lord Ruler's military forces, often deployed in massive hordes to suppress rebellions with their overwhelming strength and stamina. Controlled through Allomantic emotional manipulation by skaa rebels or Steel Inquisitors, they exhibited feral obedience but could devolve into mindless rage without direction, leading to widespread destruction.[3] Following the Lord Ruler's overthrow and the apocalyptic event known as the Catacendre, the deity Harmony (formerly Sazed) altered their nature, enabling koloss to reproduce biologically and produce offspring called koloss-blooded—hybrid beings who resemble humans but carry latent traits and can opt to undergo full transformation via spiking at maturity.[4] In the post-Catacendre era explored in the Mistborn Era Two novels, such as The Alloy of Law and Shadows of Self, koloss-blooded integrate into society as a tribal people in Scadrial's rugged Roughs region, forming communities centered on hunting, tattoo artistry, and a vow of non-aggression toward the Terris people. Though still capable of immense violence, they exhibit greater docility and cultural depth under Harmony's influence, with some individuals manifesting Allomantic powers.[5]Background and development
Historical context
Meshuggah, a pioneering band in extreme metal renowned for their intricate polyrhythmic structures and technical complexity, had solidified their influence in the genre by the late 2000s.[6] Following the release of their critically acclaimed sixth studio album obZen in 2008, which exemplified their signature blend of brutal heaviness and mathematical precision, the band entered a period of creative consolidation. obZen marked a high point in their exploration of polyrhythms and downtuned guitar work, setting the stage for further innovations in their sound.[7] Drummer Tomas Haake described Koloss as an embodiment of the band's core ethos, stating it was "organic brutality, viscera and groove all crammed into a 54-minute metalicious treat, best avoided by the faint of heart."[8] This characterization highlighted the album's intent to deliver unrelenting intensity while maintaining the groove-oriented foundation that distinguished Meshuggah from contemporaries in extreme metal.[9] As Meshuggah's seventh studio album, Koloss represented a continuation of their sonic evolution following their established partnership with Nuclear Blast Records, a label shift that had begun earlier in the decade to support their growing international presence.[10] Released in 2012, it built upon the technical advancements of prior works, emphasizing a refined balance of aggression and rhythmic innovation without departing from the band's foundational principles.[11]Songwriting process
The songwriting for Koloss primarily involved collaboration among drummer Tomas Haake, guitarist Mårten Hagström, and guitarist Fredrik Thordendal, who together composed the music for the majority of the album's tracks.[12] This process typically began with Haake programming initial drum patterns on a computer, which he then shared with Hagström or Thordendal to develop riffs and structures, allowing the band to refine ideas efficiently before full band involvement.[13] For instance, tracks like "Do Not Look Down" emerged from Haake's drum programming paired with Hagström's and Thordendal's riff contributions, while "I Am Colossus" combined input from both Thordendal and Hagström on the musical foundation.[12] Haake's vision for the album, building on the complexity of obZen, aimed to introduce more accessible grooves without abandoning the band's core rhythmic intensity.[14] A notable exception was "Behind the Sun," solely composed by vocalist Jens Kidman, marking a rare instance of his musical authorship since retiring from guitar duties in the early 1990s.[15] This track's atmospheric and sludgy elements stemmed directly from Kidman's contributions, with lyrics added by Haake.[12] Meanwhile, Thordendal's writing included "The Demon's Name Is Surveillance," while Hagström and Thordendal co-wrote "Marrow" with Haake, where their riff work pushed beyond the band's usual individual dynamics, fostering a blend of Thordendal's intricate leads and Hagström's rhythmic drive.[15] Haake wrote most lyrics, with Hagström contributing to "The Hurt That Finds You First" and "Demiurge," ensuring thematic cohesion, while the guitarists' joint efforts on pieces like "Marrow" highlighted an evolution in the band's collaborative workflow.[13] Throughout the process, the trio maintained Meshuggah's signature polyrhythms as a foundational element, derived organically from riff and drum interplay rather than forced complexity.[14] However, they intentionally incorporated more groove-oriented sections to enhance playability and impact, as seen in Hagström's emphasis on swinging, blues-influenced riffs in tracks like "Swarm," where polyrhythms supported broader, more propulsive structures.[14] This balance allowed the album to retain technical depth while expanding accessibility, with Thordendal adding solos that complemented the grooves without overshadowing the rhythmic core.[16]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Koloss took place at Fear and Loathing Studios in Stockholm, Sweden, the band's own facility where they handled much of the production in-house.[17] This setup allowed for a streamlined process, with the band utilizing Cubase software and plugins like Amp Rack for guitar tones, eschewing traditional amplifiers to maintain flexibility during tracking.[18] The sessions emphasized capturing the band's live energy by prioritizing groove and natural flow over sheer technical display, recording instruments song-by-song—starting with drums, then guitars and bass for each track—rather than batching by instrument across the album.[14] An organic production approach was central, aiming to infuse the music with soulful dynamics and atmospheric depth while avoiding a overly polished or clinical result, as described by drummer Tomas Haake as embodying "organic brutality."[18] This method extended to incorporating varied guitar tunings, including six-, seven-, and eight-string instruments, to enhance the monolithic yet visceral sound.[18] These sessions were informed briefly by ongoing songwriting collaborations, with guitarist Mårten Hagström leading on most tracks through individual demos refined collectively.[18] The timeline aligned with pre-release preparations, spanning late 2011 into early 2012 to finalize the album ahead of its March rollout.[19]Production team
Koloss was self-produced by the band Meshuggah, allowing them to maintain full creative control over the album's direction without an external producer.[17] This approach emphasized their desire for a heavy, expansive sound that captured the album's titular theme of colossal scale and intensity.[20] Guitarist Fredrik Thordendal served as the recording engineer, handling the technical aspects of capturing the band's performances at their own Fear and Loathing Studios in Stockholm, Sweden.[17] His involvement ensured precise execution of the complex instrumentation, with additional engineering contributions from other band members during the sessions to align with their unified vision.[21] The mixing was conducted by Daniel Bergstrand at The Dugout in Uppsala, Sweden, marking a return collaboration with the band since their 1998 album Chaosphere.[17] Bergstrand's expertise provided an external perspective to refine the tracks' dynamics and clarity, enhancing the organic and muscular tone reviewers noted in the final product.[20] Mastering was completed by Göran Finnberg at The Mastering Room in Gothenburg, Sweden, finalizing the album's booming and reverby production to balance its aggressive elements.[17] This step preserved the raw power of the recordings while ensuring sonic consistency across formats.[21]Musical style and themes
Genre and sound
Koloss exemplifies Meshuggah's continuation of the djent subgenre within extreme metal, defined by intricate polyrhythms, unconventional odd time signatures, and the use of heavily downtuned eight-string guitars to create a dense, mechanical low-end.[22] The album's rhythmic complexity draws on polymetric techniques, where guitar and bass lines often operate in unconventional meters against steady 4/4 drumming, fostering a disorienting yet propulsive tension that remains a hallmark of the band's sound.[23] This approach builds on Meshuggah's influence in pioneering djent's staccato palm-muted chugs and technical precision, resulting in tracks that prioritize groove over sheer velocity.[22] Relative to the thrash-infused aggression of their prior album obZen (2008), Koloss marks a shift toward more accessible, groove-centric structures that balance brutality with melodic undertones, achieved through a warmer, organic production emphasizing tangible weight and controlled dynamics.[24] Drummer Tomas Haake noted that this evolution stemmed from experimenting with varied tunings and band-wide rehearsals, yielding a less digital tone that amplifies the music's visceral impact despite its technical demands.[24] Exemplified in "Swarm," the album incorporates mechanical precision in its interlocking riffs and near-robotic interplay between instruments, blending inhuman accuracy with rhythmic swing to heighten the sense of impending force.[25][26] The closing instrumental "The Last Vigil" highlights Meshuggah's atmospheric experimentation, diverging from the album's core heaviness with a somber, ambient landscape of softly resounding guitars and ethereal textures that evoke a meditative reprieve.[27] This track underscores the band's willingness to explore progressive and ambient elements within extreme metal, providing contrast and closure through subtle harmonic layering rather than overt aggression.[28]Lyrical subjects
The lyrics of Koloss center on themes of surveillance, existential dread, and human fragility, presented through abstract and philosophical lenses that probe the tensions between individual vulnerability and broader societal forces. These elements underscore a sense of personal and collective turmoil, often manifesting as critiques of control mechanisms that erode autonomy and expose inherent weaknesses in human existence.[29] A prominent illustration appears in the portrayal of surveillance as an insidious, omnipresent threat, exemplified by depictions of mechanical oversight and enforced vigilance that strip away privacy and agency. This theme evokes existential dread by highlighting the futility of resistance against such pervasive systems, while emphasizing human fragility through imagery of subjugation and loss. The abstract nature of these lyrics invites reflection on how external controls amplify internal conflicts, blending personal introspection with warnings about societal overreach.[30] Tomas Haake serves as the primary lyricist for Koloss, crafting the majority of the content with his signature philosophical depth that weaves societal control and personal turmoil into cohesive narratives. Contributions from guitarist Mårten Hagström on specific tracks introduce complementary nuances, enriching the album's exploration of these motifs without deviating from the core thematic framework. Haake's approach draws from influences like Christopher Hitchens, infusing the lyrics with critical undertones on dogma and human limitations that amplify the existential and fragile dimensions.[15][31]Release and promotion
Release information
Koloss was released by Nuclear Blast on March 23, 2012, in Germany, March 26, 2012, in the rest of Europe, and March 27, 2012, in North America.[21][32][33] The album was made available in several physical formats, including a standard jewel case CD, a digipak edition featuring a bonus DVD with behind-the-scenes footage and live clips, a limited-edition "magic cube" boxed set restricted to 500 copies worldwide that included the digipak and a custom Rubik's Cube puzzle, and a double LP pressed on brown vinyl limited to 150 hand-numbered copies.[17][34][35][36] The lead single, "I Am Colossus," was issued digitally on March 21, 2012.[37]Marketing and singles
The lead single from Koloss, "I Am Colossus", was followed by a digital EP released in May 2012 via Scion Audio/Visual.[38] This two-track release featured the original version alongside a remix produced by Engine-EarZ and Foreign Beggars, with the remix becoming available for streaming and free download on April 26, 2012, through the same platform.[39] The remix incorporated dubstep and IDM elements, expanding the track's reach to broader electronic and metal audiences.[40] Nuclear Blast Records spearheaded the marketing campaign for Koloss, positioning the album as Meshuggah's highly anticipated return following a four-year gap since obZen in 2008.[23] Promotional efforts highlighted the record's crushing intensity through an official album trailer released on February 27, 2012, which previewed snippets of the music and artwork to build hype ahead of the March launch.[41] To further engage fans, the label distributed limited-edition 7-inch vinyl singles of "I Am Colossus" for free during Meshuggah's live tours, allowing attendees to experience the new material firsthand.[33] These tie-ins underscored the campaign's focus on the band's technical prowess and sonic evolution.[8]Reception
Critical reviews
Koloss received generally favorable reviews from critics, earning a Metacritic score of 78 out of 100 based on 12 reviews.[42] Several prominent publications praised the album's blend of technical precision and heavy impact. Spin awarded it 9 out of 10, with critic Kory Grow describing it as a "contender for [the] genre's album of the year" due to its enthralling grooves and restrained yet brutal approach.[16] AllMusic gave it 4 out of 5 stars, highlighting how the record balances Meshuggah's signature heaviness with greater accessibility compared to prior works.[43] The A.V. Club assigned a B+ grade, calling it a "predictably fantastic Meshuggah album" that delivers on the band's established strengths in groove and aggression.[44] Critics frequently lauded Koloss for its visceral brutality and rhythmic drive, noting that the album's emphasis on swing and space made it more approachable than the band's denser efforts like obZen, while retaining their complex, groove-oriented sound.[16][43]Commercial performance
Koloss debuted at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 18,342 copies in its first week and achieving the highest chart position and debut sales week for both Meshuggah and their label Nuclear Blast to that point.[45][46] The album performed strongly internationally as well, peaking at number 24 on the Canadian Albums Chart, number 7 on the Finnish Albums Chart (Suomen virallinen lista), number 12 on the Swedish Albums Chart (Sverigetopplistan), and number 36 on the Australian Albums Chart.[47][48][49][50] Beyond initial sales, Koloss reinforced Meshuggah's pivotal role in shaping the djent subgenre, with the album's emphasis on intricate polyrhythms, extended-range guitars, and atmospheric heaviness influencing a wave of progressive metal bands in the 2010s.[51] The release helped cement the band's enduring impact, as evidenced by their post-2012 output—including The Violent Sleep of Reason (2016), which also debuted at number 17 on the Billboard 200, and Immutable (2022), reaching number 113—sustaining high-profile tours and a dedicated global following in extreme metal.[52][53]Track listing and personnel
Standard track listing
The standard edition of Koloss features ten tracks with a total runtime of 54:32.[54][17]- "I Am Colossus" – 4:43
- "The Demon's Name Is Surveillance" – 4:39
- "Do Not Look Down" – 4:43
- "Behind the Sun" – 6:14
- "The Hurt That Finds You First" – 5:33
- "Marrow" – 5:35
- "Break Those Bones Whose Sinews Gave It Motion" – 6:55
- "Swarm" – 5:26
- "Demiurge" – 6:12
- "The Last Vigil" (instrumental) – 4:32 [55]
I Am Colossus EP
The I Am Colossus EP is a two-track digital release by the Swedish extreme metal band Meshuggah, serving as a promotional precursor to their seventh studio album, Koloss. Released on March 21, 2012, via Scion Audio/Visual, it was offered as a free download to generate anticipation ahead of the album's launch two days later in Europe.[37][57] The EP centers on the album's opening track, "I Am Colossus," a 4:43 heavy metal composition characterized by the band's signature polyrhythmic grooves and aggressive vocals. It also includes a remix of the same song by electronic producers Engine-EarZ and hip-hop group Foreign Beggars, reinterpreting the original's intensity through dubstep and IDM elements, clocking in at 4:44. This remix blends Meshuggah's metallic foundation with electronic drops and rap verses, expanding the track's appeal to broader audiences.[40] In addition to its digital format, the EP was distributed physically as a limited-edition 7-inch vinyl single at select U.S. concert venues during the band's promotional tour, available in various colored pressings such as blue/green, black, and burnt orange, though these were not for commercial sale.[58]Personnel
Koloss features the standard Meshuggah lineup performing on the album.[17] Jens Kidman provided lead vocals, Fredrik Thordendal handled lead guitar, Mårten Hagström played rhythm guitar, Dick Lövgren performed on bass, and Tomas Haake contributed drums.[17] Songwriting credits for Koloss are attributed primarily to the band members, with lyrics mostly penned by Haake and music composed collaboratively among Haake, Hagström, and Thordendal, alongside individual contributions.[15] The band collectively oversaw production.[59] Specific credits per track are as follows:| Track | Title | Lyrics | Music |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | I Am Colossus | Haake | Hagström, Thordendal |
| 2 | The Demon's Name Is Surveillance | Haake | Thordendal |
| 3 | Do Not Look Down | Haake | Haake, Hagström, Thordendal |
| 4 | Behind the Sun | Haake | Kidman |
| 5 | The Hurt That Finds You First | Hagström | Hagström |
| 6 | Marrow | Haake | Haake, Hagström, Thordendal |
| 7 | Break Those Bones Whose Sinews Gave It Motion | Haake | Hagström |
| 8 | Swarm | Haake | Haake, Hagström, Thordendal |
| 9 | Demiurge | Hagström | Hagström |
| 10 | The Last Vigil | (Instrumental) | Hagström |