Vapen & ammunition

Vapen & Ammunition
Studio album by
Released15 April 2002
RecordedJuly 2001 – February 2002
Studio
  • Medley Studio (Copenhagen)
  • DHS Studio (Stockholm)
GenreAlternative rock
Length45:46
LabelRCA, BMG
ProducerKent, Zed, Martin von Schmalensee
Kent chronology
B-Sidor 95-00
(2000)
Vapen & Ammunition
(2002)
Du & jag döden
(2005)
Singles from Vapen & ammunition
  1. "Dom andra"
    Released: 18 March 2002
  2. "Kärleken väntar"
    Released: 8 July 2002
  3. "FF / VinterNoll2"
    Released: 4 November 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Aftonbladet
Dagbladet
Dagens Skiva6/10
Expressen
VG

Vapen & ammunition (Swedish for Weapons & Ammunition) is the fifth studio album by Swedish alternative rock band Kent. It was released on 15 April 2002 through RCA Records and BMG. Absent from this album is a long, mostly-instrumental song, rounding the album off, as had been a characteristic of the band ever since their second record Verkligen. The white tiger on the cover is a tribute to the band's hometown Eskilstuna: the zoo in town had white tigers as its main attraction.

Vapen & ammunition was voted Best Album of 2002 on the Grammis awards, the Swedish equivalent to the Grammy. It is the best-selling album by Kent.

In an interview in January 2003, Berg spoke about the great success of Vapen & ammunition: "What exists is a self-confidence underpinned by many years of work, a certainty that we know the art, know the craft, we can redo it and more than that, we can do it better. But that in itself is no guarantee that the commercial success can be surpassed. What happened to us may never happen again. Regardless of whether we make the best album in world history next time. It's not really about that. It's more about timing, releasing the right kind of album at the right kind of time. Last year I kind of had to shake myself up and think: Enjoy! This is maybe once in a lifetime. Maybe this will be the best year of my life. It gives strange perspectives. At the same time, it is a depressing thought."