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Dark Clouds In A Perfect Sky

SKU: NPR151L
Label:
Napalm Records
Category:
Metal/Hard Rock
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Third album from this excllent female fronted gothic metal band from Lichtenstein. Everything about this feels better than their previous albums....better production and better song writing. Lots of nice crunch. Produced by Alex Krull (Atrocity).

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  • Limited edition 2 CD version includes an acoustic bonus disc."EPICA is a widely known and regarded Symphonic Metal band from The Netherlands. Formed in 2003, the band had previously released seven full-length albums. “The Holographic Principle” is the band’s eighth, and contains twelve tracks. “Eidola” is the tone-setting lead-in song. The symphony is tentative and mysterious, especially from the fat whole notes that establish the baseline. Some chanted vocals make it sound like something out of a heretic’s church, and the percussion really shines here. “Edge of the Blade” roars in direct and quickly. Simone’s clean vocals are all over the place…soft and delicate at times, harmonic during other times and far reaching as well. I find myself gravitating towards the vocals over the music in this track. “A Phantasmic Parade” is about the same length, but the harmonized vocal progressions remind me of Eastern influences, and the supporting instrumentation would agree. The bridge section really gathers steam, from the thundering double bass in particular. I love the vocal peaks in the chorus as well.“Universal Death Squad” sound about like what you would expect. It’s ominous and heavy at times, like an army of the undead marching in perfect unison. Other times the melody comes through more, temporarily distracting you from what looms out there. Harsh vocals accentuate the point. “Beyond the Matrix” has some really nice piano work that plays in unison with the clean vocals. Once again I pick up on some Eastern influences with that brief guitar fill before the chorus. Following a sweet bridge is a darker passage with more pronounced heavy guitars and harsh vocals, and a truly outstanding lead guitar solo. As is often the case with the softer songs on EPICA’s albums “Once upon a Nightmare” does not disappoint. It allows Simone’s voice to really soar and the band’s sense of grand melody to take center stage. “Ascension – Dream State Armageddon” combines comely vocals with heard and heavy riffs. The harsh vocals rattle in pretty strong here as well. The Symphonic elements are in the forefront of the song, as good as any seasoned orchestra. “Dancing in a Hurricane” is an interesting song title. The opening part of the song does indeed sound like you are watching a street dancer, clothed in a “bedlah” and hypnotizing you with her moves. About half-way in, the hurricane arrives, with prominent low brass, staccato strings and Death vocals.The closing song is the title track, an eleven minute orchestral piece that expands upon their depth of knowledge of various instruments, and how to connect them into a cohesive piece. The song has a core sound, but man do they find ways for it to stretch out. This is a very difficult accomplishment. It’s the kind of song that really sets this band apart in this genre and puts some distance on their peers. I could literally write a few pages on just this song, and all the nuances, complexities and various techniques that the band uses to tell this tale, but I will spare you the overblown verbosity. Overall, the album is excellent. It is quintessential EPICA in every sense, and might be the best album they have released to date. There aren’t a ton of surprises in the sense that it sounds about what you would expect, but that is a good thing because what this band does well is really unmatched out there." - Metal Temple
    $16.00
  • With the demise of After Forever, Epica has taken the throne as the kings (queens?) of beauty and the beast metal.
    $14.00
  • "All music has themes but metal is a genre which wears its heart on its sleeve. Thematics color everything in metal, from audience reception and marketing to the actual composition and execution of the music itself. It can affect production, tone, scales, and much more in an effort to align everything with a perceived image or to jar that image by deviating from the norm in just the right way. Take goth metal; a sub-section of doom, it relies on the theme of autumn, death, depression and nature for its impact. We haven’t even mentioned bands yet and album art, track names and that certain goth sound has already sprung into your mind. Sometimes, these themes become even more powerful and, by some twist of fate or by a pecuilar predestination, reflect in the musicians themselves: they might reflect the ideals of the music in their actions or in the facts of their lives.And sometimes, that reflection has a bitter edge. Aleah Starbridge is such an unfortunate mirror; the vocalist has been an influential part of the goth/doom scene for ages, flitting around the edges of projects like Katatonia, Swallow the Sun and her own solo works and collaboration project as Trees of Eternity. Tragically, she passed away in April, leaving an unfinished album and a host of themes now all too painful to contemplate. An immensely talented vocalist, her words now echo on the last piece of work to ever bear her name, Hour of the Nightingale, and they transform the album into something more. The themes of death, loss and darkness ring all that more true around her singing and the accompanying instruments. It’s almost as if her own story amplifies that of the album.The story’s makeup should be familiar to fans of the sub-genre. After all, Trees of Eternity are a super-group made up of members that basically birthed the scene: Juha Raivio (Swallow The Sun) play guitar, given her a backing role that’s among the staples of the sub-genre. It works in the background of Aleah’s vocals, punctuating the melodies with its own slow, mounrful progressions. On these duties he is joined by Fredrik Norrman (ex-Katatonia, October Tide), as leads and chords are exchanged behind the vocals. “Condemned to Silence” (which also features Mick Moss of Antimatter) is a good example of these dynamics. The guitars are split into two parts, as is traditional, which then pick up on different parts and notes in the dual vocal lines which make the track work.The other motivating force behind the projects are the drums, populated by none other than Kai Hahto (Nightwish, Wintersun), a truly legendary name within the metal community. His work here is more restrained than what he usually does on the two projects mentioned above, naturally fitting himself to the more fragile and ethereal compositions which make up Trees of Eternity. So too Mattias Norrman (ex-Katatonia, October Tide), the last facet of the project, whose bass work mostly enriches and envelops the rest of the music. Together with the drums, his work gives the project its shell. Such is the case on “A Million Tears” for example, as he works in tandem with Hahto to give an outer casing to the slow and thoughtful track. Here, as is true throughout the rest of the album, Aleah takes the forefront, handling most of the weight behind the track. When her voice goes soft on the outro, the song becomes its namesake, drawing forth an intense and painful sorrow.When we say this is true for the rest of the album, we mean it. Her voice, divorced from the heartbreaking circumstances of her life as it is, completely dominates this release. She was a capable and expressive vocalist, possessed of a rich and full voice. On this release it is used as the anchor around which the other instruments spin, a maelstrom of emotion that works together to enhance the overall experience. Musically, the album won’t knock you off your feet; it utilizes all the basic tools of goth metal and doubles down on their message and themes. However, especially when coupled with the circumstances surrounding it, Hour of the Nightingale has an undeniable power which perhaps stems from that very same simplicity. It’s all about sinking deeper into the autumnal mindset, drifting further into a melancholic, faintly sylvan state. For that journey, there is no psychopomp more fitting than Aleah Starbridge. Rest in peace." - Heavy Blog Is Heavy
    $14.00
  • "Following the departure of vocalist Lisa Johannson in 2011, fans of Sweden’s pillar gothic/doom metal act Draconian were left wondering about the future of the outfit. Enter Heike Langhans, formerly of The Great Sleep, to take the helm. The band’s newest, Sovran, surprisingly, sounds like nothing ever slowed them down. It’s an album that, while business as usual for the sextet, demonstrates that a major lineup change has done the band some favors in the way of memorability and songwriting.It’s basically a given that Draconian’s first two albums — 2003’s Where Lovers Mourn and 2005’s Arcane Rain Fell — are some of the most important goth/doom albums to be released in the past two decades. The band was never the type to rest on its laurels, but 2008’s Turning Season Within was too polished for its own good, and 2011’s A Rose for the Apocalypse, while offering more in the way of symphonic doom/death, left me cold.Sovran, by comparison, sounds rejuvenated, with the band finding a finally harmonious balance of the theatrical, morose, and menacing. Newcomer Heike Langhan’s vocals are less operatic than Johannson’s but are a better fit for the band’s current direction, with “Dishearten” providing one of the best examples of her range, both vocally and emotionally. Far more than just a pretty voice, Langhan’s voice adds feelings of yearning and pain where Anders Jacobsson’s growls fall short. Jacobsson, while not the most dynamic growler, is convincing enough in his delivery and prevents Sovran from turning into a weepy, saccharine mess as many goth/doom albums are apt to; the ugly, eerie doom riffs of opener “Heavy Lies the Crown” work wonderfully with his bellowing, fiery roars. Even if his main job is to provide the “beast” to balance the “beauty,” he does it effectively enough to where it doesn’t seem forced or cliched; similarly, Langhan’s voice is a driving force on many tracks rather than being relegated merely to choruses and “soft parts.”It’s the remainder band, however, that makes Sovran such a rich listen: “Rivers Between Us,” the ballad they’ve been hinting at for years, oozes with a fragile beauty that is elevated by Langhan’s vocals and the achingly sad guitar melodies, backed by violins, and album closer “The Marriage of Attaris” approaches Mournful Congregation in terms of sheer weight and grandiose arrangement. For being squarely in the goth/doom niche, Sovran is very much a guitar-based album, incorporating melodies reminiscent of My Dying Bride and early Swallow the Sun, with “Pale Tortured Blue” being a standout cut for its pure might and majestic power. When keyboards appear, they function as more than mere “atmosphere” and contribute layers of sound that, if not present, would make the songs feel hollow and incomplete. An array of mellotrons, violins, and strings appear throughout the album and add a tasteful elegance to the song structures without ever overstepping bounds into campiness or melodrama. Furthermore, Draconian are able to effectively navigate slower tempos without ever falling into mire, and the pickups in tempo are well placed, such as the driving double bass in “Stellar Tombs” and the ending section of “Dishearten.”Simply, Sovran is an album that works equally well as a full album absorbed in one listen or in smaller chunks; it’s not often that, in a genre that is capable of doing only a few things well, there are no throwaway tracks on an album — Sovran is the exception. The band’s chemistry, even with a major lineup change, has fallen into place. The songwriting is effectively paced and finds a balance between drawing listeners into a dusky atmosphere while still putting emphasis on the heaviness of the sound and the moods portrayed by the melodies. Miraculously, though this album has all the trademarks of the goth/doom niche, Draconian avoid being stereotypical and elevate the soft/loud & beautiful/ugly dynamics of the genre into a new place. Within the span of an hour, Sovran leads listeners through a gallery of despair and tragedy as well as offering glimmers of hope and catharsis. It has an artistic maturity and dead seriousness lacking in other artists of the genre, and it’s the same earnestness that has helped Draconian establish themselves as the forerunners of a sound that is endlessly aped and convoluted.Sovran will not change the opinions of those who aren’t fans of the band already, but it is an excellent album that re-establishes Draconian as masters of what they do — limited though the appeal may be, sometimes a band just needs to come along and show others how it’s really done." - Nine Circles
    $15.00
  • The much anticipated second album from Delain is here and it does not disappoint! Its interesting to see how the band has evolved. Originally conceived by Within Temptation keyboardist Martijn Westerholt as a studio project, Delain has evolved into a full blown active band. The success of the debut Lucidity tipped Westerholt's hand and Delain became a REAL band. With Charlotte Wessels on vocals, Ronald Landa on guitar and grunt vocals, Sun Caged bassist Rob Vander Loo, and Sander Zoer on drums, Delain took the Netherlands by storm. Delain toured extensively, opening for many bands including sister band Within Temptation, and appeared at many festivals. Ultimately they became a headlining band. With that behind them they headed into the studio to create their sophomore work.April Rain is cut from similar cloth from Lucidity but different enough to hear the evolution mentioned above. Instead of the multiple guests that were featured on Lucidity, April Rain does benefit from the return of Nightwish bassist Marco Hietala who sings male vocals on two tracks, as well as world renowned cellist Maria Ahn.Martijin Westholt is clearly at the helm - the big symphonic sound is still in place. Those elements that he brought to Within Temptation are clearly evident. There is a difference though...perhaps because of Jacob Hansen's mix the sound is more focused and even grittier, crunchier (thank you Mr. Landa). Songs tend to be on the shorter side but they slam harder. Having been familar with Rob Van Der Loo's intense basswork with Sun Caged its great to see him bring that progressive element to the rhythm section. Charlotte Wessels is young but has developed into the perfect voice and face for Delain.The comparisons to Within Temptation will continue but its obvious that Delain has come up with their own sound that stands on its on.This is THE symphonic gothic metal album of 2009. Nothing will touch it. This is the North American digipak edition of April Rain - with the exclusive bonus track "Come Closer". BUY OR DIE.
    $14.00
  • Second album from this French gothic metal band masterminded by Vynce Leff.  Odd situation...for a couple of years the band was fronted by Clementine Delauney, elevating the band's status as they went on tour with Delain.  Clementine left before this album was recorded, touring with Serenity so there is no studio documentation of her as a member of the band.  She has now been replaced Elvyne Lorient. Whyzdom's music is definitely molded in a similar fashion to Delain and Within Temptation.  Its very heavily symphonic and Leff has incorporated a choir into the mix lending an even bigger, more bombastic sound.  Fans of Delain's April Rain should check this one.
    $10.00