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You are here: Home1 / Metal2 / Progressive Metal3 / Green Carnation seize the moment on new single ‘I Am Time’
Roel Verscheure

Green Carnation seize the moment on new single ‘I Am Time’

Progressive Metal, Progressive Rock

Three decades into a storied career, GREEN CARNATION continue to stand the test of time. Just last year, the Norwegian prog bards reached crushing new highs during the grand and gloomy opening chapter of their long-awaited album trilogy. Now, as the band descend into deeper, darker and more personal depths on Part II of A Dark Poem, they are breaking past the surface with the album’s emotional peak.

Green Carnation are releasing the second advanced single from A Dark Poem, Part II: Sanguis. While awash with melancholy over the past, “I Am Time” seizes the moment with the band’s unwavering control and raw emotions.

“‘I Am Time’ is one of the songs from the forthcoming A Dark Poem album trilogy that discusses the fragile nature of our lives”, Green Carnation vocalist Kjetil Nordhus says. “We do not have control over time. We should try and live in the here and now, before suddenly, it’s too late”.

“To make the song a bit more interesting, the lyrics personify time”, says Green Carnation bassist and lyricist Stein Roger Sordal. “They’re about how we should respect and cherish the time that we have”.

Even after taking a hiatus, Green Carnation remain one of prog’s most celebrated and committed journeymen. Most members from the band’s current lineup were already in place back in 2001 upon releasing one-track opus Light of Day, Dark of Darkness. Behind Nordhus’ resounding cleans, “I Am Time” is firm in its assertions. “I can’t be tamed, I am not for sale”. However, it’s fitting that the newest single from Part II of A Dark Poem needed time to come together.  

“‘I Am Time’ combines ideas from two different songs”, Nordhus says. The opening crash of cymbals didn’t crest into a billowing guitar solo until he and Sordal were writing together at a cottage in the woods of Norway. “We tried letting the intro flow into the lead guitar part that takes over. It worked perfectly”.

The newfound heaviness that anchored Green Carnation on Part I of A Dark Poem hasn’t washed away. “I Am Time” floods with double bass and stormy tremolo picking. But while the view from The Shores of Melancholia was far from sunny, Sanguis pushes the band into a murkier  headspace. “In your mind, I’m tomorrow” , Nordhus sings with gloomy restraint. “For your sake, I should be today”. In the shadow of a haunting synth, the song’s central melody slips away like sand through an hourglass.

Sanguis introduces more peaks and valleys into the overarching narrative of A Dark Poem. “Part II deals with personal loss and sadness”, Nordhus shares, though he’s quick to say that the album isn’t all gloom and doom. As “I Am Time” swells like a tidal wave during its memorable finish, Green Carnation stand strong as ever with one final pronouncement.  “I am here, I am now / I am time”.

Catch Green Carnation during their upcoming hometown shows and European summer festival dates. During their headlining show at the Kilden Performing Arts Centre, the band will perform A Dark Poem in its entirety for the first and final time – including the as-of-yet unannounced Part III. Already, fans from 18 different countries have purchased tickets for this once-in-a-lifetime event.

Green Carnation 2026 Show Dates:

June 6 – Tampere, Finland @ Ankea Festival
June 14 – Kristiansand, Norway @ Odderøya
August 1 – Ungarn, Hungary @ Feke Zaj Festival
September 12 – Kristiansand, Norway @ Kilden Performing Arts Centre

*Deep Purple, Turbonegro + Slomosa
#Performing A Dark Poem, Part 1-III

A Dark Poem, Part II: Sanguis comes out April 3 on Season of Mist.

Pre-order:
https://orcd.co/greencarnationsanguis
Pre-save on Spotify
https://open.spotify.com/prerelease/7pUfKrzW4Q5vn0WAfPHCkS

Tracklist:
1. Sanguis (9:05)
2. Loneliness Untold, Loneliness Unfold (4:04)
3. Sweet to the Point of Bitter (5:58)
4. I Am Time (5:39)
5. Fire in Ice (7:03)
6. Lunar Tale (5:25)
Full runtime: 37:16

No matter how long or where the journey has taken them, GREEN CARNATIONhave never been afraid of a challenge. After reaching crushing new highs during the grand and gloomy opening chapter to their long-awaited album trilogy, the Norwegian prog bards are descending into deeper, darker and more personal depths with Part II of A Dark Poem.

“We wanted A Dark Poem to start off with guns blazing. Judging by the reaction, The Shores of Melancholia was successful in doing that”, the band’s vocalist Kjetil Nordhus says. “But for Part II, we have some very personal stories that we want people to hear. Sanguis invites listeners into our darkest inner rooms with some of the most raw and vulnerable songs that we’ve ever written”.

“The second part of A Dark Poem holds some of the most personal lyrics that I’ve ever written”, says Stein Roger Sordal, the band’s bassist and primary lyricist. “The lyrics are so personal that I had to go many rounds with myself over whether or not to tone them down. In the end, I chose to keep them as honest as possible. I mean, am getting older and I do have some life experience to back them up”.

Founded in the early ‘90s by Emperor’s original bassist Tchort, Green Carnation amassed a cult following behind critical acclaim for Light of Day, Day of Darkness, an album containing a single hour-long song that still resonates as one of the most ambitious epics in metal’s archives. Current members Bjørn Harstad (guitar), Stein Roger Sordal (bass) and Endre Kirkesola (keyboard, producer) along with Nordhus, were already in place by 2001. But whether it was the gothic crush of A Blessing in Disguise or pitch-black hard rock of The Quest Offspring, Green Carnation continued branching out through the mid-2000s. Even before going on hiatus in 2007, they still flashed a flare for the dramatic by performing their acoustic verses underneath a mountain dam.

However, there was one tale – or three, to be exact – that eluded them for more than three decades. The idea for an album trilogy penned after Shakespeare’s tragic Ophelia stems all the way back to their earliest reflections of life and death, but when the first part of A Dark Poemwas unfurled in 2025, right away, it was clear that Green Carnation had completed their masterpiece. The Shores of Melancholia washed onto year-end lists at Loudwire, Angry Metal Guy and other major publications.

If Green Carnation set sail from a familiar place of melancholy on The Shores of Melancholia, then Sanguis finds the band far out at sea, fighting to stay afloat against the storm that’s raging in their minds. Whereas Part I only scratched at the surface, the epic title track that opens Part II vows to forgive and forget old bloodied wounds. Over the course of nine minutes, cresting cleans and swells of organ from long-time producer and newest member Endre Kirkesola try and wash away the familial wreckage — only for a traumatic childhood memory to come flooding back during the song’s doomy coda.

“Father was boiling, mother was crying / The children left scared in their beds”. A fiery shiver of a riff slowly spirals downward, as if trapped inside a mental hell.

“It paints a pretty grim picture of my childhood”, Sordal says about “Sanguis”. “I do have great memories from that time, too, but parts were very dark. I had some tough issues with my father, but I now know that he had it worse. I didn’t think about that when I was younger, but as I’ve gotten older, I’ve learned that there is usually more to the story”.

“It took Stein Roger almost 50 years to understand why his father treated him the way he did”, Nordhus says about his dear bandmate. “He didn’t understand until he had kids of his own and was watching them grow up”.

The heaviness that launched Green Carnation during Part I of A Dark Poem has aged like a fine wine on Sanguis. “Sweet to the Point of Bitter” balances meaty riffs with a pleasing melody and underlying notes of resentment. “You will acknowledge I was broken / Before you came around”. With a guitar solo that winds like the winds of change, “I Am Time” demands immediate recognition. “In your mind, I’m tomorrow / For your sake, I should be today”.

But while “Fire In Ice” stokes the political flames viewed from The Shores of Melancholia with pounding windchills of double bass, Part II reveals Green Carnation at their most raw and vulnerable. As was the case for most of Part I, Sordal penned all the lyrics to Sanguis. However, in a rare appearance not seen since the burden was his alone, he steps to the mic on “Loneliness Untold, Loneliness Unfold”. With an arrangement that’s plucked like the petals of a wilted flower, the song now stands as one of the more barren and stirring in their discography. “Do you want to die?”  Sordal poses to a distant familiar of the band. His delicate delivery confirms his fear of already knowing the answer.

“These songs come as they are, with no filter”, Sordal says. “I needed to set these stories free and let them out”.

“Part II deal with personal loss and sadness”, shares Nordhus, though as he’s quick to explain, Sanguis isn’t all gloom and doom. “Those feelings can be almost comforting, like stories you hear about the calm that people experience before they die”. Indeed, if A Dark Poem contains a silver lining, it’s in the creative partnership that’s helped Green Carnation endure for more than three decades. “It would be different if I had only known Stein Roger for two months”, Nordhus continues in explaining how he gives voice to the words of his dear friend. “It’s easy for me to understand and relate to all of his struggles, all of his pleasures and joys, because I’ve been a part of them as well”.

Part II introduces more peaks and valleys into the overarching narrative of A Dark Poem, but nowhere does the album’s bleeding-heart core shine through more achingly than its closing ballad. Graced by Ingrid Ose’s soothing flute, “Lunar Tale” positively sparkles, even as it casts a rather grim beacon into the future. “The end justifies the means, you’ll see”, Nordhus sings with eerily quiet confidence. As the piano seeps beneath the moonlight, Sanguis leaves fans hanging in suspense over where this trilogy will end.

Recording Lineup:
Kjetil Nordhus — Vocals
Stein Roger Sordal — Bass, Rhythm Guitars, Lead Guitars, Keyboards, Lead Vocals on “Loneliness Untold, Loneliness Unfold”
Bjørn Harstad — Lead Guitars, Effects
Endre Kirkesola — Keyboards, Synthesizers, Organs, Effects, Backing Vocals on “Lunar Tale”
Jonathan Alejandro Perez — Drums

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15/03/2026/0 Comments/by Roel Verscheure
Tags: Ankea Festival 2026, green carnation, norway, Progressive Metal, Progressive Rock, season of mist
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