NIGHTWISH in writing mode for tenth album
03-03-2022
NIGHTWISH has commenced the songwriting process for its tenth studio album.
Yesterday (Wednesday, March 2), the Finnish/British/Dutch symphonic metallers shared a photo of NIGHTWISH keyboardist and main songwriter Tuomas Holopainen in the studio, along with the following caption: “Demo session for #n10Demo session for #n10”.
Demo session for #n10 👀 pic.twitter.com/zOctfAvXV1
— Nightwish (@NightwishBand) March 2, 2022
NIGHTWISH‘s latest album, “Human. :II: Nature.”, was released in April 2020. The follow-up to 2015’s “Endless Forms Most Beautiful”, “Human. :II: Nature.” was a double album containing nine tracks on the main CD and one long track, divided into eight chapters, on CD 2.
NIGHTWISH will embark on the North American leg of the “Human. :II: Nature.” world tour this spring. The 10-date trek will kick off on May 6 in Montreal with stops in New York, Chicago, and Denver before concluding in Los Angeles for two back-to-back shows at The Wiltern on May 20 and May 21.
Last July, NIGHTWISH played a special “secret” concert in Oulu, Finland as a warm-up for its festival appearances in Finland. The gig marked NIGHTWISH‘s first fan-attended show in more than two a half years. It was also NIGHTWISH‘s first proper concert with session bassist Jukka Koskinen‘s (WINTERSUN), who stepped into the group as the replacement for longtime NIGHTWISH bassist/vocalist Marko “Marco” Hietala. Hietala announced his departure from the band in January 2021, explaining in a statement that he hadn’t “been able to feel validated by this life for a quite a few years now.”
Koskinen made his live debut with NIGHTWISH at the band’s two interactive experiences in May 2021. The shows reportedly drew 150,000 viewers, setting the record for the largest paid virtual concert in Finland’s history. Most of the viewers came from Europe and North America, but the performance was a truly global event, with fans in 108 countries purchasing tickets to the show and the box office gross exceeding one million euro.
Last spring, Holopainen said that Hietala‘s decision to leave the band “came as a bit of a surprise.” He told Finland’s Kaaos TV: “Marko informed us in December of 2020 that he was leaving the band. And even though he has been very open about his state and problems during the past years, it still came as a bit of a surprise for us. So it was a really tough pill to swallow. And for a few days, I was actually quite confident that there’s no coming back, that this is it. I remember talking to Emppu (Vuorinen), the guitar player, and we were, like, ‘You think this is it?’ ‘Yeah, I think this is it.’ I mean, enough is enough. So much has happened in the past. Something that broke the camel’s back, as they say. Then, after some time had passed — a few days — we started to think that it’s been such a ride of 25 years, with so many ups also, that this is not the way to end it.”
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