P är: There wasn’t really a big difference from the past Joakim is in charge of most of the music, I collected the initial ideas and started to set out the topics, and then we sit together and write the lyrics eventually. What were the writing and recording processes like? When we go on a tour like this, I don’t think we’ve played so much for a new album ever on a tour so that’s confirmation that fans want to hear the new stuff, which I’m happy for. First of all the media who heard it were very thrilled about it, and also the reception of the fans has been fantastic. It brought us to a place we’ve not been, bigger clubs, bigger venues, higher up the bill on festival slots and stuff like that so it’s definitely brought us to new areas.Īnd what’s the reception been like for the new album? We’ve not really experienced the times when they’ve been selling masses of albums, so for us every album has been a bigger and bigger step, and it’s the same with The Last Stand as well. P är: As every album with SABATON it takes us to a new place, and I’m lucky we didn’t really live in the times where record sales went down – we constantly grew and grew. How do you feel the album has helped the band grow? SABATON released The Last Stand last year. Distorted Sound recently caught up with P är Sundstr öm, the band’s bassist, before their Manchester show as part of The Last Tour to discuss the new album and how the band has become one of the main festival headliners over recent years. SABATON released The Last Stand in 2016, the band’s eighth studio album as they continue their partnership with Nuclear Blast Records.
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