Tomas Lindberg, the lead singer of the Swedish death metal band At the Gates, died “this morning following complications related to his ongoing cancer treatment,” his bandmates wrote on social media. “You were an inspiration to us all,” they added. “A true friend, both compassionate and sympathetic. You will always be remembered for your generosity and your creative spirit.” Lindberg was 52 years old.
Born in Gothenburg, Sweden, Lindberg came up in the city’s metal scene, trading tapes with fellow teenagers and designing the logo for Norwegian band Darkthrone. He adopted the pseudonym Goatspell upon joining his first band, Grotesque, who helped spearhead Gothenberg’s emerging death metal scene in the late 1980s. He co-founded At the Gates in 1990, and the band’s 1992 debut, The Red in the Sky Is Ours, became a death metal landmark, twisting wiry melodies into the genre’s backbone of piston riffs and bludgeoning rhythms.
In 1995, the band’s fourth album in as many years, Slaughter of the Soul, elevated At the Gates’ status both at home—alongside Stockholm compatriots like Entombed and Dismember—and internationally, where fans were drawn in by Lindberg’s surrealist, scream-along lyrics and the band’s labyrinthine songwriting. Adulation and influence ensued, but At the Gates’ whirlwind first phase was coming to an end. The band parted ways in 1996, primarily citing burnout, and Lindberg side-quested with an array of extreme-music voyagers including Lock Up, Disfear, Skitsystem, and the Great Deceiver.
At the Gates reunited for a tour in 2007 and embarked upon a second era as a studio band in 2014. They have since released three albums: At War With Reality, To Drink From the Night Itself, and The Nightmare of Being. Lindberg remained a friendly presence in the heavy-music world and taught social studies in a Gothenberg middle school during respites from touring.
Last month, At the Gates and Lindberg told fans that the singer was diagnosed, in December 2023, with adenoid cystic carcinoma, a rare cancer that was detected in his mouth. Lindberg said he underwent surgery to remove “a big part of the roof of the mouth” and also had two months of radiation therapy, but remains of the cancer were found early this year. A day before going in for surgery, he recorded all the vocals for a new At the Gates album, the statement noted.