Image: Official album artwork of Take Me Back To Eden
On May 19, 2023, Sleep Token released their album Take Me Back To Eden. Today, the British collective’s third full-length record officially turns three years old. Three years in which a lot has happened for Sleep Token — and a huge part of that journey can be traced back to Take Me Back To Eden, the album that ultimately launched the band into international success.
To celebrate the album’s third birthday, you can get 20% off Sleep Token merch (excluding media items) for three days. So if you want to celebrate the anniversary properly, now’s the perfect time to grab your favorites — while supplies last.
Take Me Back To Eden was released following Sundowning (2019) and This Place Will Become Your Tomb (2021), serving as the final chapter of a trilogy. Thematically, the songs continue the narrative established on the previous records. The story revolves around the protagonist Vessel — who is also the masked band’s frontman — and the fictional deity Sleep. The two exist in a complicated relationship, with Vessel offering “Tokens” in the form of songs to please Sleep. Their dynamic — or perhaps conflict — is deeply toxic and continues to unfold throughout Take Me Back To Eden. Tracks like “Chokehold,” “Vore,” and “Aqua Regia” perfectly embody these themes.
Sleep Token: Between Toxic Relationships and the Courage to Change
The structure of the first three albums follows a recurring pattern. Each record consists of twelve tracks, with fans interpreting the first eleven songs as the core narrative while viewing the final track as a kind of epilogue. Take Me Back To Eden closes with “Euclid,” a song that revisits and summarizes the pain explored throughout the album.
Thematically, it centers around letting go of an incredibly painful experience or situation and symbolizes a form of rebirth (“The night belongs to you / This bough has broken through / I must be someone new”). In doing so, it doesn’t just conclude the album itself, but the entire trilogy.
Alongside the songs that explore the relationship between Sleep and Vessel, Take Me Back To Eden also offers deeper insight into Vessel’s inner world. Tracks like “DYWTYLM” (“Do You Wish That You Loved Me”) and “Are You Really Okay?” expose vulnerability, self-doubt, and emotional pain. At its core, the album tells the story of Vessel suffering under the weight of this toxic bond — and no matter how hard he tries to break free, the more he seems to fall apart. Yet despite the darkness, the songs also carry hope. Throughout the album, Vessel repeatedly attempts to move forward, and “Euclid” strongly suggests that, despite setbacks and pain, he eventually succeeds. The follow-up album Even In Arcadia (2025) reinforces exactly that shift, as it no longer focuses on the toxic relationship between Vessel and Sleep.
Music Pulling From Every Corner of the Genre Spectrum
Musically, the album conveys its emotions in an incredibly diverse way. Much like Sleep Token’s previous releases, Take Me Back To Eden doesn’t follow a single sonic blueprint. Instead, the often emotionally heavy lyrics are wrapped in a unique soundscape that blends countless genres together. Alongside Alternative Metal and Progressive Metal, the album incorporates influences from Funk, Blues, R&B, Pop, and Electronica. The result is a record that feels impossible to categorize — and that’s exactly what made it so successful. On Spotify, Take Me Back To Eden became the most-streamed metal album of 2023.
Commercially, it was also the band’s biggest success up to that point. The album charted in all major markets, reaching #3 in the UK, #5 in Germany, and #16 in the United States. Whether Sleep Token intentionally aimed to reach different audiences by blending genres is hard to say. More than anything, it has always felt like the band simply creates whatever feels right in the moment. Either way, the formula clearly worked — because Sleep Token’s music resonated far beyond traditional metal audiences.
A Tour That Changed Everything
A smart strategic move before the album’s release also played a major role in the band’s rise. In early 2023, before Take Me Back To Eden officially dropped, Sleep Token joined Architects on tour for their album For Those That Wish To Exist. Around the start of the tour, Sleep Token released the first two singles from the record, “Chokehold” and “The Summoning,” and completely won over audiences as the support act.
Anyone involved in the scene who hadn’t heard of Sleep Token before that tour almost certainly knew their name afterward. Shortly after the run ended, additional singles followed.
Within a single month, Sleep Token quadrupled their Spotify monthly listeners thanks to the rapid succession of singles and the Architects tour. At the beginning of January 2023, the band sat at around 300,000 monthly listeners — by the end of the month, they had climbed to nearly 1.6 million. Not bad at all.
The Lasting Impact
With the overwhelming success of Take Me Back To Eden, expectations for a follow-up record were naturally massive. Even In Arcadia took the band in a different thematic direction, but still managed to match — or even surpass — the success of TMBTE. Commercially, the fourth album achieved even stronger chart positions. Among fans, however, Take Me Back To Eden largely remains the favorite.
And honestly, that’s the beautiful thing about music: it never really expires.