17.10.2025 - Fucales

Mari Singstad - bass and vocals

Leon Torskangerpoll - guitars and vocals

Simon Stenersen - trumpet, synthesizer, FX, and vocals

Mikkel Baltasar Eilertsen Nordtveit - drums, percussion, and vocals


fucales debued with their first full-length album "AIRHEAD" in 2025, after releasing three critically acclaimed EPs since 2020. Over the last few years, fucales has toured the Nordic countries, Germany, and Estonia, honing their skills to become a solid live band. Packed concerts at festivals like Klubbøya and the Borealis Festival for Experimental Music demonstrate Fucales' exploratory nature and their ability to draw the audience into their playful world.


The band is also no stranger to creating music for silent films, having already delivered a legendary concert performance for The Passion of Joan of Arc at BFK in 2022.


Selected Press:

“One of the city's most distinctive bands.” ♡♡♡♡♡ — Bergens Tidende

“An absolutely furious, jaw-droppingly unique new act coming out of Norway.” — Impose Magazine

"...Fucales have a knack of being able to pinpoint when to elevate each genre and ultimately execute it with style." 7/10 — Clash Magazine

“Fucales flex jazz muscles between shoegaze and noise rock.” ♡♡♡♡♡ — Klassekampen


Nosferatu:

"Nosferatu - A Symphony of Horror" is an iconic silent film from 1922, considered to be one of the most influential films for the horror genre ever. It is also an example of German Expressionist cinema. It was directed by Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau from a screenplay by Henrik Galeen who adapted it from Bram Stoker’s Dracula Novel.

Nosferatu was not an authorised adaptation of Dracula, and although Galeen changed some details and most names to German, Stoker’s widow sued the film makers over copyright violation, and a court ruling ordered all copies of the film to be destroyed. However, several prints of Nosferatu survived, and the film has come to be a venerated as a classic.


TIME:

By Bergen-based artist Filip Glezgo.

"TIME" is said to represent the creation and formation of the universe. How particles slowly begin to move, split, burn, and clump together in one place, where they create new space. New possible worlds. Or maybe not. I don't really care. It's just a blinking headlamp and play in an aquarium in a dark basement. Incredibly fun and frustrating to make."

—Heavily inspired by Oppenheimer (2023).