Roy Khan

Roy Khan
Roy Khan during a concert in 2007.
Background information
Birth name Roy Sætre Khantatat
Born (1970-03-12) 12 March 1970
Origin Elverum, Hedmark, Norway
Genres Symphonic metal, power metal, progressive metal
Instruments Vocals, piano, keyboards, guitar, bass guitar
Years active 1991–2011, 2018–present
Associated acts Conception, Kamelot, Epica, Avantasia

Roy Sætre Khantatat (Thai: รอย ขันธทัต; born March 12, 1970), commonly known as Roy Khan, is a Norwegian singer-songwriter. He is the lead singer for the Norwegian progressive metal band Conception, and was the lead vocalist for the symphonic power metal band Kamelot from 1997 until his departure in 2011. He co-wrote most of Kamelot's songs with the band's guitarist and founder Thomas Youngblood during his tenure. Khan had retired from music in 2011 until 2018, when he released a new solo song on YouTube and announced the return of Conception.

Early life

Khan was born March 12, 1970 to a Norwegian mother and Thai father, and took both of their last names. Khans maternal grandfather, Kåre Sætre, was a major influence on his musical aspirations, something Khan would state in several interviews. Sætre would later appear alongside his grandson on stage several times. Khan began singing at a young age, and at the age of 17, while in the shower at school, Khan was caught singing "Alone" by Heart by a fellow student and was offered to join his band. After graduating from high school, Khan studied opera for three years.[1]

During his school years, he shortened "Khantatat" to "Khan" as he found it easier, and frequently used it as a nickname. He is also credited as "Khan" on most early albums.

Career

Conception

After finishing his opera studies, Khan joined the Norwegian progressive metal band Conception, after its previous lead singer quit in 1991. He was selected after several potential singers auditioned. The band released several albums over the coming years before disbanding in 1998, a year after Khan left the band to pursue a career with Kamelot.

In 2005, Khan reunited with Conception and played at the 2005 ProgPower USA VI festival[2] on Friday 16 September and Norwegian Scream Magazine's 15 Years & 100 Issues Festival on Saturday, October 1. Khan, guitarist Tore Østby (also known from the band ARK) and the rest of Conception reunited; at the time it was clarified Khan would continue to support Kamelot.

On April 30, 2018, it was announced that Roy Khan and the other members of Conception had reunited.[3]

Kamelot

In 1997, Khan was invited to join Kamelot by guitarist and founder Thomas Youngblood, after the band's previous vocalist was fired. Khan performed lead vocals on the subsequent releases "Siége Perilous" (1998), "The Fourth Legacy" (1999), "Karma" (2001), "Epica" (2003), "The Black Halo" (2005), "Ghost Opera" (2007), and "Poetry for the Poisoned" (2010). During his tenure, Khan also co-wrote most of the songs alongside Youngblood, most notably on "Poetry for the Poisoned".

Retirement and return

In September 2010, it was announced that Khan would not be joining the first leg of the upcoming tour in support of "Poetry for the Poisoned" due to illness, with the band initially planning to use a replacement vocalist,[4] before later deciding to postpone the North American tour entirely while he recovered.[5]

After much speculation among fans and media that Khan was seriously ill or had left the band, Khan himself announced his departure from the band in his blog on April 21, 2011, with the band making the formal announcement the day after. In the announcement, Youngblood wrote that Khan had been given a lot of time to make the decision and the band respected it.[6] The tour eventually went on with Rhapsody of Fire vocalist Fabio Lione, while his permanent replacement, Tommy Karevik, joined Kamelot the following year.[7][8]

In a 2014 interview with local Norwegian media, Khan revealed that he had burned out after overworking himself for years, and that he decided to quit the band before the tour in 2010 to prioritize his health and family, but in an agreement with Youngblood and the rest of the band, they would not announce his departure in case he recovered and changed his mind.[9]

After his departure, Khan joined the Moss Frikirke local church in Moss, Norway. In 2013, photos of Khan performing psalms at his local church were posted online by a fan page, along with audio recordings of him performing "You Raise Me Up". These were later removed on Khan's request, as he didn't want the attention. In a short statement to the fan page, he confirmed that he still enjoyed metal music, and denied rumours of an upcoming gospel CD, saying he would not be returning to music "any time soon". He worked at the church as a counselor and youth minister until September 2016.[10]

On April 1, 2018, Roy Khan released a song on YouTube called "For All", leading many fans to speculate in an upcoming return to music.[11] The speculations were proven true a few weeks later, when Conception announced their reunion with Khan returning as lead singer.[12]

Discography

Solo

Single
  • For All (2018)

With Conception

Albums
EPs
  • TBA (2018)
Singles
  • Roll the Fire (1994)
  • Guilt/Sundance (1995)

With Kamelot

Albums
Live albums
Live DVDs

Guest appearances

References

  1. http://www.myspace.com/kamelot_germany/blog/533693537
  2. , ProgPower USA Lineup History
  3. "Former KAMELOT Singer ROY KHAN Is Back With Reunited CONCEPTION; New EP Due This Fall". Blabbermouth. April 30, 2018. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  4. <http://www.kamelot.com/site/kamelot-singer-falls-ill-north-american-tour-to-go-on/>
  5. http://www.kamelot.com/site/kamelot-postpone-full-north-american-tour/
  6. http://www.myspace.com/roykhanofficial/blog/542719606
  7. http://www.kamelot.com/site/us-shows-announced-singer-update/
  8. http://www.kamelot.com/site/news/kamelot-statement/
  9. Østlendingen, 19.04.2014
  10. "What Happened To Roy Khan After Leaving The Band". Metal Bell. September 8, 2014.
  11. "Former KAMELOT Singer ROY KHAN Releases First-Ever Solo Song, 'For All'". Blabbermouth. April 2, 2018. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  12. Official Facebook announcement
  13. http://www.freecovers.net/view/6/63b78df7aca7ef9bf669d4a88080feb8/Victory_-_Voiceprint_%281994%29-inside.html


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