Starofash
Starofash is the solo musical project of Norwegian musician and songwriter Heidi Solberg Tveitan, born on 31 May 1972, who performs as a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist across genres including art pop, electronic, and ambient music.[1][2] Originally launched as Star Of Ash, the project evolved into Starofash, with Tveitan handling composition, production, and performance from her base in the woods of Telemark, Norway.[1][3] Her work draws from experimental influences, notably her prior involvement in the extreme metal band Peccatum under the alias Ihriel, and emphasizes atmospheric soundscapes and lyrical depth inspired by nature and introspection.[4][5] Tveitan's discography under Starofash includes notable albums such as skógr (2016), featuring tracks like "Hvitna" and "The Forest Queen," which blend ethereal electronics with folk-tinged elements.[6] Other releases encompass Ghouleh (2014) and Iter.Viator (2002), showcasing her evolution toward more ambient and introspective compositions available on platforms like Apple Music and SoundCloud.[2][7] She continues to develop her craft through collaborations, including a feature on her brother Einar Solberg's album 16 (2023), capturing musical and visual inspirations from her surroundings.[8]Early life and background
Childhood and upbringing
Heidi Solberg Tveitan was born on May 31, 1972, in Notodden, Telemark, Norway.[9][10] She grew up in the rural, wooded landscapes of Telemark, an environment that has notably shaped the atmospheric and thematic elements in her later artistic endeavors.[6] From a young age, she was exposed to music through her family, which included siblings active in the Norwegian music scene, though she pursued her initial explorations without formal training.[2]Family and musical influences
Heidi Solberg Tveitan, known professionally as Starofash or Ihriel, is the older sister of three brothers active in the music scene: Einar Solberg, the lead vocalist and keyboardist of the progressive metal band Leprous; Kenneth Solberg, former guitarist of Leprous; and Lord PZ, former member of Peccatum. The siblings shared a household in Notodden, Telemark, where family encouragement of musical pursuits, including Einar's early involvement in youth bands at his sister's request, fostered an environment of creative expression.[11] Tveitan married Vegard Sverre Tveitan, professionally known as Ihsahn of the influential black metal band Emperor, on February 20, 1998.[12] The couple has two children: a son, Angell Solberg Tveitan, born in 2008, who has followed in their footsteps by forming his own black metal project, Angell, and releasing his debut single "Undergang" in April 2025; and a daughter, Ariadne Solberg Tveitan, a musician who released her debut single "My Nightmare Ends Where Yours Begin" on November 13, 2025, and joined Leprous on tour.[13][14][15][16][17] Ihsahn's background in black metal significantly shaped Tveitan's exposure to extreme and experimental genres, with the couple maintaining a collaborative dynamic in their shared home studio, Symphonique Studios, located in Notodden, Telemark.[18] This setup, operational since at least the early 2000s, allowed for ongoing musical experimentation amid the region's rural setting.[19] Tveitan's initial encounters with metal and experimental music stemmed from family discussions and immersion in Notodden's local scene, a hub for early Norwegian black metal where Emperor formed and performed their initial shows in the early 1990s.[20]Professional career
Peccatum era (1998–2006)
Peccatum was formed in 1998 by Heidi Solberg Tveitan, performing under the stage name Ihriel, alongside her husband Vegard Tveitan (Ihsahn) and his brother Arnt C. Tveitan (Lord PZ).[21] The band emerged as a collaborative outlet for experimental metal, with Ihriel taking on primary vocals, keyboards, and key songwriting duties to craft an avant-garde sound that fused black metal intensity, progressive structures, industrial textures, and symphonic atmospheres.[22] This innovative approach allowed Peccatum to distinguish itself from traditional metal genres, emphasizing emotional depth and sonic experimentation through Ihriel's ethereal yet aggressive vocal delivery and atmospheric keyboard layers.[23] Following its inception, Peccatum signed with Candlelight Records in 1999 and debuted with the album Strangling From Within, a critically regarded work that showcased the band's ability to blend harsh riffs with melodic interludes and unconventional song forms.[21] The group built on this foundation with the EP Oh, My Regrets in 2000 and the full-length Amor Fati in 2001, where Ihriel's contributions to composition helped evolve their style toward more abstract, narrative-driven pieces exploring themes of existential struggle and human frailty.[24] Later releases, including Lost in Reverie (2004) and the EP The Moribund People (2005), further refined this avant-garde metal aesthetic, incorporating electronic elements and dynamic shifts that highlighted the trio's cohesive interplay.[25] Peccatum's live performances during this period underscored their theatrical and immersive style, with notable appearances at the Mystic Art Festival in Poland in 2000 and the Inferno Metal Festival in Norway in 2001.[21] These shows featured Ihriel's commanding presence on stage, delivering soaring cleans and guttural screams amid the band's elaborate setups of guitars, drums, and synthesizers, which captivated audiences and reinforced Peccatum's reputation for boundary-pushing metal.[26] By 2006, after eight years of collaboration, Peccatum disbanded as Ihsahn and Ihriel pursued diverging creative paths, citing a desire to explore individual artistic directions amid evolving personal priorities.[27] The dissolution marked the end of this foundational phase in Ihriel's career, allowing her to transition toward more personal projects while leaving a legacy of experimental innovation in the metal scene.[23]Inception and development of Star of Ash/Starofash (2001–2010)
Star of Ash was launched in 2001 as the solo project of Norwegian musician Heidi Solberg Tveitan, known as Ihriel from the experimental metal band Peccatum, which remained active until 2006.[4] The project emerged from an invitation for Tveitan to create a solo album, allowing her to explore personal artistic visions beyond Peccatum's collaborative framework.[28] This inception marked a shift toward more atmospheric and introspective compositions, influenced by Peccatum's avant-garde experimentation but emphasizing Tveitan's autonomy as a multi-instrumentalist handling vocals, piano, and programming.[1] The debut album, Iter.Viator, was released in 2002 on Jester Records, blending neoclassical, electronic, and avant-garde elements into a narrative-driven work inspired by noir aesthetics and minimalist composers like Arvo Pärt.[29] Recorded and self-produced by Tveitan at her home studio, Symphonique Studio in Notodden, Norway, the album featured sparse instrumentation with contributions from guest musicians, including jazz drummer Anders Berg, to evoke haunting, cinematic landscapes across its 42-minute runtime.[29] Tveitan's approach prioritized thematic cohesion, rearranging motifs mathematically to build emotional depth without relying on traditional rock structures.[28] In 2006, Tveitan collaborated with Japanese cyberpunk author Kenji Siratori on the track "Neo Drugismo," where Siratori contributed lyrics, spoken-word vocals, and conceptual elements drawn from his dystopian themes, marking an early fusion of literature and electronic sound design in the project.[30] This partnership, announced that October, highlighted Tveitan's interest in interdisciplinary art, though it initially appeared as a standalone bonus or experimental piece before integration into later works.[31] The project's mid-period saw expanded releases under Tveitan's self-production banner via Mnemosyne Productions, her independent label. The Thread, issued in 2008 by Candlelight Records and Mnemosyne (catalog MNEMO-006), delved deeper into art pop and electronic minimalism with 10 tracks, including the Siratori collaboration, and incorporated poetic influences from Emily Dickinson.[32] Recorded at Symphonique Studio, it underscored Tveitan's multi-instrumental prowess, layering piano, programming, and subtle neoclassical motifs to create immersive, introspective soundscapes.[33] In 2009, Tveitan composed and produced Ulterior: The Soundtrack for Irish director Jason Mehlhorn's low-budget film Ulterior, released exclusively on Mnemosyne (MNEMO-009) as a limited-edition CD of ambient and minimalist scores tailored to the movie's psychological thriller narrative.[34] This work, again self-recorded at her home studio, emphasized atmospheric electronics and sparse piano to enhance on-screen tension, demonstrating the project's versatility in multimedia applications.[35] The decade concluded with Lakhesis in 2010, distributed by The End Records and Mnemosyne (MNEMO-011), a full-length album of art pop and electronic compositions that solidified Tveitan's evolution toward more personal, woodland-inspired themes reflective of her Telemark surroundings.[36] Around this time, the project underwent a stylistic rebranding from Star of Ash to Starofash, streamlining the name for future releases while maintaining continuity in its experimental ethos.[1] Throughout this period, Tveitan's home-based production process at Symphonique Studio enabled complete creative control, allowing her to perform and engineer nearly all elements as a one-woman operation.[33]Recent projects and activities (2011–present)
Following the dissolution of Peccatum, Heidi S. Tveitan continued her solo endeavors under the Starofash moniker, which she adopted from the earlier Star of Ash project. In 2013, she initiated a creative challenge to compose, record, and release one original song per month throughout the year, resulting in the album Ghouleh, issued in April 2014 by her own Mnemosyne Productions label.[37] This 13-track collection, including a bonus piece, emphasized ethereal art pop with ambient textures and electronic experimentation, reflecting Tveitan's exploration of introspective sound design amid personal and artistic transitions.[38] Building on this momentum, Starofash released Skógr on May 31, 2016, again through Mnemosyne Productions. The seven-track album delved deeper into atmospheric compositions, drawing inspiration from Nordic landscapes with titles evoking forests and frost, such as "The Forest Queen" and "The Frost," and featured guest vocals by Einar Solberg of Leprous on "Viðr."[6] This work marked a shift toward more immersive, nature-infused ambient elements, prioritizing organic instrumentation and subtle electronic layers over previous pop structures. In 2023, Tveitan provided guest vocals on the track "Where All the Twigs Broke" for Einar Solberg's debut solo album 16, released on InsideOutMusic.[39] Since Skógr, Tveitan has maintained ongoing music production from her base in Notodden, Telemark, Norway, where she operates Mnemosyne Productions.[6] Her output has evolved further into ambient and environmentally themed pieces, though no full-length solo albums have been released as of November 2025, with the project's most recent major contribution being the 2023 feature on Einar Solberg's 16.[1]Other contributions
Production and studio work
In 2003, Heidi Solberg Tveitan, known as Starofash or Ihriel, co-founded Mnemosyne Productions with her husband Vegard Tveitan (Ihsahn) in Notodden, Norway, establishing it as both an independent record label and a dedicated recording studio focused on experimental and avant-garde music projects.[40] The company served as an outlet for their collaborative endeavors, handling production, management, and distribution for niche releases in genres ranging from black metal to ambient and electronic works.[41] Tveitan's production credits extend to her own Starofash albums, where she handled composition, performance, and engineering, as well as select external collaborations. Notably, she co-produced several albums for the progressive metal band Leprous—her brother Einar Solberg's project—including Bilateral (2011), Coal (2013), and The Congregation (2015), often alongside Ihsahn and the band itself at Mnemosyne Studios.[42] These efforts emphasized layered, atmospheric soundscapes, leveraging the studio's capabilities for intricate mixing.[43] With Peccatum, the experimental metal duo she formed with Ihsahn in 1998, Tveitan contributed to arrangement, composition, and performance on releases such as Strangling from Within (1999) and Amor Fati (2000). This self-sufficient approach carried over to initial Starofash projects around 2001, enabling production in a modest domestic environment before the full development of Mnemosyne Studios.[41] Tveitan's informal contributions to family-related recordings, like those for Leprous, further highlighted her role in fostering technical support within their shared musical network.[44]Visual arts and photography
Heidi Solberg Tveitan, the creative force behind Starofash, maintains an active practice in photography, drawing inspiration from the rugged landscapes of Telemark, Norway, where she has spent much of her life. Her images often capture the region's dark woods and natural forms, reflecting the introspective and elemental motifs prevalent in her songwriting. Tveitan frequently collaborates with visual artists to develop artwork that aligns thematically with her music. For the 2016 album Skógr, she partnered with illustrator Maria Picassó i Piquer, whose designs evoke forest depths and abstraction, mirroring the record's exploration of nature and isolation.[6] In live settings, Tveitan integrates custom visuals to deepen the immersive experience. During the 2018 Motstrøms festival at Myrens Dam in Notodden, Norway—a collaborative event featuring Starofash alongside acts like Ihsahn and Leprous—she incorporated atmospheric imagery that echoed her music's ethereal and narrative qualities.[45]Musical style
Genres and instrumentation
Starofash's musical foundation traces back to the avant-garde metal style of Peccatum, characterized by industrial-tinged black metal elements including distorted guitars, aggressive drumming, and experimental structures blending progressive and symphonic influences.[46] Instrumentation in this era featured multi-layered arrangements with vocals, electric guitars, bass, keyboards, and occasional orchestral touches like violins and piano to create dynamic shifts between heavy riffs and melancholic interludes.[47] This approach established a core of black metal roots while incorporating broader experimental palettes.[48] With the inception of Starofash around 2001, the project shifted toward art pop, ambient, and electronic genres, emphasizing atmospheric and neoclassical elements over metal aggression.[2] Key releases like The Thread (2008) highlight this transition through minimalistic compositions driven by pianos, synthesizers, and programming to build layered, ethereal soundscapes.[49] Vocals remain central, often delivered in a haunting, emotive style, complemented by electronic programming for ambient textures and occasional choral or spoken elements.[50] Post-2010, Starofash's style evolved further into neoclassical and art rock territories, favoring sparse arrangements with piano-driven pieces and subtle synthesizer washes that evoke classical composers' influences, such as intricate melodic phrasing reminiscent of modern minimalism.[51] This refinement reduced distorted, heavy sounds in favor of introspective, folk-tinged electronics and acoustic integrations, maintaining black metal's atmospheric depth but through a more restrained, multi-instrumental lens including guitars for textural support. The project's instrumentation underscores Heidi Solberg Tveitan's multi-instrumentalism, with synthesizers and programming enabling fluid genre hybrids that prioritize emotional resonance over intensity.[52]Themes and evolution
The music of Starofash prominently features recurring themes of nature and isolation, deeply rooted in the artist's surroundings in the dark woods of Telemark, Norway, where she composes her material.[53] These elements manifest in works like the 2016 album Skógr, whose title derives from the Old Norse word for "forest," evoking imagery of mystical seclusion and natural introspection.[6] Mythology also plays a key role, with influences from Norse folklore and medieval narratives channeled through literary sources, contributing to a layered exploration of existential solitude.[54] Lyrically, Starofash employs a poetic and abstract style, prioritizing emotional impressions over straightforward storytelling and often incorporating visceral, dark imagery drawn from literature.[28] For instance, phrases such as "I yearn to vomit my heart all over you" exemplify the intense, evocative language that blends the profound with the surreal.[28] This approach frequently references broader cultural touchstones, including Norwegian author Sigrid Undset's medieval tales in Master of Hestviken and Emily Dickinson's introspective poetry, to weave personal reflection with mythological undertones.[54] Thematically, Starofash's output has evolved from the raw, impressionistic torment of early releases to greater emotional depth and serenity in later ones. The debut album Iter.Viator (2001) centers on a crime noir-inspired journey, using cryptic lyrics to paint contrasts of light and darkness while emphasizing atmospheric settings over character development.[28] [55] By The Thread (2008), themes shift toward relational strife and the futility of endurance, framed as a tragic love narrative that highlights human vulnerability and fate.[54] This progression reflects the artist's growing confidence, honed through collaborations and a seven-year creative hiatus influenced by parallel projects like Peccatum, resulting in more cohesive, introspective expressions in the 2010s onward.[54]Discography
Peccatum
Peccatum, the Norwegian avant-garde metal band co-founded by Heidi Solberg Tveitan (known as Ihriel) in 1998 alongside her husband Vegard Tveitan (Ihsahn) and brother Pål Solberg (Lord PZ), produced a series of innovative releases blending black metal with progressive and symphonic elements during its run from 1998 to 2006.[25] Tveitan contributed vocals, keyboards, synthesizers, and the majority of lyrics across the band's output, often delivering haunting, operatic performances that contrasted with the project's extreme structures.[24] The band's debut full-length album, Strangling From Within, was released in 1999 by Candlelight Records in CD format, marking an early exploration of experimental song structures that shifted between aggressive black metal riffs and atmospheric interludes.[56] Key tracks like "Speak Of The Devil (As The Devil May Care)" and "The World Of No Worlds" highlight Tveitan's vocal range, from ethereal cleans to intense screams, layered over complex guitar landscapes and keyboard-driven drama that evoke a conceptual journey through inner turmoil.[22] The album's divided format into "Part One" and "Part Two" underscores its avant-garde approach, with runtime spanning approximately 40 minutes across nine tracks.[57] The band also released the EP Oh, My Regrets in 2000 via Candlelight Records in CD format, featuring four tracks that expanded on their experimental style with aggressive vocals and symphonic elements, clocking in at about 17 minutes.[58] Following in 2000, Amor Fati appeared on Candlelight Records as a CD, further evolving the band's sound with intricate, genre-defying compositions that incorporated violin, multi-layered symphonics, and heavy riffing.[59] Tveitan's contributions shine in highlights such as "Murder" and "A Game Divine?", where her lyrics explore themes of love, death, and spiritual conflict, supported by her synth work that adds a chamber-music texture to the 44-minute collection of ten tracks, including untitled interludes.[60] The release emphasized conceptual depth over conventional metal tropes, earning praise for its artistic ambition.[61] The final full-length, Lost in Reverie, emerged in 2004 via the band's own Mnemosyne Productions imprint in CD format, shifting toward a more rock-infused avant-garde style while retaining experimental flair through stark instrumental passages and dynamic production.[62] Clocking in at around 50 minutes over seven tracks, it features Tveitan's prominent vocals on pieces like "Black Star" and "Parasite My Heart," where she handles both melodic and aggressive deliveries amid evolving soundscapes that blend full-band assaults with minimalist introspection.[63] This album, produced during a period of lineup changes after Lord PZ's departure, solidified Peccatum's legacy in pushing metal boundaries.[25] In 2005, the EP The Moribund People was released by Mnemosyne Productions in CD format, comprising three tracks of introspective and atmospheric avant-garde metal, totaling about 15 minutes, serving as a precursor to the band's dissolution.[64]Starofash albums
Starofash's core solo studio albums span from the project's inception as Star of Ash to its evolution into Starofash, showcasing Heidi S. Tveitan's experimental art pop and electronic soundscapes.[1] The debut, Iter.Viator, marked the beginning of her solo endeavors following Peccatum, released on CD by Jester Records in 2002 with 10 tracks recorded sporadically at Symphonique Studio between 2001 and 2002.[29] This was followed by The Thread in 2008, issued on CD by Candlelight Records and Mnemosyne Productions, featuring 10 tracks enhanced with multimedia elements; it was recorded and mixed at Symphonique Studio by Mnemosyne Productions, incorporating lyrics adapted from Emily Dickinson poems 536 and 1736 on select tracks.[33] Subsequent releases solidified the project's output under Mnemosyne Productions. Lakhesis, a CD album with 8 tracks, appeared in 2010, emphasizing Tveitan's multi-instrumental production.[65] Ghouleh (2014) expanded to 13 tracks in digital MP3 format at 320 kbps, completing Tveitan's 2013 songwriting project involving daily compositions, with all material handled in-house by Mnemosyne Productions.[66][37] Skógr (2016), a 7-track digital album, was written and performed entirely by Tveitan and produced by Mnemosyne Productions, featuring guest vocals by Einar Solberg on "Viðr."[6] As of 2025, all Starofash albums remain available digitally on platforms including Bandcamp, Spotify, and Apple Music, with physical CD editions of earlier works occasionally reissued through independent distributors like The End Records for Lakhesis.[67]| Album | Release Year | Label | Format | Track Count | Notable Production Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iter.Viator | 2002 | Jester Records | CD | 10 | Recorded sporadically 2001–2002 at Symphonique Studio; additional percussion and vocals at Ambassaden Studio.[29] |
| The Thread | 2008 | Candlelight Records / Mnemosyne Productions | CD (enhanced) | 10 | Recorded and mixed at Symphonique Studio; lyrics from Emily Dickinson poems on tracks 6 and 7.[33] |
| Lakhesis | 2010 | Mnemosyne Productions | CD | 8 | Self-produced by Tveitan under Mnemosyne.[36] |
| Ghouleh | 2014 | Mnemosyne Productions | Digital (MP3) | 13 | Culmination of daily songwriting project from 2013.[37] |
| Skógr | 2016 | Mnemosyne Productions | Digital | 7 | Written and performed by Tveitan; guest vocals on one track; produced by Mnemosyne.[6] |