Enslaved Unveil Two New Sea Shanties “Fire Marengo” & “Anna Lovinda”

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Norwegian metal band Enslaved have shared two new tracks today – recordings of sea shanties. Made in collaboration with the Storm Weather Shanty Choir in Bergen, Norway, “Fire Marengo” is a traditional shanty, meanwhile “Anna Lovinda” was written by late sailor and Norwegian cultural figure Erik Bye. A video was produced for the former track, which can be found on Enslaved and Nuclear Blast Records’ YouTube channels.

The video features lyrics for the track, accompanying the vocals and industrial mental instrumentation that color this new take on the shanty. The video – appropriately – features imagery of the open sea and of pirate ships plucked right from the era of these shanties. Enslaved had much to say in regards to the process leading to these new recordings. They stated, “Enslaved was formed on the western edge of Norway, where mountains fall into the sea and history is carried by wind and tide. Bergen is not simply a coastal city; it is a threshold — between land and ocean, between myth and lived experience. The sea is not scenery here. It is memory, labour, departure and return. Among the most powerful living symbols of this heritage is Statsraad Lehmkuhl, the great Bergen tall ship that still sails the world’s oceans. Around this vessel lives and breathes the shanty tradition — songs born of rhythm, rope, salt, and collective effort. From this environment emerged Storm Weather Shanty Choir.”

“Our connection to the ship began in 2014,” they continued, “when the Tall Ships Races concluded in Bergen. We were invited to compose and perform a commissioned piece on the deck of Statsraad Lehmkuhl. Metal echoed across the harbour that evening — a meeting of ancient wind-powered technology and modern amplified ritual. It felt less like contrast and more like continuity. Since then, a friendship has grown — particularly with Haakon Vatle, director of the ship’s foundation and one of Norway’s most devoted custodians of the shanty tradition. He often remarks that sailors were the first metalheads — people who faced elemental forces daily and answered them with song. There is truth in that. Shanties were not entertainment; they were functional incantations — rhythm as survival.”

Finally, the band mentions their first performances of the track. “In November 2025, during the choir’s 20th anniversary concert in Bergen,” they said, “we joined forces on the traditional “Fire Marengo” and the Norwegian shanty “Anna Lovinda,” written by the late sailor and cultural figure Erik Bye. The collaboration felt less like fusion and more like recognition — two expressions of the same coastal inheritance meeting at the centre. After the performance, it was clear that this convergence should not remain ephemeral. We met again in early 2026 to record the material — not as novelty, but as continuation. Because at the centre — at mið — we find not isolation, but shared origin. Wind, rhythm, voice. The same pulse that once moved sails now moves amplifiers. The same call-and-response that coordinated labour now shapes modern ritual.”

“The sea remembers. And so do we.”

Steven Taylor: Hello, I'm Steven! I'm a graduate of Seton Hall University. I majored in journalism, with a minor in Public Relations. I've always had a passion for the arts and creative fields. Writing especially is an area I've always found myself gravitating towards, between assignments in class, working for the school newspaper or just writing in my spare time. I love providing and hearing new perspectives. In addition to my studies and work in writing, I work part-time at after-school and summer programs for my local elementary school. I've been a part of these programs since I was in high school, and I've even been assigned to work one-to-one with children with special needs. I like to think that if I'm able to communicate well with children in the 2nd grade, then I can communicate well with most adults too!
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