On July 5, former KAMELOT singer Roy Khan took the stage at Tokio Marine Hall in São Paulo, Brazil for a one-night-only performance celebrating the 20th anniversary of the band’s “The Black Halo” album.
Originally released in 2005, the LP remains a landmark in metal history, featuring iconic tracks like “March Of Mephisto”, “The Haunting (Somewhere In Time)” and “When The Lights Are Down”.
This rare event saw Khan breathing new life into some of these fan-favorite songs, delivering an unforgettable experience for his devoted Brazilian audience.
Backing Roy at the São Paulo show were members of the Brazilian progressive rock/heavy metal band MAESTRICK, consisting of Fabio Caldeira on vocals, piano and synthesizers, Renato Montanha on bass, Heitor Matos on drums and Guilherme Henrique on guitar. Also appearing on select tracks was American vocalist Adrienne Cowan of SEVEN SPIRES.
Roy‘s setlist was as follows:
01. When The Lights Are Down (KAMELOT)
02. Moonlight (KAMELOT)
03. Soul Society (KAMELOT)
04. The Haunting (Somewhere In Time) (KAMELOT)
05. Abandoned (KAMELOT)
06. Memento Mori (KAMELOT)
07. March Of Mephisto (KAMELOT)
Fan-filmed video of the show can be seen below.
In a recent interview with PowerOfMetal.cl, Roy was asked why now was the right time for him to celebrate “The Black Halo”. Roy said: “Well, it’s 20 years ago since it came out. And ‘The Black Halo’ is undoubtedly possibly the most important album in my catalog. So I just felt that it was in its place to do some sort of celebration in connection with the 20th anniversary. And that’s what we’re doing in São Paulo on the 5th of July.”
Asked what he thinks made “The Black Halo” such a “timeless” record, Roy said: “I think it was in a very important phase of the band’s development, both as a group and as the members individually. The time was right. There were some new collaborations there that took place. It was the first record we recorded with SPV, so we had a good budget and we could do whatever we wanted. We could try our stuff and tear things down in studio, build them up again. We had the finances to do things properly. And I think the lyrics hit some sort of nerve that I think a lot of people can relate to. But most of all, I think it’s a bunch of people that happened to align with each other and managed to make something that is really greater than the sum of them all. And ‘The Black Halo’ has definitely stood the test of time. I mean, the album is a classic in the genre.”
“The Black Halo (20th Anniversary Edition)” was recently made available in an array of special formats, including a limited-edition wooden box set featuring splattered vinyl, a collector’s chalice, a ring, a pendant in a velvet bag, a 20-page booklet, and an exclusive autographed card. Other variants include deluxe marbled vinyl, a slipmat and a digipak CD edition. This must-have collector’s edition was released via Napalm Records on March 14, 2025 — exactly two decades after its original debut.
Khan is also featured as a special guest on “Here Be Dragons”, the latest album from Tobias Sammet‘s AVANTASIA. His powerful vocals grace a grand and emotional power ballad, marking another exciting chapter in his return to the scene. Sammet himself praised Khan‘s contribution, calling the song “one of the most moving and emotional, yet biggest ballads I have ever done.”
In the summer of 2023, Roy said that a number of things contributed to his decision to leave KAMELOT nearly a decade and a half ago.
The now-55-year-old Norwegian singer announced his exit from KAMELOT in April 2011 after taking several months off to recover from a “burnout.”
After his departure from KAMELOT, Khan, who is a devout Christian, joined a church in the coastal town of Moss, Norway.
In an interview with Justin Young of Monsters, Madness And Magic, Roy — whose full name is Roy Sætre Khantatat — was asked what led to his split with KAMELOT. He responded: “Everything. Too much travel. Too much work. I had my first kids. I got married and I was pretty much falling into every pit there was. And this whole character that I was creating was very different from the person that I was and wanted to be at home. And those two characters pulled farther and farther from each other and that whole thing just tore me apart. I wasn’t really present when I was at home either. I’d come back from a six-week tour and just take my shoes off and sit right down on the PC and work on something, and it was not good. And I got mentally sick. That summer of 2010, I had a period of five, six weeks where I literally did not sleep. Maybe, I mean a little bit, of course, but there were so many nights that I did not sleep at all. I just wandered around the house and worrying about everything and nothing.”
Asked if he became religious after his exit from KAMELOT, Roy said: “Religious? Depends on what you mean by religious, how you define that. But I’ve always been occupied with big questions and also spiritual things. I mean, those kind of things have always fascinated me. But there were some really weird things that happened to me in connection with me being at my lowest low ever in 2010. I mean, obviously, I was really mentally ill at that point, but we experienced things. I mean, I experienced things that other people experienced together with me, and the timing of things were really awkward. Whatever that was, it definitely made me completely change my mind on the whole issue, is there something out there that we can’t see that affects us? I’m positive about that. And I still have to sit down and pinch myself in the arm and just remind myself that the things that happened happened. I mean, some of those things people surely will say are coincidence. Some will say that I just imagined it. Some people will say that — some people won’t even believe. But for me, it was very, very clear. And, there’s no doubt in my mind. That doesn’t mean that that completely changed my life. I mean, it did, but it’s not like I was a whole new being all of a sudden. I still have things that I struggle with. It’s not like you go from being an arrogant, sinful bastard to being an angel. It’s a process. But all those things, having those things in mind for me is definitely gradually changing me in my approach to other people, life in general and then how I look at the time that I have left on this planet.”
Three years ago, Roy told Chaoszine about his split with KAMELOT: “I’m really, really extremely thankful that KAMELOT was able to continue without me, ’cause I had no intention to hurt the band. It was a very personal decision to quit the band and I simply had to. And I’m just glad that everything turned out in the end to be… They managed to go on without me, and I’m just very thankful for that, really.”
Khan, who reformed his pre-KAMELOT band CONCEPTION seven years ago and released an EP, 2018’s “My Dark Symphony”, and a full-length album, 2020’s “State Of Deception”, previously reflected on the circumstances that led to him ending his long working relationship with KAMELOT during an appearance in 2021 on the “Breaking Absolutes With Peter Orullian” podcast. Roy said: “That whole thing was a cocktail of several things that just happened to climax at that point. As you all, KAMELOT was getting more and more popular, so I was away months every year — like half the year at least I was gone. I was having a family, and that right there was starting to tear me apart. And then I was living my life not very healthy — let’s put it that way — and I did a lot of stupid stuff back then that… I knew in my heart that it was going down the drain.”
He continued: “I remember every night when I sang [the KAMELOT song] ‘Karma’, I would feel that this shit is gonna knock me on the back of the head at some point. If it’s gonna tomorrow, [if] it’s gonna be two years from now, I don’t know, but the way I live my life, that’s not gonna work — it’s not sustainable. And then it happened. I knew for so many years, actually, that this was gonna not work out, and then, all of a sudden, it happened. I broke down. I had a full summer where I barely slept — like six to eight weeks where I didn’t sleep a whole lot of hours during those six to eight weeks, and I was going really completely crazy. And in connection with that, a lot of stuff happened.”
According to Khan, leaving KAMELOT after a 13-year run weighed heavily on him at the time.
“Quitting KAMELOT was the best decision that I’ve ever made, and by that I don’t mean that… KAMELOT was a fantastic thing in my life, and Thomas and the other guys — it had nothing to do with them; it was all me and the way I lived my life, and I just couldn’t take it any longer,” he explained. “And I was also overworked — I worked all the time. Even when I was home. The first thing I’d do when I got back home is I would kick my shoes off in the hallway and I’d just sit right down at the computer and start working. I was really not a good husband and I was not a good father. Lots of things weren’t good about me at that point.
“Quitting KAMELOT at that point, it was easy but it was hard,” he elaborated. “It was easy because I didn’t really have a choice. I was really wrecked. And at the same time, it was hard because I’d been working to get to that point my whole life, basically — 20 years, at least — and finally I was there. And then I threw the towel in and said, ‘Hey, guys, I’m not coming in for the next tour.’ ‘Okay. Well, what’s wrong?’ ‘Well, actually, I’m not coming back at all.’ And obviously, everybody… My mom was, like, ‘Are you kidding me? Are you serious?’ Then the guys in the band, they thought that it was gonna pass. But I knew in my heart that summer [of 2010], already in August, I knew that that’s it.”
KAMELOT officially announced Tommy Karevik as its new lead singer in June 2012. The Florida-based band has recorded four albums so far with the Swedish vocalist: 2012’s “Silverthorn”, 2015’s “Haven”, 2018’s “The Shadow Theory” and 2023’s “The Awakening”.
Asked if he has listened to any of KAMELOT‘s recent material with Karevik, Roy told Italy’s SpazioRock back in 2018: “Yes I have. I really like some of their new stuff. Sounds classical KAMELOT in my ears, and Tommy is a great singer.”
Roy Khan se apresenta como “Co-Headliner” em show solo especial no Tokio Marine Hall, em São Paulo, no dia 5 de julho de…
Posted by Tramamos on Saturday, March 15, 2025