It was a quick birth, too, with In Flames’ fifth album arriving only a year on from its predecessor. It’s unclear whether this picking up of speed benefitted Anders’ changing lyrical focus, but the flesh-and-blood man who had conjured the Clayman soon dispensed with fantastical imagery in favour of something more personal. As a creative left turn, this act of soul bearing was matched by an increased focus on melody and the inclusion of synths – ushering an era of experimentation that would gain momentum on subsequent releases. “With every album we felt the need to challenge our listeners and ourselves,” reflects Anders. “The three albums that came before Clayman were a trilogy, in a lyrical and musical sense, so we felt we had to take an extra leap for this one.”
Bullet Ride and Only For The Weak confirmed Clayman as the sizeable jump its authors had intended, with bold new sounds delivered with trademark precision, and becoming some of their biggest and most enduring tracks in the process. And while some fans of the heavier early days inevitably bemoaned this sonic sea change, Clayman successfully graduated In Flames to the world stage, while capturing the imaginations of a generation of metal bands, particularly American ones, eager to embellish their own darkness with inventive new shades. Not that Anders acknowledges this influence.
“We’ve never looked to other bands to find out if we’ve influenced them,” laughs the 47-year old, recalling the legacy of an album celebrated with a deluxe reissue of remastered and re-recorded material. “We made four albums before it and have made eight since then, but it feels like Clayman was an important central point for us,” reveals Anders, who now has a clothing line named after it. “I think the fact we’re celebrating it in this way now, and still playing many of its songs, says a lot about an album that’s 20 years old.”
Here, as we mark two decades of In Flames' centre point, Anders guides us through the record's creation and impact…