Tomas Lindberg, lead singer of influential Swedish metal favorites At the Gates, has died after a battle with cancer. He was 52.
At the Gates confirmed Lindberg’s death on social media Tuesday, Sept. 16, writing: “Tomas passed away this morning following complications related to his ongoing cancer treatment. Despite intensive medical efforts, his life could not be saved.”
The band continued: “Tomas — You were an inspiration to us all. A true friend, both compassionate & sympathetic. You will always be remembered for your generosity and your creative spirit. You will be eternally missed. Forever in our hearts.”
With his singular, deafening howl, Lindberg helped put At the Gates at the forefront of Gothenburg, Sweden’s melodic death metal revolution. The group formed in 1990 and quickly established themselves as an underground favorite, especially upon the release of their 1992 debut, The Red in the Sky Is Ours.
At the Gates worked at a swift clip, releasing three more albums over the next three years. Their 1994 effort, Terminal Spirit Disease, helped raise their profile beyond Sweden, while 1995’s Slaughter of the Soul was labeled their masterwork. (The LP landed at Number 79 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 Greatest Metal Albums.)
Recalling the band’s aims when they went into record Slaughter of the Soul, Lindberg told Revolver in 2018, “We set out to make an album as good as Bonded by Blood from Exodus or Slayer’s Reign in Blood. We never expected to get even close, but thought that if this was our aim, then we might get about halfway. There were loads of death-metal bands around at the same time, but they were all happy to make mediocre records. We never saw this as an option. At the Gates wanted to test ourselves up against the giants.”
Despite the success of Slaughter of the Soul, At the Gates broke up just one year after its release. Lindberg spent the next decade playing in an array of different projects, such as the grindcore supergroup Lock Up, as well as more hardcore and punk-influenced outfits, the Great Deceiver, Disfear, and Skitsystem.
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In 2008, At the Gates embarked on a reunion tour, and in 2014, they dropped a new album, At War With Reality. While founding guitarist Anders Björler left the group after that LP, At the Gates continued to tour and perform, releasing two more LPs, To Drink From the Night Itself in 2018 and The Nightmare of Being, in 2021. (Björler eventually returned to the band in 2022.)
Lindberg was diagnosed with adenoid cystic carcinoma — a cancer that affects the mouth and palate — in 2023, but only revealed his diagnosis publicly in August. He said that he had undergone major surgery that “took away a big part of the roof of the mouth,” which was followed by radiation therapy. However, at the start of 2025, more cancer was found and Lindberg said it was “inaccessible by surgery or radiation.”
At the time, Lindberg also revealed that the day before he underwent that surgery, he spent one day in the studio and recorded all of his vocals for At the Gates’ new album “just to make sure we HAD the album, so to speak.” He added: “So the vocals were actually recorded BEFORE the rest of the album…. a bit different, but it felt good to have it done.”
Lindberg concluded by saying that At the Gates had “decided not to wait any longer to release this new album,” though the band has yet to share any follow-up details about the LP.
“It is an album that we all are very proud of, and it’s the first time in 10 years that [bassist] Jonas [Björler] and I have worked together with [guitarist] Anders [Björler] writing an album’s worth of music,” Lindberg said. “It is a bit more of a return to the ‘roots,’ probably best described as a mix between the two last albums we did with Anders (Slaughter of the Soul and At War with Reality). Hope you all will enjoy it!”
From Rolling Stone US