At no point over the last 25 years has Green Carnation ever shied away from a challenge. Whether completing one of the most ambitious individual epics in metal’s historic archives or performing their acoustic verses under a mountain dam, the prog bards have always flashed a flare for the dramatic. However, from the very beginning, there was one tale – or three, to be exact – that eluded the Norwegians. That is, until now.
Having reached crushing new peaks and delved into their deepest, darkest, and most personal depths during the first two parts of A Dark Poem, today, Green Carnation are bringing their critically-acclaimed album trilogy to a bold conclusion. With the announcement of A Dark Poem, Part III: The Messiah Complex, the band is putting the finishing touches on another masterpiece that stands as one of the defining statements in their storied career.
“A Dark Poem is by far our biggest achievement since Light of Day, Day of Darkness”, Green Carnation vocalist Kjetil Nordhus says: “Our new album trilogy returns to the epic storytelling that put us on the map back in 2001. While the reception to Part I and Part II has been overwhelmingly positive for us, we do believe that Part III saves the best for last. The Messiah Complex ties the whole story together with our most uncompromising statement to date”.
“The intention behind A Dark Poem was to build a completely new musical universe”, Green Carnation bassist and primary lyricist Stein Roger Sordal says. “While the direction revealed itself as the creative journey unfolded, The Messiah Complex was carefully planned with a clear vision for where we wanted the story to end. Our goal was for all three parts to stand on their own, but Part III brings them all together into a unified whole”.
A Dark Poem, Part III: The Messiah Complex comes out September 4, 2026, on Season of Mist, in the available formats:
- CD Digipack
- 12” Vinyl Gatefold (Black)
- 12” Vinyl Deluxe Gatefold (Silver and green marbled)
- 12” Vinyl Deluxe Gatefold (Transparent red and black marbled)
- 12” Vinyl Deluxe Gatefold (White with black splatters)
- 12” Vinyl Deluxe Gatefold (Turquoise and black marbled)
- 12” Vinyl Deluxe Gatefold (Transparent orange and black marbled)
- Limited-edition A Dark Poem, Part I-III Colored LP Box Set (includes demos and outtakes)
Part I and Part II of A Dark Poem left fans and critics more than satisfied, but Part III arrives as the trilogy’s missing key. On The Shores of Melancholia, Green Carnation unfurled their ode to Arthur Rimbaud’s Ophelia amidst grand and gloomy peaks of crushing heaviness, while Sanguis took a deeply personal turn with the most raw and aching ballads that the band has ever penned. The Messiah Complex ties the whole story together with masterful strokes of prog.
“The first two parts of the trilogy can stand on their own”, Nordhus says, “but in order to truly understand A Dark Poem, you have to hear Part III”.
All the complexities of A Dark Poem won’t be revealed until the 16-minute orchestral suite that closes The Messiah Complex finally sees the light of day. But if the opening of Part III is any indicator, the ending won’t be happy. Lead single “Unconditional Artificial Chemistry” is powered by doomy riffs and a heavy groove. Just don’t get too lost in its pitch-perfect chorus.
“With every byte and code I will comply”, Nordhus sings without missing a beat, though his cold hard stare into the video camera betrays a fatal flaw in the system. “But given time I won’t ask why”.
While inspired by a Shakespearean tragedy, A Dark Poem addresses the rapidly failing relationship between our inner lives and the outside world. “We’ve lost faith in the world we once knew and that’s leading to a personal feeling of dystopia”, Nordhus says. The collective anxiety over encroaching technology, power-hungry leaders and social division that stirred below the surface of Parts I and II surges to a raging head on The Messiah Complex. In the video for “Unconditional Artificial Chemistry”, director Rikard Amodei uses artificial intelligence not as a cheat code but as a glitch that exposes its potential to destroy us.
“The video for ‘Unconditional Artificial Chemistry’ tells a meta story about the danger of artificial intelligence”, Nordhus says. “We all know, if we are being honest with ourselves, that A.I. is going to take control of our lives. There are powerful people who stand to profit from it and that makes its takeover inevitable.
“The video shows this happening before our eyes” Nordhus continues. As soon as the A.I. takes control, our likeness is corrupted. Before the song is even finished, we’re completely destroyed”.
The video for “Unconditional Artificial Chemistry” was directed and edited by Rikard Amodei.
Catch Green Carnation during their upcoming hometown shows and European summer festival dates.
During their headlining show in September at the Kilden Performing Arts Centre, the band will perform A Dark Poem in its entirety for the first and final time. Already, fans from 18 different countries have purchased tickets for this once-in-a-lifetime event.
