Album Review: Witchcraft, Idag

Posted in Reviews on May 30th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Witchcraft IDAG

The Swedish word idag is ‘today’ in English, and that’s exactly where Witchcraft meet you. It’s not to be confused with yesterday or tomorrow.

Since their founding in 2000 by guitarist/vocalist Magnus Pelander, Witchcraft have spearheaded a genre, revamped their sound, and made a name for themselves as one of the most important bands of their generation. By now, they’re bordering on ‘classic’ themselves. Their first two albums, 2004’s Witchcraft (discussed here) and 2005’s Firewood, helped establish ’70s vintageism in heavy rock and roll in a way few bands have.

Pelander, who was in Norrsken prior with members of Graveyard and Dead Man for three pivotal demos and a 7″ that desperately need to be on a complete-works compilation, is the lone remaining founder, and has for most of the band’s tenure been the figurehead, auteur, however you want to say it. By the time they got to their third LP, 2007’s The Alchemist (discussed here), they were moving on in sound.

Idag (for which I wrote the bio here) reckons with Witchcraft‘s stylistic origins in a way the band has not done before. Pelander is joined for the outing by Philip Pilossian (Lowest Creature) on bass and Pär Hjulström (Mowgli, etc.) on drums, and when it’s a full band, the sound can be thick and resoundingly doomed like the eight-minute opening title-track “Idag,” which is also the longest cut on the record (immediate points for starting with it), with Björn Ekholm Eriksson sitting in on synth. Clearly Witchcraft today have learned from Witchcraft yesterday.

The later “Burning Cross” (5:00) has a raw, garage-y sway and slowed-down heavy blues riff, and it’s probably as close as they’ve come in 20 years to the approach that set them forth. “Spirit” (6:31), which caps before an epilogue, is a fuzzed oblivion topped with accordingly sorrowful and soulful vocals. If you’re the kind of Witchcraft fan who since they signed to Nuclear Blast and put out Legend (review here) in 2012 has been pining away for the organic primitivism of their first releases, you are not left out of Idag.

But this in itself is a redirect. Witchcraft‘s last album was 2020’s Black Metal (review here), which was transgressive in its interpretation to say the least, with Pelander on acoustic guitar and vocals and nothing else. A spiritual successor to Pelander‘s 2016 solo album, Time (review here) and an earlier four-track CD EP, Black Metal pulled the rug out from under the heavy rock grandstanding and slicker production of 2016’s Nucleus (review here) and hard-left-turned Witchcraft into a different kind of band. I don’t know the circumstances behind that release, but it was a stark change.

Now aligned to Heavy Psych Sounds with a new manager in Sean “Pellet” Pelletier — who circa-2008 masterminded a comeback for Pentagram that resulted in the 2011 documentary Last Days Here; one enjoys the consideration that Pentagram‘s early days were a defining influence for young Witchcraft — the trio led by Pelander can be full and forceful on “Burning Cross” and then boogie out on the Leaf Hound-esque “Irreligious Flamboyant Flame” (3:55) but that’s still only half of Idag‘s project. Recorded across what seem to have been different sessions with a variety of tones and approaches, the album manifests much of what Witchcraft are and have been to this point and looks ahead to what they still may become.

witchcraft (photo by dcmetalchris)

Because, make no mistake, ‘today’ is where past and future meet. A fair portion of Idag is in Swedish. “Drömmar av is” (2:56) follows the title-track and is a slow-moving distorted nod complemented by the even-rawer “Drömmen om död och förruttnelse” (3:24) the latter sounding like it was recorded live, and that deconstruction of the brunt offered by “Idag” continues as “Om du vill” (2:37) drops drums and bass in favor of strummed electric guitar and vocals — something Pelander is a more than capable enough singer to pull off, in his native language or English — and the brief side-A-ending “Gläntan” goes further into minimalism with just over a minute of wistfully folkish standalone acoustic guitar before “Burning Cross” brings a heavy reset for side B.

The second half of Idag, and thus the album as a whole, also ends acoustic, with the 44-second “Om du vill (Slight Return),” but the course that gets there isn’t so linear. One might think of “Burning Cross” and the rawer “Irreligious Flamboyant Flame” as complements, and the same applies to the acoustic narrative “Christmas” (6:08) — which seems to recount a familial falling out marked by the devastating realization, “I’m not so sure/That you miss me at all/I was never sure/That you love me at all,” delivered in English in the fragile space between the strums of a verse — and “Spirit,” which follows directly. There is a flow from one to the next, from the fuller, heavier sound into more of the organic, in-the-room classic-heavy, into acoustic balladeering and back toward the resonant march of downerist riffing.

“Spirit” establishes its riff over the first minute and is intentionally grueling for its six and a half minutes, the tempo holding for the duration, and that Idag would make its ending in “Om du vill (Slight Return)” highlights how much of the album’s impact is emotional. That’s not to say its heavier moments are somehow lacking tonal presence or don’t hit hard or whatever — Idag is the heaviest Witchcraft have ever sounded, and that includes those shiny modernized outings for Nuclear Blast — and for the first time in their 25 years, they fully account for each aspect of the development Pelander has undertaken over that span. It’s all here, and at 40 minutes, one can only call it efficiently encapsulated.

So if the question going into Idag was what Witchcraft were going to be this time around, the answer is a bit of everything they’ve ever been. This in itself, the breaking down of barriers between various modes of operating and constructions, full-band or solo, and so on, is a forward-thinking representation of Witchcraft, but there’s no question that the story of Idag is that of Pelander bringing classic heavy back into their sound in a way it hasn’t been in 20 years. That he does it as part of a broader scope tells you that Witchcraft circa ’25 aren’t looking to be defined as any one single thing other than themselves, and perhaps that is what they’ve been working toward all along.

One never knows what the future will bring, if Witchcraft (who also made a rare US appearance at this year’s Maryland Death Fest, where the photo above was taken; credit to @dcmetalchris) are beginning a new surge to engage a new generation of listeners or not, but it sure sounds like they’re making an effort in that regard, and Idag leaves one with high hopes and expectations alike going forward. Fingers crossed, anyhow.

Witchcraft, Idag (2025)

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Witchcraft to Relase Idag May 23; “Burning Cross” Streaming Now

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 18th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Concurrent to opening preorders for reissues of 2020’s Black Metal (review here) and 2016’s Nucleus (review here) both backed by the band’s new label, Heavy Psych Sounds, Sweden’s Witchcraft today unveil the first audio from their new full-length, Idag, out May 23. You can see below I wrote the bio, so I’m not going to pretend not to have heard it or that what’s happening sound-wise on it isn’t a big deal. In a song like “Burning Cross,” which is a swinging and classically dark first single, it’s the most in-conversation with doom Witchcraft have been in 20 years. That’s not minor in my mind.

I’ll have more to come — I hope — before May 23 gets here, but you can hear the song at the bottom of this post (Decibel had the premiere; I’ll never be that cool and I’ll always be insecure about it) and see what you think. If you want more of my take on the thing at this point, read ‘Album Description & Bio’ below.

Here’s how it came down the PR wire:

Witchcraft IDAG

Heavy Psych Sounds to announce WITCHCRAFT new album IDAG – presale starts TODAY !!!

Today we are stoked to start the presale of the WITCHCRAFT upcoming brand new album IDAG !!

RELEASE DATE: MAY 23rd

ALBUM PRESALE: https://www.heavypsychsounds.com/shop.htm#HPS353

USA PRESALE: https://www.heavypsychsounds.com/shop-usa.htm#HPS353

TRACKLIST
SIDE A
Idag – 8:07
Drömmar av is – 2:55
Drömmen om död och förruttnelse – 3:24
Om du vill – 2:36
Gläntan – 1:02

SIDE B
Burning Cross – 4:59
Irreligious Flamboyant Flame – 3:54
Christmas – 6:07
Spirit – 6:30
Om du vill (Slight Return) – 0:44

ALBUM DESCRIPTION & BIO

More than 20 years after their debut, Witchcraft’s seventh album, ‘IDAG,’ is an awaited full accounting of who they are as a band. Those who have clamored for the return to an earlier sound rooted in ’70s classic progressive and heavy rock will delight to the strut of “Irreligious Flamboyant Flame” while the eight-minute opening title-track is the heaviest the band have ever sounded, and a succession of interspersed acoustic-based pieces helps create a vision of a new, soulfully folkish doom taking shape as they continue to move inexorably forward.

Founding guitarist/vocalist, Magnus Pelander, says of ‘IDAG’: “This album will reap souls and destroy wicked minds. And perhaps mend a couple of broken ones.”

These enigmatic few words from the Swedish band’s main songwriter give clues as to the songs’ intentions; a reference dropped to Coven’s 1969 album, ‘Witchcraft Destroys Minds and Reaps Souls.’ Coven also had a folkish, proto-doomed take at that point in their history, and that multifaceted nature has been a part of Witchcraft all along. On one level, Magnus is winkingly telling you it’s a Witchcraft record. The actual meaning of that becomes clear when you hear the album and find out just how much ‘a Witchcraft record’ can encompass.

The storyline of Witchcraft’s growth, from Pelander’s starting the band in Örebro in 2000 in the wake of his prior outfit Norrsken’s disbanding. A generational landmark of a 2004 self-titled debut helped spark a retroist movement that has become its own subgenre, but Witchcraft never stopped growing. 2005’s ‘Firewood’ and 2007’s ‘The Alchemist’ introduced more progressive sounds, and five years later, the pointedly modern ‘Legend’ established in 2012 that they had moved beyond the analog worship they had been a part of pioneering within the contemporary heavy rock and doom scene.

In 2016, the 2LP ‘Nucleus’ introduced fuller-toned doom, and 2020’s ‘Black Metal’ diverged into moody acoustic minimalism familiar to some fans from Pelander’s early solo work, but different from anything Witchcraft had done prior. ‘IDAG,’ then, is the tie that draws all of this – more than two decades of exploring and growth – together. Whatever they’ve done in the past and whatever they’ll do in the future, ‘IDAG’ feels like a nexus for defining who and what Witchcraft are. Even crazier, that might be the point of the thing. — JJ Koczan

CREDITS

Recorded and engineered by Johan Elander, Philip Saxin and David Storm.
Mixed and mastered by David Storm. Produced by Magnus Pelander.
All music and lyrics and guitars and vocals by Magnus Pelander.
Drums: Pär Hjulström. Bass: Philip Pilossian. Synth on track 1 by Björn Ekholm Eriksson.

Thanks to: Oscar Johansson for the pigtail and Pär and Philip for dedication and help. Anton Sundell for professional worship of audio files.
Very special extra thanks to: Sean Pelletier for driving the Wheels Of Confusion overboard then back starboards again. For making this LP happen. With peace in his mind. Forever in debt to your priceless advice.
Artwork: John Bauer.
Gatefold photo: Magnus Pelander.
Design: David Bååth.

www.witchraftswe.com
www.facebook.com/witchcraft
https://www.instagram.com/witchcraft.band/

heavypsychsoundsrecords.bandcamp.com
www.heavypsychsounds.com
https://www.facebook.com/HEAVYPSYCHSOUNDS/
https://www.instagram.com/heavypsychsounds_records/

Witchcraft, “Burning Cross”

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