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This is my secondary, extremely-seldomly updated blog about music.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

My Top 25 Albums of 2011

Okay. 2011 has been a fantastic year musically; case in point, I've spent the last few weeks slogging through days of the best music from this year to pick out my favorites. I was originally going to do a top 10 list, but there were so many good ones that I've decided to do a top 25 instead. To help you determine how guilty to feel about not listening to any of these gems (kidding), I've also included their genres, as well as a flurry of links to example songs. Right, I have at most 10 hours of this year left after subtracting time spent at social events, so let's do this. I hope you find plenty to enjoy in this list, and have a happy new year and 2012.

25. Paragon of Dissonance
, by Esoteric (Death/doom metal)
Esoteric's music resembles standard death metal slowed down by a factor of about four. This double album is seven songs clocking in at over 90 minutes, which the shortest over 7 minutes. The lumbering, detuned guitars play so slowly that every note seems of critical importance; the drumming is similarly slow and emphatic. The vocals are there but take a backseat to the dark musical journey embodied in each song; there are often lengthy instrumental passages, some of which border on dark ambient music. Paragon of Dissonance is definitely not for the impatient, or those who enjoy nice, happy music; it is for those who enjoy deep music well out of the mainstream you can spend hours poring over. (In part because the album is so long to begin with) For a sample, listen to "Aberration", part 1 and part 2.

24. Celestial Lineage, by Wolves in the Throne Room (Ambient black metal)
Celestial Lineage has a lot to live up to: Wolves in the Throne Room specializes in epic-length, evolving black metal compositions that don't reach out and grab you like most metal bands but invite you to explore them. Everything is deliberately mixed together in a mush, with indistinct vocals, steadily riffing guitars, and furiously blast-beating but muted drums combining to create bizarrely soothing music. This album seems to go a bit more in the ambient direction, with plenty of quiet passages and sound effects that make it one of the best users of dynamic range from this year. Except for the two transitionary tracks, each song is quite fully-realized and distinct, with three over ten minutes in length. Overall a satisfying and enjoyable release, but not quite as powerful as some of their earlier releases like Diadem of 12 Stars or Two Hunters, which is why it's only number 24. For a sample track, check out "Astral Blood".

23. Redemption at the Puritan's Hand, by Primordial (Folk-inspired black metal)
When I first heard Primordial I didn't think they could be a black metal band without extreme vocals. They've since convinced me to revise my definition of black metal. This album is a fine example of their distinctive style: bleak, rapidly-picked guitars that play haunting melodies, tireless drums that effortlessly switch between the standard double bass-heavy black metal style and something akin to tribal war drums, and A.A. Nemtheanga's impassioned vocals that lie somewhere between singing and incanting (he does switch to standard black metal vocals at times). The instrumentation is the standard five-piece dual-guitar metal band, but the melodies and lyrics have their roots in Irish folk music. It's bleak, anthemic, and very metal. In another example of my weakness for bands with long songs, the shortest track on this album is 6:18; there is no filler here. Very enjoyable compositionally as well as for the metalz; example track would be the opener, "No Grave Deep Enough".

22. Heritage, by Opeth (Progressive rock/jazz fusion)
Heritage is Opeth's second acoustic album, after 2003's Damnation; there are no metal guitars or death growls to be found anywhere on this album. But where Damnation essentially sounded like Opeth's preexisting acoustic side extended to album length (and was undeniably brilliant), Heritage sees them pursue progressive rock much further than before. This is their last album with keyboardist Per Wiberg and he does quite an impressive job on it, from piano to Hammond organ. This is undoubtedly Opeth's most eclectic album yet, and I certainly enjoy it, but I hope it's just another interlude in their usual, brilliant style of metal. Example track: "I Feel the Dark".


21. Grace for Drowning, by Steven Wilson (Progressive rock)
If Porcupine Tree had released an album this year it would be somewhere up on this list, but instead I content myself with Steven Wilson's second solo album. The twenty-three minute song "Raider II" aside, it's perhaps a bit more mainstream than his work with Porcupine Tree. Since this is just Wilson, his musical brilliance and ability to create music as pleasing to the head as it is to the ears is in full swing here, as in "Remainder the Black Dog", a nine-minute piece with lots of mellow keyboard and a saxophone solo, and "No Part of Me", the intro to which seems to be channeling Owl City. Highly recommended for lovers of Porcupine Tree, progressive rock, and music in general.


20. Diotima, by Krallice (Progressive black metal)
Krallice is another of the compositionally interesting black metal bands I've been discovering this year. With four songs in a row around 12 minutes or greater, you know these guys aren't messing around. The constant tremolo-picked guitars and blast beats may get repetitive to the uninitiated, but lovers of progressive music will find plenty to enjoy as they look deeper. This album is kind of homogenous, but good examples would be the epics "The Clearing" or "Telluric Rings".





19. Weightless, by Animals as Leaders (Instrumental/technical metal)
Animals as Leaders is up there with Periphery and Canvas Solaris as one of my favorite instrumental technical metal bands. This album is probably their best yet (not saying much, as there are only two). With its lightning-fast guitar-and-bass riff and multisegmented structure, opening track "An Infinite Regression" quickly confirms that this album is the best possible kind of crazy. It resembles what would happen if you took normal-speed progressive metal and sped it up. The rest of the album is extremely diverse, from relatively sedate tracks like "Odessa" to the even more frenetic and detuned "Earth Departure". This is one of the most brilliant albums of the year (which is saying something with this list) and a tremendously enjoyable listen for anyone who can keep up.

18. Looping State of Mind, by The Field (Ambient/minimalist electronic)
My friend introduced me to The Field as truly fantastic driving music. Most of the appropriately-titled Looping State of Mind consists of brief snippets of electronic melodies and beats that are looped together and slowly change and evolve over the duration of each lengthy song. This combination of static repetition and gradual change is pretty soothing; this is music that isn't meant to be analyzed, but simply enjoyed. It's some of the best chill-out music I know of (especially if ambient metal like Wolves in the Throne Room isn't your thing). The title track "Looping State of Mind" is a good example of what to expect.



17. The Destroyers of All, by Ulcerate (Progressive death metal)
previously posted about a song from this album when I found it. Ulcerate plays this really bizarre mix of slower, highly dissonant guitar riffs and furiously fast-paced drumming filled with high-speed bass drumming and blast beats. Their earlier albums are most standard death metal with a technical/prog bent; this one definitely shows their unique style the best. Another good example is "The Hollow Idols" and the epic title track. Maybe I just like this album because I'm such a sucker for extreme metal drumming which is kind of the musical focus here, but it's really interesting music.



16. Take Care, Take Care, Take Care, by Explosions in the Sky (Instrumental post rock)
Explosions in the Sky became one of my favorite bands for their solid albums full of beautiful, emotional, and fascinating instrumental rock. They make better use of dynamic range than possibly any other band I know and each song has its own very distinct personality. Take Care, Take Care, Take Care does not disappoint for fans of the band, full of majestic, evolving compositions that inspire wonder and reminiscing. Example: "Be Comfortable, Creature". It also has a rather unusual faster-paced track, "Trembling Hands". Overall this album seems a bit more mellow than previous ones, with the band staying more towards the lower end of their intensity range. Maybe if I'd given it more listens to grow on me it would be higher up on the list, but you should listen to it anyway.

15. Road Salt Two, by Pain of Salvation (Progressive metal)
Pain of Salvation's Road Salt One was a bizarre mix of classic rock and progressive metal; my dad couldn't believe one of the songs from it wasn't authentic '70s rock. Road Salt Two is even more eclectic; PoS traditionally switched genres from album to album, but to an extent they do it from song to song here, more than usual. Tracks like "Conditioned" still evoke classic prog rock; "The Deeper Cut" is distinctly more modern, and "The Physics of Gridlock" is pretty much everything (with outro in French). The music is quite deep compositionally and technically, and not too heavy to be unenjoyable by mainstream music listeners. And of course vocalist Daniel Gildenlöw is one of the most talented in progressive metal.


14. Surtur Rising, by Amon Amarth (Melodic death/viking metal)
The wrath of the Norsemen is upon us again! Amon Amarth, Swedish masters of viking metal, explode back onto the scene with more epic tales of mythology, war, fire, and death than you can shake an ax at. As usual, this music is brutally heavy all the way through, making no concessions to the mainstream like interspersed clean vocals or melodic keyboard parts, but manages to be brilliantly catchy and fun to listen to nonetheless. Amon Amarth is certainly performing at their best here, though there isn't much reinvention or reinterpretation of their style--not that you'll likely mind as you headbang to fantastic metal like "A Beast Am I" or my favorite, "Destroyer of the Universe". A very solid modern melodic death metal release for fans of the genre.

13. Varjoina Kuljemme Kuolleiden Maassa, by Moonsorrow (Folk/black metal)
The folk-tinged black metal band Moonsorrow has been one of my favorites since I got into them earlier this year. Their typical songs are towering, mid-paced compositions stretching at least ten minutes each with mixed metal, folk instrument, and symphonic elements. Varjoina... (the title apparently means 'As Shadows We Walk in the Land of the Dead') has four of these very satisfying songs, with three short filler tracks sandwiched in between. Similar to Esoteric, they don't play many notes, but each one that they do has the power of several from lesser bands. The lyrics are mixed lower and are all in Finnish anyway, so the focus is largely on the epic, booming guitars and atmosphere created by all the reverb. For an example listen to "Tähdetön"

12. As the World Bleeds, by Theocracy (Progressive power metal)
Discovering the existence of bands that play the kind of European-style nerd metal I so enjoy and have Christian lyrics was one of my favorite Christmas presents of 2008. The foremost of these that I now enjoy is Theocracy. Lyrically this album is pretty diverse and generally focused on storytelling, like Martin Luther ("Nailed") or a man living a double life ("Hide in the Fairytale"), as well as several Biblical stories. ("30 Pieces of Silver", "Altar to the Unknown God", and "Drown").The opening song "I Am" is the multisegmented epic of the album, consisting almost entirely of reverent exposition of who God is to us. But along with the cool lyrics Theocracy doesn't musically compromise for a moment; this is progressive power metal that can compete with the best bands in the business (see #9 below). There is plenty of technical proficiency and compositional complexity in songs like "I Am", "The Gift of Music", or "As the World Bleeds" to satisfy even a Dream Theater fan. (If only they'd stayed together to release another album on their usual schedule this year, it would probably be pretty far up on this list...)

11. Dwellings, by Cormorant (Progressive black metal)
It's hard to believe I wasn't into black metal until this year. I was unable to find any enjoyable bands with acceptable (i.e. non-Satanic) lyrics until this Spring, then lately this whole new world of brilliant bands with interesting lyrics opens up--a world populated by bands like Cormorant. On Dwellings they pull together an assortment of seemingly incompatible musical influences like classic prog rock, black metal, and folk metal and manage to pull off a very interesting album indeed. Compositionally this is up there with Opeth in terms of braininess, but such a bizarre musical mix has to be enjoyed with a very open mind. "Funambulist" is one of my top favorite progressive music songs.


10. Fallen Empires, by Snow Patrol (Alternative rock)
And we get into the top 10. This album actually isn't coming out in the US until next year, but I'm counting it anyway. I would go so far as to call Fallen Empires the high point of the Irish alt rockers Snow Patrol's musical career. As mainstream alt-rock bands go, Snow Patrol is about as far from finding a single musical formula that works and rehashing it endlessly as you can get. The album consists of fourteen songs, all very different from each other, but there isn't a single weak track to be found. They range from incorporating more electronic influences (as in "Called Out in the Dark" or "I'll Never Let Go"), to tender piano-driven ballads ("New York" or "The President") to acoustic numbers ("Life-ning" or "The Garden Rules") to songs that build into epic anthems ("This Isn't Everything You Are" and "The Symphony") It's beautiful music that is emotional without ever sounding whiny, thanks in part to Gary Lightbody's wonderful voice. Of all the albums on this list, I'd say this one is the most accessible to people who aren't into my usual music style. Definitely give it a listen

9. Iconoclast, by Symphony X (Progressive power metal)
...wow. Symphony X seems to outdo themselves with each of their recent albums. Iconoclast is an epic ride that fascinates and excites from beginning to end. After hearing the epic title track "Iconoclast", if you aren't hooked...well, you have a lot to get out of this blog. ("We! Are! Strong!") It maintains the intensity and cinematic swagger of Paradise Lost with plenty more metallic aggression, technical wizardry, and, of course, more Russell Allen. This is true progressive power metal at its best. Very solid album with few weak points.




8. The Unforgiving, by Within Temptation (Symphonic/gothic metal)
I always tend to get attached to the first thing I hear from a given artist; consequently, The Unforgiving has been struggling to get out of the shadow of The Heart of Everything. The two albums is quite distinct; where in 2007 they took the symphonic bombast to 11 to produce some memorable songs like "The Howling" or "Our Solemn Hour", on this album they relax just a bit and focus on great songwriting. That's not to say there aren't still ridiculous songs like "In the Middle of the Night" or "Iron", but there plenty more gothic/poppy ones like "Shot in the Dark" and "Faster". Overall The Unforgiving seems a bit more laid-back and thoughtful than The Heart of Everything, which is just a bit disappointing for me, but it's still a very solid album that has potential to introduce Within Temptation to a much wider audience.

7. MyGrain, by MyGrain (Melodic death metal)
MyGrain is one of my favorite finds in the field of melodeath this year. Their self-titled album is a fantastic example of their style, as self-titled albums should be: super-intense, fast-paced, packed with technical wizardry, and with a modern sound bordering on the futuristic. The album's fantastically tight production helps with this; they don't rely on reverb at all to make themselves sound better, instead deciding to just play more notes. As is becoming so popular among modern melodeath bands they have some clean vocals thrown in, but they work pretty well. This album just throws one brilliantly composed, flawlessly executed, possibly overproduced single material song after another at you; a very impressive effort indeed. I could use pretty much any song on it as an example, but I'll go with "Into the Parallel Universe" and the more melodic "Dust Devils and Cosmic Storms". Fantastic find for lovers of modern melodeath.

6. Listen to the Sound, by Building 429 (Alternative rock)
Yeah, I realize I'm being favoritistic here, but the newest album by my number-one band had to be on here somewhere. I've already done a more extensive review of this album after it came out, so I can be brief here. As I previously said, Listen to the Sound continues B429's move away from the dreamy atmosphere of Iris to Iris to a more rousing, (relatively) intense sound--see "Made for You" or "One Foot". Since htis is Christian rock, the focus is generally on the lyrics--honest, down-to-earth portrayals of bandmembers' relationships with Jesus, and the reason B429 is my favorite band but probably won't be yours.



5. Écailles de Lune, by Alcest (Atmospheric black metal/shoegaze) (See addendum)
Apparently blackened shoegaze is really a thing, and has a very strong scene in France. It's not really black metal, it's not really alt rock, its not really shoegaze--it exists in the amorphous realm between all these bizarrely diverse influences. But regardless of genre, Écailles de Lune is absolutely beautiful. Most of the vocals are clean, fairly quiet, almost lullaby-like, layered over generally melodic guitars that only occasionally dabble in the dissonance so common in black metal. (See part 1 of the title track) Part 2 starts off sounding like a beautiful sleep aid, up until the blast beats start and Neige comes in with some downmixed black metal vocals reminiscent of Wolves in the Throne Room. It's one of the strangest and loveliest bands I've found in a long time. If you don't like the extreme metal elements, their previous album Souvenirs d'un Autre Monde is even cleaner.

4. The Reckoning, by Needtobreathe (Alternative/folk rock)
My top four are going to be pretty easy as I've already written reviews for all of them; here is the one for The Reckoning. Needtobreathe became one of my favorite bands as I got into The Outsiders and The Reckoning was actually a bit of a disappointment in comparison. It does see them pursuing even more energetic, anthemic songs like "Keep Your Eyes Open", "Slumber" and album standout "Drive All Night", interesting drumming on "Maybe They're On To Us", and more learned and subtle lyric-writing. Other songs I didn't get to mention above but are totally worth listening to are "White Fences" and the epic title track. Maybe I'm just too attached to The Outsiders, because this is still a fantastic album in its own right and very accessible for all manner of music lovers.

3. The Unseen Empire, by Scar Symmetry (Progressive/melodic death/power metal)
[Review] The Unseen Empire is a concept album about the earth being invaded and dominated by extradimensional reptilian overlords. No big deal for Scar Symmetry. It sees them recovering quite ably from their loss of Christian Älvestam before Dark Matter Dimensions with their two new vocalists working together better than ever, and pushing their bizarre musical blend (note the genre soup I listed for them) to ever-greater heights of brutality and mainstream acceptability. (Or at least, I want to believe so) There is really no weak tracks on this album, but the standouts are "Extinction Mantra", "Seers of the Eschaton", "Astronomicon", and one of my favorite songs ever, "Illuminoid Dream Sequence", which is probably several times better than a real acid trip. If you don't mind extreme vocals and extremely ridiculous musicianship, this is a supremely worthwhile album to look into.

2. Until We Have Faces, by RED (Alternative/symphonic metal)
[Review] Named after a C.S. Lewis classic, Until We Have Faces is a musical and lyrical journey from hopelessness, isolation, and loss of identity to redemption, purpose, and a new identity in Christ. The lyrics convey the songs' message concisely while staying enjoyable for secular audiences, and they work well together with the flow of the album's mood. The first song "Feed the Machine" sounds dystopian, built around a heavily distorted, dissonant guitar riff (wow, I just accidentally repeated my review almost verbatim). "Lie to Me (Denial)" expresses the realization of betrayal by the empty promises of false gods, and "Let It Burn" is an anguished cry for a means of escaping the meainglessness. Then the album turns from despair to faith; "Not Alone" is the first glimmer of hope, followed by metal anthems "Watch You Crawl" and "Who We Are" about fighting for your identity. "Best Is Yet to Come" is a glorious expression of hope for the future if you don't find it too cheesy. As you can tell, I really enjoy the lyrics of this album because they avoid the pitfalls of shallow sentimentality or disconnected doctrine (pardon the accidental alliteration) of so many contemporary Christian bands, but of course the music is quite fantastic too. RED has been my favorite "mainstream" Christian metal band for a while due to their symphonic touch and Michael Barnes' fantastic vocals, and while previous albums have similarly great lyrical themes, musically this is easily their strongest album yet, particularly the darker first half.

1. Imaginaerum, by Nightwish (Symphonic power metal)
[Review] Yeah, since I first heard this album a month ago I knew there was no question which would top my list. Similar to Within Temptation, Nightwish has turned down the cinematic bombast just a bit between 2007 and 2011 (ironic, since Imaginaerum is the soundtrack to a movie of the same name coming out in 2012) and focused on songwriting, expanding their style, and better incorporating new vocalist Anette Olzon into the band. Lead single "Storytime" summarizes the whole album stylistically (the closing title track summarizes the whole album musically, literally), and "I Want My Tears Back" (with uilleann pipes!) and "Rest Calm" will thrill anyone who enjoyed Dark Passion Play. Their quieter ballads have also shown evolution ("Turn Loose the Mermaids" and "The Crow, the Owl, and the Dove") and they also do some songs that are complete musical curveballs. (Nightmarish borderline nu-metal on "Ghost River", downright nightmarish "Scaretale", and '30s-esque smooth jazz on "Slow, Love, Slow") The new epic, "Song of Myself" is a bit of a disappointment due to the entire second half being a poem recitation. Finally, "Last Ride of the Day" is a near-flawless combination of Nightwish's old and newer sounds, featuring an actual shredding guitar solo! (I'm aware I've linked to nearly the entire album, the songs are all amazing) The album isn't without its flaws and hasn't quite attained the near-mythical status held by Dark Passion Play, but is fantastic in its own right and a promising step forward for Nightwish.

Honorable Mention:
The Great Mass, by Septicflesh (Symphonic death metal)
A Rose for the Apocalypse, by Draconian (Gothic death/doom metal)
Five Serpent's Teeth, by Evile (Thrash metal)
Mammal, by Altar of Plagues (Atmospheric black metal)
The Hunter, by Mastodon (Progressive sludge metal)
Ascension, by Jesu (Post metal)
Epoch, by Fen (Atmospheric black metal)

Addendum: It appears some of my metadata was wrong and Écailles de Lune was in fact released in 2010, making it ineligible for this list. It's still a great album, though.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

My Most "Hardcore" Artists



As this old fake webcomic I made shows, I consider song length to be a measure of a artist's, shall we say, "hardcoreitude". I quantify this by the average length of their songs. I originally checked this using an Excel spreadsheet as I use to do so many other musical statistics, but this approach had several problems which I have now fixed with a smarter Python script. This list shows the 20 artists in my library with the longest average song length, along with the number of songs by them I have for comparison. (Esoteric with 35 songs averaging 13:37 is more impressive than Lustre averaging 16:08 with 5 songs--particularly because it makes Esoteric 'leet') The results turned out to be a mix of post rock, atmospheric black metal, progressive rock, and classical music.
  1. Godspeed You! Black Emperor - 18:05 , 14
  2. Lustre - 16:08 , 5
  3. Darkestrah - 14:38 , 6
  4. Esoteric - 13:37 , 35
  5. Neal Morse - 13:11 , 11
  6. Darkspace - 12:10 , 17
  7. Altar of Plagues - 12:10 , 14
  8. Berlioz - 12:00 , 5
  9. Transatlantic - 11:01 , 21
  10. Beethoven - 10:56 , 30
  11. Wolves in the Throne Room - 10:54 , 21
  12. Krallice - 10:15 , 19
  13. Moonsorrow - 9:53 , 34
  14. Schubert - 9:38 , 13
  15. Guilt Machine - 9:36 , 6
  16. Negura Bunget - 9:10 , 8
  17. Conrad Herwig - 9:02 , 6
  18. Strauss - 8:57 , 8
  19. Hindemith - 8:52 , 3
  20. Brahms - 8:43 , 18
I got the idea for this post because I am currently listening to the #1 band, Godspeed You! Black Emperor and thus being reminded of how amazing they are. They do some of the most out-there, beautiful, and interesting experimental rock of any band I know of. Their "average" song is about 18 minutes (according to my script), filled with spacey, minimalistic guitars, unusual classical/folk instrumentation, and nonsensical samples. The result is somewhere between Explosions in the Sky, classical symphonies, movie soundtracks, and dreaming. Here is part 1 of one of my favorites, from their last album. (They went on hiatus in 2002, but recently announced they are working on new material!)


And for my fellow nerds out there, here is my script. Note that I now interface with my iTunes library metadata through the XML file iTunes saves for this purpose rather than through arbitrary text files. If anyone wants the module used for this, contact me.


import sys
import os
import os.path
sys.path.append('%s' % (os.path.abspath(os.path.join(os.curdir, 'BansheeMeld'))))
import xmlIO
if len(sys.argv) > 1:
   numtoprint = int(sys.argv[1])
else:
   numtoprint = 20
lib = xmlIO.lib()
artistlengths = dict()
def good(song):
   return song['Track Number'] is not None and song['Track Count'] is not None and song['Genre'] != 'Podcast'
def converttime(t):
   m, s = divmod(t, 60)
   return "%d:%02d" % (int(m), int(s))
for song in lib[0]:
   if good(song):
      if 'Album Artist' in song and song['Album Artist'] is not None:
         artist = song['Album Artist']
      else:
         artist = song['Artist']
      if artist in artistlengths:
         artistlengths[artist][0] += song['Time']
         artistlengths[artist][1] += 1
      else:
         artistlengths[artist] = [song['Time'], 1] 
averages = [((v[0] * 1.0 / v[1]), k, v[1]) for k, v in artistlengths.iteritems()]
averages.sort(reverse=True)
for i in xrange(numtoprint):
   print averages[i][1],'-',converttime(averages[i][0]),',',averages[i][2]

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Monday, December 5, 2011

Norwegian Party Metal

Kvelertak is classified on the Encyclopedia Metallum as a mix of black metal and punk rock. They play songs with the heaviness and shrieked vocals of black metal and the upbeat tempo and catchy melodies of good old rock music. One of the most unique bands I've heard in a while.

Imaginaerum: Nightwish is Back

Alright. I've listened through the whole album three times and my favorites quite a bit more than that. I think I'm ready to discuss Nightwish's new album/movie (yes, movie), Imaginaerum.

I fell in love with Nightwish in the summer of 2008. I was floored by their huge, bombastic sound, a blend of a full orchestra, choirs, native instruments, and metal equally able to produce beautiful ballads and towering compositions of incredible grandeur and power. Songs like "The Poet and the Pendulum", "Ghost Love Score", and "7 Days to the Wolves" became central to my definition of what "epic" music sounds like. Their 2007 album Dark Passion Play has been one of my favorite albums ever since. Now, for the first time since I got into them, Nightwish has released a new album. My burning question is, of course, how does it compare with Dark Passion Play, and more generally how does it represent and evolve their sound as a whole? Well, now that it's here, those questions have answers. Let's go.

This is their first album to feature an intro track, specifically "Taikatalvi" ("Magic Winter"). Nice symphonic song with all-Finnish vocals and some sound effects tying into the movie. It blends right into "Storytime", the first single of the album. Unlike "Amaranth" or "Bye Bye Beautiful" of Dark Passion Play, "Storytime" is a pretty good musical summary of the entire album, with the characteristic heavy guitar riffs, epic orchestral flourishes, and a great vocals by Anette Olzon. Hearing this song for the first time, the message I got was: Nightwish is back! Rejoice!

From there "Ghost River" kicks off with an interesting guitar riff that fades into a beginning that sounds sort of similar to "Storytime"...until it takes a nightmarish turn with super-heavy chugging guitars and some great, scary-sounding harsh vocals by bassist Marco Hietala that I wish could have been mixed a bit louder. Despite the extremely dark sound it has the same kind of standard pop-rock rhythm of "Storytime". The focus on the pounding rhythm in the chorus almost reminds me of nu-metal (don't worry, it's really good). Also a random children's choir interlude that sort of works.

"Slow, Love, Slow" is a faithful tribute to '30s nightclub jazz (believe it or not), easily the biggest surprise of the album. Very mellow, with great brushed snare drumwork and a surprisingly convincing vocal performance by Anette. The fantastical atmosphere of the album is maintained by some swirling piano until the rest of the orchestra comes back towards the end along with the guitars. Very interesting song, a completely new direction for Nightwish, but it works fairly well.

At first I thought "I Want My Tears Back" recalled "Bye Bye Beautiful" in its bouncing rhythm and chugging, industrial-type guitars, but then I realized Nightwish is actually channeling fellow Finnish folk metal band Korpiklaani. Seriously, compare it to a sample Korpiklaani song. I'm not saying Nightwish is ripping them off or anything, but many of the same elements are there. As Nightwish's symphonic epic-ness continues to grow, it's nice to see them keep room for traditional instruments like the uillean pipes (last heard on the Dark Passion Play instrumental "Last of the Wilds") The vocal trade-off during the chorus is also nice and has some of Marco's most melodic singing yet.

"Scaretale" is about childhood nightmares; call it Nightwish's version of "Enter Sandman". Predictably, it sounds even more nightmarish and horror-genre influenced than "Ghost River", with some kind of weird circus breakdown and "creepy" vocals that aren't like anything Anette has done before. It's very impressive and one of the more progressive songs on the album recalling a mix of Mr. Bungle and Unexpect at times, but I confess, it's not that fun to listen to. "Arabesque" is an instrumental outro to it, added to fit the movie, but overall a very enjoyable and diverse song for its length. They should do some lyrical songs like it.

"Turn Loose the Mermaids" is a tender, acoustic ballad that, like "I Want My Tears Back", focuses more on folk than symphonic instrumentation. Following it is "Rest Calm", a longer song whose intensity rises and falls like waves before building to a climactic ending similar to "7 Days to the Wolves". Much of this is the chorus line being sung repeatedly, alternately by Anette and Marco (and the children's choir at one point); luckily it's one of the most beautiful vocals on the album. It's bookended by another quieter song, "The Crow, the Owl, and the Dove", another folk-influenced ballad written by Marco. It's a beautiful duet between him and Anette (if you couldn't tell, Nightwish's two vocalists have a much better dynamic on this album, and Marco's singing and range of styles have improved, period). It does have some electric guitar and drums, which keeps it from sounding too similar to "Turn Loose the Mermaids".

And then we have "Last Ride of the Day", a song inspired by a roller coaster ride and in my opinion the strongest song of the album. Immediately we get punchy strings accentuated by drums and choral vocals telling us, this is going to be big, building excitement like climbing up the first hill. And the ride that follows does not disappoint. It's easily the fastest and most intense song on the album with the band, the orchestra, and the choir all turning their parts up to 11. And then around the 2:45 mark, it's--what's this? An honest-to-goodness shredding guitar solo! Huzzah! That metal staple that so many otherwise-great Nightwish songs have been doing without lately triumphantly returns. Man, this song is almost better than a real roller coaster.

The album's obligatory epic, placed late in the songlist this time, is "Song of Myself". It clocks in at about 30 seconds less than "The Poet and the Pendulum" and the first half is pretty comparable, with even better use of the choir than "Last Ride of the Day" to sing part of the chorus, but the second half (last ~six and a half minutes) are a recitation of a poem based on one of Tuomas' muses, Walt Whitman. The band keeps playing for most of it, but the focus is clearly on the reading, and it seems to drag on too long. With a few minutes left as I was following the lyrics, I realized, "Oh, the song isn't coming back, it's just more poem." Good for Walt Whitman fans, a bit disappointing for the rest of us.

And lastly, the title track is a symphonic medley of the rest of the album that will presumably be played over the end credits of the movie. Hearing the strings play the chorus line from "Storytime" is nice and nostalgic, and the arrangement is top-notch, but I kind of miss the band on this song.

At this point I'm still working out my preference for this album or Dark Passion Play; the latter has attained an almost mythical status in my library which makes it hard to top. But regardless of this comparison, Imaginaerum is a great album. Nightwish shows evolution in the diversity of their style, in terms of band dynamic, songwriting, and individual ability. They keep the bombast and grandiosity that made Dark Passion Play amazing while better blending their diverse influences and exploring new musical territory.

The album is not, however, without some nagging problems. While Nightwish kept the good elements of Dark Passion Play, they also kept one of the bad ones, namely Emppu's tendency not to do anything interesting on the electric guitar (with the notable exception of "Last Ride of the Day" and, to a lesser extent, "Ghost River" and "I Want My Tears Back"). They also tend to lean heavily on the standard-issue rock drumbeat as heard on "Storytime", "Ghost River", "I Want My Tears Back", "Rest Calm" (considerably slower), and "Last Ride of the Day". And the two ending tracks, which I was expecting to be the standouts of the album, were both minor disappointments.

With these things in mind, I'm giving the album a solid 4.5. It's obligatory for fans of Nightwish, particularly Dark Passion Play, and a great album to introduce yourself to the band with.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Storytime

Nightwish's new album Imaginaerum has hit Finland. I'm listening to it now. Rest assured, a full review will come, but until then...SO GLORIOUS. Just listen.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Song Titles

I'm a rather fastidious record-keeper when it comes to my music collection--I update an annotated chart of my library size by time every few months. I also sometimes look for odder attributes of my music. Today I wrote two simple Python scripts--one to look for the most common song titles in my library, the other to find songs that have the same title, artist name, and album name. To get the music metadata into a form easily readable by Python, I selected my whole library in the main music list of iTunes and copy-pasted it into Excel. (You can do that) I then picked out the columns I needed (title for one; title, artist, and album for the other) and copy-pasted these into tab-separated text files that Python can easily digest. My results are below.

Top 50 Most Common Song Titles

Allegro - 36
Intro - 16
Overture - 15
Andante - 11
Forever - 10
Prelude - 9
Lost - 9
Home - 9
The End - 9
Adagio - 9
Coming Home - 9
Hidden Track - 8
Disappear - 8
Silent Night - 8
Broken - 8
Farewell - 8
Presto - 8
O Holy Night - 8
Beautiful - 7
Revolution - 7
O Come All Ye Faithful - 7
Falling Down - 7
One - 7
Wake Up - 7
Allegro Moderato - 7
Credits - 7
Rain - 7
Tonight - 7
The Promise - 7
Hope - 7
Alive - 7
Believe - 6
Savior - 6
Save Me - 6
Main Menu - 6
Falling - 6
Alone - 6
Grace - 6
Afterlife - 6
Escape - 6
I'm Alive - 6
Free - 6
Scream - 6
Largo - 6
Without You - 6
Revelation - 6
Hero - 6
Sacrifice - 6
Judgment Day - 5
Ganondorf - 5

(I can't say I'm surprised about #1...and I don't even have that much classical music)

Songs with the Same Title, Artist, and Album



Amesoeurs - Amesoeurs - Amesoeurs
Bang Camaro - Bang Camaro - Bang Camaro
Iced Earth - Iced Earth - Iced Earth
Into Eternity - Into Eternity - Into Eternity
Iron Savior - Iron Savior - Iron Savior
Outworld - Outworld - Outworld
Primal Fear - Primal Fear - Primal Fear
Theocracy - Theocracy - Theocracy


For those who are curious, here are the scripts I wrote in about 5 minutes each to do this parsing.

SongNames.py

import sys


topvalues = 50


if len(sys.argv) < 2:
   sys.exit()


filename = sys.argv[1]
counts = dict()


for line in open(filename, 'r'):
   l = line.strip()
   if l in counts:
      counts[l] += 1
   else:
      counts[l] = 1


topcounts = sorted(counts.keys(), key=lambda x: counts[x], reverse=True)


for title in topcounts[:topvalues]:
   print title,'-',counts[title]

SongData.py

import sys


if len(sys.argv) < 2:
   sys.exit()


filename = sys.argv[1]
finds = list()


for line in open(filename, 'r'):
   l = line.strip().split('\t')
   if len(l) == 3 and (l[0] == l[1] == l[2]):
      finds.append("%s - %s - %s" % tuple(l))


print '\n'.join(sorted(finds))

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Jesu

Jesu is one of the most interesting metal bands I've heard in a while. I would describe their experimental style as "dream metal"--plodding, detuned guitar melodies, semi-electronic beats, and clean singing that fades into the background. Fascinating, soothing, and strangely beautiful.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Architect of Lies

This is another one of those posts where I talk about an album I love. Just like most of the time.


Danish band Mercenary ranks up there with Wintersun and Scar Symmetry in terms of combining power metal and melodic death metal to create an interesting blend that is both brutal and accessible to lovers to less extreme metal. (Particularly their previous album The Hours That Remain, during which they didn't have a harsh vocalist and went entirely with clean vocals) Architect of Lies is still more on the melodic side of things than their earlier albums, with some thrash and prog metal influences thrown in. The produced, reverb-heavy dual guitars and keyboards give it a very dense, "boomy" feeling, almost like a somewhat more laid-back, melodious Kalmah album. The album feels unified like a concept album, musically rather than lyrically.

The first two tracks, "New Desire" and "Bloodsong", are both pretty standard and unremarkable, like if you took the average of the rest of the album. Harsh verses, cleanly sung choruses and NWOBHM-esque guitar solos abound. "Bloodsong" features somewhat slower, laid-back drumming, a hallmark of this album that is different than lots of melodeath. No blast beats for these Danes. "Embrace the Nothing" is slower still, with fairly quiet, almost plaintive verses. The keyboard takes part of the solo, making this song more of a breather than anything else.

And then it's on to the nearly six minutes of intensity in "This Black and Endless Never". (All the songs on Architect of Lies are excellent-length--the shortest is 4:50) The relentlessly pounding bass drum and guitar riffs are somewhat strangely contrasted by the lack of harsh vocals in this song similar to The Hours That Remain. It's great fun to listen and headbang to, but feels a bit monotonous as if they could have done more with it.

"Isolation (The Loneliness in December)" is virtually a ballad, another breather song before the metallic whirlwind that is "The Endless Fall". The heaviest song on the album, it has harsh vocalist René Pedersen turning his death growl into a ferocious roar, with the clean vocals only coming in during the chorus. The chorus riff, by the way, is excellent, with a synchronized guitar and bass drum attack that sounds quite epic. There's also the nearly two-minute instrumental section (including a solo) that, despite (or because of) its aggression is great fun to listen to

"Black and Hollow" is much slower, keeping an almost lumbering pace but a dark atmosphere throughout. Like "This Black and Endless Never" it has largely clean vocals. "Execution Style" is another fast, aggressive song, one of the thrashiest, but with an extremely expansive-sounding chorus that turns out to be pretty epic. In lieu of a solo it has a furiously chugging pseudo-symphonic section with vocal samples.

The last two tracks tie the album together and give it the musical feel of a concept album. "I Am Lies" has a fairly standard beat with some seriously catchy rhythms and riffs layered on top of it. The chorus has musical callbacks to "This Black and Endless Nothing" and the extended bridge is definitely the climax of the whole album, culminating in the title being shouted to make your skin crawl. After that, it does seem to drag on a bit long, awkwardly sticking around after hitting its awesome peak. Finally "Public Failure Number One" feels like an epilogue, starting aggressively but tapering off into a keyboard-laden, almost ambient and dreamy melody that carries you out of the album. After all its fury, the album goes out more with a whimper than a bang--strange but beautiful.

Overall, a solid piece of metal from a band at its peak. (Read: half the band left after it) They manage to make music that sounds huge and furious, but at the same time melodic and inviting (at least to fans of the genre). Some of the slower songs turned out a bit ridiculous and borderline-emo at times, but metal gems like "The Endless Fall" and "I Am Lies" make up for these moments of weakness. Recommended for fans of melodic death metal, or power metal fans looking for something heavier. (In this case, The Hours That Remain might help you get acclimated to Mercenary)

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Porcupine Tree: A Primer

Tonight I'm going to do a post in the vein of some I've seen on a metal review website whose names escapes me now, where I do a longitudinal study of all the albums in a band's career to help people get a feel for their style and find a good album to check out. I can think of no better band to do than Porcupine Tree, as it's a band I really think more people should know and love. I can understand if DragonForce's absurdly fast video game metal or Dream Theater's 10+-minute prog excesses aren't your thing, but if you don't like at least some Porcupine Tree...well, let's hope you've just never heard of Steven Wilson. As a band they've displayed more variance in their style than possibly any other I know of, completely changing genres at least twice in 20 years. Through it all they've always been complex, enjoyable, and deeply satisfying to listen to. Let's go.

On the Sunday of Life... (1991)

Admittedly, Porcupine Tree's first album is pretty weird. At this point the band was pretty much just Steven Wilson in the persona of a mythical '70s prog rock band and this album is a compilation of the "band"'s early demos. It's highly experimental and isn't always as beautiful as later albums--"Linton Samuel Dawson" appears to have been sung in a room full of helium and tracks like "Space Transmission" and "Message from a Self-Destructing Turnip" feel more like jokes than music. But at the same time there are some enjoyable songs unlike anything on later albums where the band had settled on a genre, like the upbeat "Jupiter Island" or "Third Eye Surfer" which is basically a drum solo. Meanwhile other tracks like "Music for the Head", "Radioactive Toy", or "It Will Rain for a Million Years" hint at PT's upcoming spacey style. This album is interesting, but mostly worth checking out only if you already love Porcupine Tree.

Up the Downstair (1993)

On their second album Porcupine Tree takes a big step from their experimental early work to the spacey, psychedelic rock that characterized their earlier career. It's floaty, expansive, and yet often punctuated by loud sections--great use of dynamic range. This is exemplified by "Aways Never", the epic title track, and "Burning Sky". Meanwhile "Small Fish" and "Synesthesia" are more standard, medium-paced prog rock songs and "Not Beautiful Anymore" continues their habit of working interesting audio samples in with the music. Recommended largely for the amazing title track.

The Sky Moves Sideways (1995)

Six songs, 65 minutes. Both parts of the title suite and "Moonloop" are psychedelic rock masterpieces in excess of 16 minutes; the other three songs, which would be good on other albums, seem like filler by comparison. "Dislocated Day" is the obligatory louder song. I haven't listened to this album as much as I should, but it's good.




Signify (1996)

Signify is pretty much the height of Porcupine Tree's psychedelic period. It has soothing, confusing, meandering, crazy pieces like "Signify" and "Waiting Phase Two", amazing ambient songs "Pagan" and "Light Mass Prayers", and several brilliant sample-containing songs like "Sever", "Idiot Prayer", and "Intermediate Jesus". The finale, "Dark Matter", is one of my favorite epics of theirs, mellow yet intense, dark yet accessible. The deluxe edition of the album has a second CD with more goodness and early versions of some of the songs. The wealth of great material might have to do with how this was the first one recorded with a full band. I cannot get enough of this album, and it's only my third favorite of theirs.Modern music you hear on the radio cannot compare.

Metanoia (1998)

Metanoia isn't technically a studio album, just a compilation of ambient improvisations from the exceedingly fruitful Signify sessions. If you checked out Signify as recommended and liked the more ambient parts, by all means, look into Metanoia.





Stupid Dream (1999)

In Stupid Dream Porcupine Tree begins to transition away from their early psychedelic style to the more acoustic, alternative rock-influenced style of their middle years. They're at their most accessible during this album and the next two, but they by no means "sell out" or water down the complexity of their unique style for the masses. Stupid Dream is enjoyable the first time, but like all good albums it keeps getting better, rewarding each successive listen. I don't really have any favorites on this album, but check out "Don't Hate Me" or "Even Less" for an idea.

Lightbulb Sun (2000)

Ah, Lightbulb Sun. The height of PT's poppy, acoustic period. A beautiful, emotional, intricate album with lyrical themes centering around loss. Covered in quite a bit more detail in one of my early posts. If you don't feel like reading all that, check out the title track, "Four Chords that Made a Million", epic "Russia on Ice", or subdued final song "Feel So Low". But seriously, the whole album is indescribable.


In Absentia (2002)

In Absentia is the beginning of PT's journey to their current, metal-influenced home. Still plenty of spacey, acoustic beauty on this album (see "Blackest Eyes", "Trains", "Heartattack in a Layby", and "Collapse the Light into Earth"), but also some increasingly intense songs like instrumental "Wedding Nails", "The Creator Has a Mastertape", and "Strip the Soul". All around a very solid, well-balanced album and the one I'd recommend right after Lightbulb Sun.

Deadwing (2005)

Another PT album I haven't listened to nearly enough. Some songs like "Deadwing", "Halo", and "Mellotron Scratch" resemble a louder, slightly angrier old Porcupine Tree. Others like "Shallow", "Arriving Somewhere But Not Here", and "Open Car" are something else entirely. Their modern style is definitely shining through here.




Fear of a Blank Planet (2007)

I haven't listened to this one quite enough either. PT keeps its new metallic edge here, but tempers it considerably for quieter tracks like "My Ashes" and "Sentimental". "Fear of a Blank Planet" combines the free-roaming musical energy of Signify with a very modern sound, and "Anesthetize", their longest song since The Sky Moves Sideways, defies description. Overall a fascinating blend of the familiar and the new.



The Incident (2009)

Porcupine Tree's latest release is possibly their most experimental (among their full-length albums) since their first. The entire first disc runs together into one 55-minute song, with four unrelated tracks on the second. I suspect that The Incident might be the start of their move to a new, completely unique genre invented by them. At times it's dark, heavy, and brooding, other times light-hearted and thoughtful. Some songs, particularly resident epic "Time Flies", are just about everything. Highly recommended for one and all.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Dystopia

So apparently Iced Earth's singer has retired again, they've brought on Into Eternity singer Stu Block, and they've released a new album! I'm not going to do a full review, but suffice it to say that it's probably their best in a while. The whole band is playing at their best and Stu is almost, almost good enough for me to not miss Matt Barlow. For now, check out the first song, "Dystopia":

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Dichotomy

Try as I may to enjoy the "Christian" music scene, it's never easy due to numerous bands who try to distinguish themselves only by their reverent, Christian content-packed lyrics while staying content to follow in the well-worn musical footsteps of their secular counterparts. I treasure the albums of bands that are pioneers both in the truth of their lyrics and the ingenuity of their music. Where alternative rock has bands in this category like Switchfoot, Jars of Clay, and Needtobreathe, power metal has Theocracy, and metalcore has August Burns Red, death metal has one that darn near tops them all: Becoming the Archetype. Possibly my favorite non-melodic death metal band by any stretch, it's a nice bonus that they write cool concept albums comparing the spread of the gospel to fire melting ice or containing extensive references to one of my favorite authors.
Yep, if you haven't read That Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis and recognized the album art, Dichotomy is heavily inspired by his Space Trilogy, as well as the gospel. But on top of that, it's some of the best progressive death metal I've ever heard. (Except Opeth, but it's in quite a different vein) Like the Swedish masters, Opeth successfully mixes brutality with peaceful sections, but their compositions are more average-length and their sonic palette somewhat more varied.

To start off, "Mountain of Souls" begins with a rather ghastly, dramatic riff that morphs into a full-on death metal assault before the first verse. It also features a spacier bridge with clean vocals and a mellow, very Opeth-style piano outro. Excellent starting song, but not even close to the album standout. The title track mixes more furious riffing with some soft backing keyboard which is an interesting and rather puzzling effect. it again has a quiet, piano interlude with clean vocals that builds back up to the song's full force in a rather epic manner. The lyrics are more or less a retelling of the second half of Romans 1--the hopelessness of the human condition without God and our tendency to bring destruction upon ourselves.

"Artificial Immortality" shows how BtA toys with melodic songs that are enjoyable for more than pure brutality, without crossing over into melodic death metal. Fantastic blast beats in the chorus and a fist-pumping pseudo-breakdown are also awesome. Lyrically it recalls the horrific experiments of the NICE to "improve" humanity. "Self-Existent" is pretty much a retelling of the resurrection...with furious blast beats! The sheer power of the screamed lyrics "I watched him die/I watched him die" counterpointed by "I saw him rise/I saw him rise" is pretty epic.

"St. Anne's Lullaby" is a brief acoustic interlude...I hope I'm not making BtA sound too much like Opeth; they use some of the same compositional techniques, but sound very little alike. "Ransom" starts off similarly quietly but is definitely one of the heaviest songs on the album, with a particularly awesome, shredding guitar solo and lyrics using Ransom's final battle in Perelandra as a metaphor for Christ's victory over death. "Evil Unseen" has some excellent double-bass work, but seems a bit less compositionally "tight" as other songs.

"How Great Thou Art" is, of course, a death metal retelling of the classic hymn. I'm just waiting for the Hope worship band to play it during offering one day. Someday... "Deep Heaven" uses dark, dense synthesizers in the intro and verses for a really cool effect as the lyrics compare leaving the earth with leaving behind the weight of sin and death. Once again, cool piano interlude. They don't feel overdone on this album. And finally, "End of the Age" is pure epic all the way through, with awe-filled lyrics about God's glory and the second coming like "He pulls down the sky/To crush His enemies/He descends upon them with fire". The chorus has death grunts mixed with what sounds like a choir for "He is clothed in greatness/His voice resounds throughout the earth". The last two and a half minutes are instrumental and provide  more-than-adequate closure to the album.

Overall, this is a fantastic album both in its death metal prowess and its deep, truth-packed lyrics. (And C.S. Lewis references) Vocalist Jason Wisdom gets major points for his heavy-yet-intelligible vocals that get the band's message across, but they always come off as poetic rather than preachy.