About this blog

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

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

2013 Top Albums

[Note: This post originally appeared on my main blog. When I switched publishing music posts from this blog to my main one, I expected I would be writing a good deal more there, but in fact I only wrote two. In light of this fact, I've moved them back to this blog.]

Though my music blog is no longer running, I of course can't resist at least sharing my favorite albums from this past year. I'm going to focus more on giving representative samples of each album and letting them speak for themselves than doing a writeup on each album.

Top 5:

The Afterman: Descension - Coheed and Cambria (Progressive rock; United States)

Nightmare Ending - Eluvium (Ambient; United States)
Eluvium double album. Enough said.

Seventh Swamphony - Kalmah (Melodic death metal; Finland)
Interesting new Kalmah album featuring further explorations into life in the Finnish countryside, and interesting slower songs like "Hollo" above and "The Trapper". See also "Pikemaster".

Live - From Chaos to Eternity - Rhapsody of Fire (Symphonic Power Metal; Italy)
Rhapsody of Fire's D&D metal bombast reaches new levels of epic on this new live album.

Nemesis - Stratovarius (Power Metal; Finland)

Other 2013 Recommendations:

The Nexus - Amaranthe (Melodic death/power/pop metal; Denmark/Sweden)
It's basically Swedish melodic death metal on a sugar rush.

Deceiver of the Gods - Amon Amarth (Melodic death metal; Sweden)

Wagner Reloaded - Apocalyptica (Symphonic metal/Classical; Finland)
Apocalyptica's first live album is a very interesting mix of cello-powered metal and classical music. Possibly their first album meriting the separate genre of "cello metal".

Rescue & Restore - August Burns Red (Progressive metalcore; United States)

Sleddin' Hill - August Burns Red (Progressive metalcore; United States)
This is basically a whole album version of ABR's cover of Carol of the Bells (which is on here in rerecorded form).

The Mystery of Time - Avantasia (Symphonic power/progressive metal; Germany)

The Theory of Everything - Ayreon (Progressive metal; Netherlands)
The rivalry continues: arguably better than Avantasia's new album.

Ars Musica - Dark Moor (Symphonic power metal; Spain)

Dream Theater - Dream Theater (Progressive Metal; United states)
Yes, I finally cracked and got Dream Theater's post-Portnoy albums. Drumming aside, they don't feel as distinctively Dream Theater as their earlier work, but are still interesting.

Saivon Lapsi - Eternal Tears of Sorrow (Symphonic/melodic death metal; Finland)

Skull - Evile (Thrash Metal; United Kingdom)

Blodsvept - Finntroll (Death/folk metal; Finland)

Straight Out of Hell - Helloween (Power metal; Germany)

Impermanent Resonance - James LaBrie (Progressive metal/hard rock; United States)

Everyday I Get Closer to the Light from Which I Came - Jesu

Pure Heroine - Lorde (Pop; New Zealand)
Blame Marissa for getting me into this one, but it has grown on me.

Through Our Darkest Days - Mercenary (Melodic death/power metal; Denmark)
Though still not at the level of Kral or Mikkel, Rene Pedersen does a much better job carrying the band's vocal duties here.

Planetary Breathing - MyGrain (Melodic death metal; Finland)

Dark Wings of Steel - Rhapsody of Fire (Symphonic Power Metal; Italy)
RoF's new studio album is interestingly slower than usual, but certainly lived up to my expectations as a devoted fan.

The Migration - Scale the Summit (Instrumental progressive metal; United States)

Pacifica - Segue (Ambient/Electronic; United States)
As my friend Evan pointed out, this album sounds exactly like the cover looks.

Kveikur - Sigur Rós (Post rock; Iceland)

Rise - Skillet (Modern hard rock; United States)
Skillet's first concept album is a very pleasant suprise. See also some of the more anthemic tracks like "Rise" and "Circus for a Psycho".

The Living Infinite - Soilwork (Melodic death metal; Sweden)
Also a pleasant surprise: a double album of very solid melodeath from Soilwork.

Cupid's Head - The Field (Electronic/ambient; United States)

Vengeance Falls - Trivium (Metalcore/thrash; United States)

Vermis - Ulcerate (Technical death metal; New Zealand)

We As Human - We As Human (Hard rock/metal; United States)
Up-and-coming We As Human does a good job of working their Christian faith into their lyrics without beating you over the head with it. The only one of these bands I've seen live this year.

Pre-2013 Albums I Missed:

The Void - Beardfish (Progressive rock; Sweden)
This would have been on my top 5 for 2012. See also: "Ludvig and Sverker" and "Note".

The Parallax II: Future Sequence - Between the Buried and Me (Progressive deathcore; United States)


Dethalbum II - Dethklok (Melodic death metal; United States)
A hilarious affectionate parody of Scandanavian death metal.

A Dramatic Turn of Events - Dream Theater (Progressive Metal; United states)

The Fall - Gorillaz (Alternative hip hop/electronic; United Kingdom)
This album is basically a series of musical reflections from the eclectic English virtual band as they toured the United States.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Final Announcement: This Isn't Really Working

If you actually read this blog, I'm sure you've noticed it has been rather slow in the last several months. This isn't just because my main blog has been going through a kind of renaissance, with a post every 1.5 days in May and every 3 days in February, March, April, and June. It's also because I've been doing some thinking about how I enjoy music. The process by which I get into an album is more like falling in love than it is like reading an interesting book, expanding outward in scope. As I listen to it over and over again, certain moments--a particularly stirring vocal line, a lyric that grips my imagination just so, an awesome guitar riff or double-bass-driven rhythm--start to stand out to me and grab my attention. I start enjoying and listening to the songs they're present in on their own as well as in the album. Over time, I may come to be affectionately familiar with the whole album in this way after dozens of listens. If I wasn't into the artist before, I may check out something else in their discography. The whole approach is intensely personal and subjective, and has a definite center on those initial moments or song that I latched onto and how they fit into the work as a whole.

But my writing on this blog has been largely flat, impersonal, and focused on more objective surface-level detail. In other words, how I write about music increasingly doesn't match how I listen to music, which I think is why I've been finding it so hard to write about music even though I've been enjoying it more than ever (especially having finished the β22 amp, also attempting to write about that). In the language of the MBTI cognitive functions, my writing style has tried to be extroverted intuition (creatively looking for patterns and possibilities in external data), extroverted sensing (focusing on immediate sensory experience), or even extroverted thinking (relying on objective facts, lists, and criteria) while I mostly enjoy music with my strongest function, introverted intuition, which is notoriously hard to express with words.

Despite this undeniable fact, for a while I was reluctant to consider the possibility of shutting this blog down. But now I think I've found a solution. I originally split this blog off from my main one (on theology, interpretation, and culture) because I was afraid of overwhelming my main blog with posts on whatever I happened to be listening to at the moment that had little to do with the rest of the subject matter. That danger appears to have passed. So, while I hope not to stop blogging about music altogether, my volume in doing so has fallen to the point where I'd rather just put them on my main blog with the "Music" tag. In the future, look for them there.

Friday, June 21, 2013

The β22

Unbenownst to me, my building the DIY (do-it-yourself) Bottlehead Crack headphone amp was not only a way to get a great amp for cheap, it was a gateway into greater ventures. Namely building this:
This is the β22 (Beta22), an open-source design for a reference-quality, all-discrete, class-A, solid-state headphone amp, renowned for its transparency. You can't just buy one (except by paying an exorbitant sum to have someone else make you one and ship it), you must build it yourself. And unlike Bottlehead, AMB barely holds your hand at all. They give you the schematic, sell a few of the parts (and recommend which ones to buy from third parties), and offer a help forum for when things go wrong. The electronics took at least forty hours of soldering, and the heavy sheet steel cases another fifteen hours of machining (they recommend buying a case, but I would still have had to machine the mounting holes and I preferred steel for its superior EMI resistance). I'm pretty sure this thing could support my weight.
The power supply, known as the σ22, is another electronics project in itself also designed by AMB, which I worked on mostly in parallel. Despite being about half the size of the β22, it weighs almost as much because of the toroidal transformer.
The construction was a laborious process. I started with bare printed circuit boards and hundreds of parts from Digikey...
One board...
Two board...
Three board.
Four board!
After the boards had been mostly populated, it was time to start connecting them together...
...and then set to work on the handmade case, which started out like this:
After a lot of machining, it was time for the final assembly!


So, the design and construction aside, how does the β22 sound? Like...nothing. Combined with my also-transparent HRT MusicStreamer II+ DAC and HD800s, I don't really hear my signal chain at all--only the music. It's possibly the most transparent sound system I've ever listened on, except maybe some Stax electrostatics I got to try at a headphone meet.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Under the Grey Banner

My most recent metal acquisition: some actual metal (14-gauge ASTM A1011 sheet steel for my headphone amp project)!

Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha ha.
All joking aside, I have finally been getting into Dragonland's newest album, Under the Grey Banner, just a year and a half after it came out.

Under the Grey Banner is a continuation of the Dragonland Chronicles saga of the band's first two albums, interrupted by Starfall and Astronomy. With several symphonic interludes and spoken parts, it is pretty much the band at its most Rhapsody of Fire (or early Avantasia)-like, but with a decidedly Gothenburg spin: where RoF has insane neoclassical guitar noodling, Dragonland has classically Swedish guitar sounds paired with rapid-fire drumming mixed satisfyingly higher than their southern European counterparts.

The concept of the album is classic high fantasy: an evil king returns to crush the peoples of Dragonland under his iron fist, a prophesied hero comes to the land, rallies the people, and fights to otherthrow him and save the land. Simple as this sounds, the songs are extremely good and have been growing on me pretty steadily. After an all-symphonic instrumental intro to set the scene ("Ilmarion") comes the read lead-in track, "Shadow of the Mithril Mountains". It would be nice if the minute-long spoken prelude were part of the previous track, but after this the whole band explodes with intensity unlike anything heard on Astronomy, and simultaneously more orchestral flourishes than any of the non-instrumental suite songs to fit the fantasy setting. Except for the prelude, it's one of the strongest songs of the album.

"The Tempest" following it is even better, depicting the mythical storm that deposits the hero on Dragonland. Its pacing is slow and truly majestic with a well-placed violin solo, almost a better version of "Supernova" (a song that dropped my jaw when I first heard it). "A Thousand Towers White", the most straight-up power metal song, provides a nice counterpoint with a rapid 3-time tempo to depict Ilmarion's wondrous encounter with the gleaming capital of Dragonland and the corruption inside it.

"Fire and Brimstone" has an ear-catching, surprisingly progressive tempo that allows for some excellent trading-off vocals that resemble an opera; the characters almost seeming to interrupt each other with their lines gives a nice sense of many things happening at once as Ilmarion frees the princess of the elves from being burned as a witch. I should mention that Fred Johansson, the operatic vocalist who voices the evil king, is absolutely fantastic and steals the show in each of the three songs he appears in.

I lied; "The Black Mare" is the most power metal song of the album, with galloping triplets almost worthy of Iced Earth. It constantly trades between mellow narrative sections, crashing orchestral chords, and an incredibly fast and triumphant chorus to make Rhapsody of Fire jealous (compare with "Dawn of Victory").

The next two songs, "Lady of Goldenwood" and "Dûrnir's Forge", form a natural pair, the first placing the listener in an enchanted elven forest with airy, acoustic melodies and lots of keyboard; the second evoking a subterranean dwarven forge with ponderously heavy guitar chords, crashing drums, and blaring horns (and a verse sung by the deep-voiced Dwarven Council).

"The Trials of Mount Farnor" is fast, heavy, and minor-keyed enough to sound more like Swedish melodic death metal with Jonas Heidgart's vocals; the slower pre-solo breakdown is also quite epic. "Throne of Bones" is the calm before the storm, consisting of an amazing and theatric vocal solo by the king. Consequently, it  is possibly the best song on the album despite being under two minutes.

The eight-minute finale "Under the Grey Banner" tells of the final battle between the forces of good and evil for the fate of Dragonland, and as such is ridiculously epic and borderline-cheesy, with soaring horns, reverb-overloaded guitar and drum crashes in the intro alone. After a few slower verses we hear a lengthy and too-awesome-to-describe instrumental section depicting the main of the battle before Ilmarion and the king (who, as usual, is the standout of this song) begin trading lines in their duel. (Hint: Ilmarion wins)

For my fans of epic/symphonic/power/high fantasy metal, this album is a must-listen; behind the cheesiness lie some of Dragonland's best songs ever

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Helloween: A Primer

It's time to focus on a band that hasn't been getting nearly as much love on this blog as it deserves. The German power metal band Helloween helped invent the genre as an offshoot of speed metal in the 80s, and they have been assiduously pretending the 80s never ended ever since. While they rock as hard or fast as most of their descendants (DragonForce excepted), the most distinctive thing about Helloween is their ability to never take themselves too seriously and accept that, at heart, power metal is kind of ridiculous. While never straying into affectionate parody territory like Dream Evil, Helloween knows how to milk the "narm" factor for all it's worth, while still writing some top-notch metal. Including their new album Straight Out of Hell, they have 16 albums, and unlike so many other bands from the 80s, their recent ones don't suck!

Walls of Jericho (1985) ★★★☆☆
Helloween's first album dates back to before they signed Michael Kiske; their then-guitarist Kai Hansen does the vocals and consequently Walls of Jericho sounds more like a Gamma Ray album. It's more speed metal than true power metal, with more of the classically German focus on aggression, power, and, of course, high tempos. It's kind of repetitive and not as definitively power metal as later albums, as Hansen and the whole band were not at the top of their respective games yet, and it succeeds more as classic metal than power metal. Still, it has some decent songs like "Walls of Jericho / Ride the Sky" and "Murderer". Others like "Starlight", "Gorgar", and "Heavy Metal (Is the Law)" preface Helloween's future inability to take themselves totally seriously.

Keeper of the Seven Keys, Part I (1987) ★★★★★
Keeper of the Seven Keys, Part I is possibly the defining album of power metal. With new singer Michael Kiske and a more heroic, melodic sound that would become the foundation for the style of thousands of bands to come, this album is a classic. True, it is fairly short with only six full-length songs, and the lyrics are still getting there. Some songs like "A Little Time", and "I'm Alive" stay close to the classic metal themes of individuality and freedom, "Future World" is irresistible in its ridiculous saccharine hyperoptimism, and "A Tale That Wasn't Right" is a traditionally sappy ballad of heartache. The more esoteric "Twilight of the Gods", on the other hand, gets much more fantastical and interesting, and the thirteen-minute epic "Halloween" remains one of their best songs to this day. And besides the lyrics, Keeper of the Seven Keys is great simply for its status as truly prototypical power metal, predating all the stylistic and genre shifts to come. If it sounds cliche, it's because virtually all power metal to come was influenced by it. Each of the full-length songs is strong and a classic in its own right. For all intents and purposes, this is Helloween's first album.

Keeper of the Seven Keys, Part II (1988) ★★★★★
Keeper of the Seven Keys, Part II largely continues the work of defining the genre of power metal that its predecessor started, so it's hard to fault it for not sounding too different. It's perhaps a bit more on the zany side, with the lighthearted "Rise and Fall" and a whimsical homage to Frankenstein, "Dr. Stein". "Eagle Fly Free", "You Always Walk Alone", and "I Want Out" are more power metal classics about freedom and individuality (again, from before their straightforward style and lyrical themes became cliché). "Keeper of the Seven Keys", another epic, is one of Helloween's more progressive works, and possibly their best song with Kiske. I suspect it helped establish the lyrical center of power metal around the fantastical themes that later bands like Blind Guardian and Rhapsody of Fire would run with. Keeper of the Seven Keys could be considered, overall, a double album, and together the two parts define "classic" Helloween and form the blueprint for the storm of power metal to come.

Pink Bubbles Go Ape (1991) ★★☆☆☆
I know what you're thinking: "Pink Bubbles Go Ape? What kind of a name is that for a metal album?" Which is what I and every other Helloween fan have been wondering. In this and the next album, Michael Kiske started leading Helloween away from their usual fantastical subject matter and into the weird. In addition, guitarist Kai Hansen left the band in 1989 to form Gamma Ray, and Pink Bubbles suffers noticeably from the lack of his songwriting abilities. Songs like the short intro track, "Back on the Streets", "Your Turn", and "Heavy Metal Hamsters"(!?) go off the deep end from weird to just dumb. The riffs and melodies on "Goin' Home" or "I'm Doin' Fine, Crazy Man" are similarly weak. "Mankind" seems to be intended as another epic and is arguably one of the better songs on the album, but mostly falls flat compared to its precedent. And, unfortunately, it would all get even worse on the next album...

Chameleon (1993) ★☆☆☆☆
This much-maligned album is the culmination of the non-metal direction Kiske led Helloween in before his dismissal. The first track, "First Time", is actually not too bad, almost as if to reassure loyal fans, but then "When the Sinner" sounds more like some kind of guitar-infused big band dance song than power metal (see also "Music"). The genre of songs like "I Don't Wanna Cry No More", "Windmill", or "In the Night" can't be considered metal in any way, and even songs in a more conventional vein like "Revolution Now" seem dead and aimless even compared with Pink Bubbles Go Ape. I'm not sure exactly what musical movement Chameleon is trying to blend in with, but it's really only valuable to Helloween fans for historical purposes.

Master of the Rings (1994) ★★★★☆
Due to the creative differences between Kiske and the rest of the band made increasingly obvious by the last two albums, they replaced him with Andi Deris, their current vocalist, for Master of the Rings. The result, while still more musically adventurous than the Keeper of the Seven Keys albums, avoids the pitfalls of the last two albums with Kiske. Somewhat more intense than either Keeper album, it seems to inject a bit of the sound of Walls of Jericho into Helloween's classic sound. (See opening track, pseudo-speed-metal powerhouse "Sole Survivor") "Where the Rain Grows" is another classic tune with a great solo and amazing, really powerful vocal performance by Deris. "Perfect Gentleman" is a hilarious monologue from a delusionally narcissistic, self-proclaimed Casanova and one of Helloween's classic songs. "The Game Is On" seems to have been a social commentary on video games, but with its now-dated concerns and Game Boy-esque beeping it comes across as more of a nostalgic tribute to a bygone age of gaming. Master of the Rings isn't Helloween's best album, but it is a solid, memorable release that definitely recovers the ground lost by the last two.

The Time of the Oath (1996) ★★★☆☆
Despite its appearing to be a return to the fantastical stylings of Keeper of the Seven Keys, The Time of the Oath is the beginning of Helloween's stylistic shift from "classic" to "modern". Like so many mid-90s power metal albums, it is rather awkward, but the signs of progress are evident. Songs like "We Burn" and "Before the War" draw back from their speed metal origins to sharpen and harden their sound into a darker, more intense one that would come to be more definitive of their modern style. "Steel Tormentor" even evokes a bit of Judas Priest, and "Wake Up the Mountain" almost seems to look forward to 7 Sinners. Again, there are a few ballads: "If I Knew" and "Forever and One", a strong, sad one similar to "A Tale That Wasn't Right" Significantly, there are two new epics, "Mission Motherland" and "The Time of the Oath", both of them excellent and arguably the first since "Keeper of the Seven Keys". And the catchy but head-scratching "Anything My Mama Don't Like" continues Helloween's tendency to write bad-weird songs. The Time of the Oath and its next few successors constitute Helloween's least remarkable period, in my view, between their "classic" sound and their current, more refined one, but it's still a good, if not groundbreaking, power metal album.

Better than Raw (1998) ★★★☆☆
Better than Raw is something of a transitionary piece in Helloween's history, in which they throw a bunch of "raw" musical ideas into a cauldron and stir it up to see what will come out. The first two songs, "Push" and "Falling Higher", are a metallic one-two punch and probably their heaviest songs to this point. From there, Better Than Raw seems to go in every possible direction at once. The good: this album is at is best with some of the more progressive songs, like "Revelation", "Midnight Sun", and the ballad "Time" (which seems strangely reminiscent of Aerosmith's "Dream On" at times). The bad: "I Can", however, is fairly bland and adds little to the mix, and "Don't Spit on my Mind" and "Handful of Pain" seem like steps backward in both speed and power, more like subpar hard rock. And the weird: "Lavdate Dominvm" comes from nowhere, is sung entirely in Latin, and sounds so upbeat as to almost be jingle material. "Hey Lord!" almost seems to be channeling some Bon Jovi. Lots of musical elements that would become distinctives of later Helloween, for better or for worse, are visible here in their infancy.

Metal Jukebox (1999) ★★★★☆
This is an album of covers of Helloween's various musical influences, and as the name suggests is probably their most eclectic. As such, it has excellent covers of other German metal bands ("He's a Woman, She's a Man"), Swedish pop covers that work bizarrely well ("Lay All Your Love On Me"), and nonsensical yodeling ("Hocus Pocus"). The cross-genre ones are honestly the best, like "All My Loving" with furious 3-time double-bass drumming. The more progressive-rock cover of "Space Oddity" is also excellent. Not being terribly familiar with any of the originals, I'm not the best judge of this cover album, but it's pretty enjoyable on its own terms, in part because of its total randomness and good (borrowed) songwriting.

The Dark Ride (2000) ★★★★☆
Refining (or "cooking") the new direction embodied in Better Than Raw and not containing any covers, The Dark Ride was a decisive step in Helloween's stylistic shift from their classic fantastical sound to their modern, "darker and edgier" one. "Mr. Torture" mostly reflects this in its darker subject matter and heavy, "machine gun" strummed verses; "Mirror, Mirror" sounds almost brooding, and "Madness of the Crowds" has a constantly ascending refrain melody shared between the guitar and bass that sounds like an aural representation of going insane. "All Over the Nations", "Salvation", and the chorus of "Mr. Torture" are cleaner and more like a straight evolution of Helloween's "classic" sound. Also of note are "The Departed (Sun Is Going Down)" for its memorable chorus and the title track, which is a fairly good eight-minute epic. "If I Could Fly" walks a tightrope over the dark and light sides of this album, with the guitar and keyboard sharing the melodic line. Overall, The Dark Ride isn't terribly special on its own, but it does mark an important turning point in Helloween's history.

Rabbit Don't Come Easy (2003) ★★☆☆☆
Musically, Rabbit Don't Come Easy is another, shall we say, "eccentric mess" like Chameleon, though more of a mixed bag than a failure. Parts of it continue the refinement that The Dark Ride began as seen on excellent songs like "Open Your Life", "Listen to the Flies" and "Liar", the latter possibly being their darkest song of any album except 7 Sinners. "Just a Little Sign" is extremely strong musically, but the lyrics, repetitive and about trying to pick up a girl at a metal show, ruin it for me. Others, like the bizarre, rambling "Nothing to Say", are possibly some of the worst from the Deris era, and "Don't Stop Being Crazy" or "The Tune" are just bland. Some good songs on this album, but probably the weakest of the "modern" Helloween.

Keeper of the Seven Keys: The Legacy (2005) ★★★★★
After all the overly dark, offbeat, or just plain weird detours of previous albums, The Legacy is, as the name suggests, the spiritual successor to the classic Keeper of the Seven Keys albums and a great combination of "old" and "new" Helloween. By far the best example of this is "King for a 1000 [sic] Years", which is every bit the epic "Halloween" and "Keeper of the Seven Keys" were and then some, benefitting considerably from more modern, "metallic"-sounding production. It's progressive power metal at its finest, with not a dull moment in its fourteen minutes. This whole album in general has a decidedly grandiose, progressive bent, with another slightly shorter and more laid-back epic, "Occasion Avenue", at the beginning of the second disc. (Did I mention it's a double album?) The album has plenty of songs that sound like Helloween rethinking their past: "Invisible Man" harkens back to The Dark Ride and "King for a 1000 Years", "Born on Judgment Day", and "My Life For One More Day" are the closest Helloween has come to recapturing the epic glory of the original Keeper of the Seven Keys albums. The more banal "Come Alive" sounds most like Chameleon, unfortunately. But there are others that seem to look into the future, like "Occasion Avenue" or "Shade in the Shadow". There are some misses, like "Come Alive" or "Mrs. God", which definitely falls under "just plain weird", but on an album of this size there is plenty to enjoy.

Gambling with the Devil (2007) ★★★★★
With a tone more similar to The Dark Ride, Gambling with the Devil is a strong shift from Keeper of the Seven Keys: The Legacy's throwback "classic" sound to Helloween's current, more modern and serious one, perhaps in response to fans tired of the silliness of albums like Rabbit Don't Come Easy. (That sentence may have set my record for album title dropping) This new sound is exemplified in songs that surpass any of their previous work in intensity, like the fast and furious opening track, "Kill It", which has vocals harsh enough to almost be screams and a 3-time "zigzag" riff. "Paint a New World" is similarly impassioned. On the other hand, more melodic songs like "The Saints" and "Final Fortune" provide a nice balance; "As Long As I Fall" is a quasi-ballad with keyboard/piano and the guitars sharing the spotlight equally, somewhat like "If I Could Fly" from three albums ago. "Fallen to Pieces" and "Heaven Tells No Lies" are like condensed versions of the epics of previous albums with more interesting structure; "Fallen to Pieces" in particular could almost qualify as progressive metal. Overall, Gambling with the Devil successfully reestablished Helloween's dominance of the European power metal scene and revitalized their sound, and for that I'd say it's an excellent album.

Unarmed (2010) ★★★★★
Another experiment in the vein of Metal Jukebox, Unarmed is a collection of rerecordings of classic Helloween songs in a variety of non-metal genres that would, ironically, make Michael Kiske proud. (Even with Andi Deris singing many of his best songs) Some are just hilarious; "Dr. Stein" is jazzy with a prominent saxophone, "I Want Out" has a children's choir, and the ridiculous, lilting melody of "Perfect Gentlemen" honestly seems to fit the lyrics better than the original power metal style. This would be a terrible experiment in the vein of Chameleon if these were original songs and Helloween was serious about the stylistic change, but since these are tried and proven songs, it's more of an alternate look at the band's history. Other songs, like "If I Could Fly", "Forever and One", and "Fallen to Pieces" are in more of a symphonic rock style and are legitimately awesome. There is no better example of this than "The Keeper's Trilogy", a 17-minute medley of "Halloween", "Keeper of the Seven Keys", and "King for a 1000 Years" performed with a choir and 70-piece orchestra, which is possibly Helloween's best song ever. Unarmed is a delightfully strange album and a truly unique recomposition of some of the band's best work, possibly worth getting for "The Keeper's Trilogy" alone.

7 Sinners (2010) ★★★★★
In contrast to Unarmed, Helloween's penultimate album is their darkest and heaviest yet, continuing the trend started in Gambling with the Devil. It follows an interesting songwriting approach in which each song was written solely by one member of the band, providing an interesting mix of styles, all of them unrelentingly heavy, in sharp contrast to Unarmed. (Perhaps as a visual contrast, the cover features just about every kind of sharp object imaginable) Six songs were written by Deris; "Are You Metal?" and "Long Live the King" are both extremely fast, intense songs about the genre itself, "Where the Sinners Go" is slower and somewhat of a snarling anthem. More interestingly "Far in the Future", is a very strong semi-epic at nearly 8 minutes and "Smile of the Sun" manages to harness the slow pacing and tenderness of a ballad with none of the sappiness. The other band members wrote fewer songs, but perhaps because of this they tend to be stronger and more creative. By guitarist Sascha Gerstner, the extremely dark song "Who Is Mr. Madman?" is a sequel to "Perfect Gentleman" about the gentle/madman's current state of insanity. "Raise the Noise" by second guitarist Michael Weikath has more of a "classic" power metal sound and a flute solo that works bizarrely well. "World of Fantasy" by the bassist Markus Grosskopf is interesting in that it also has more of a "retro" sound, except that pitch-wise Deris' vocals stay in the midrange for pretty much the entire song. Overall, 7 Sinners is excellent but a little one-dimensional and focused on being as "metal" as possible (which is a mixed blessing). The muddy production doesn't help with this and is a casualty of the "loudness wars"; arguably it's the biggest thing holding these otherwise awesome songs back.

Straight Out of Hell (2013) ★★★★☆
With 7 Sinners acting as the culmination of Helloween's move towards a dark, heavy sound, their newest album Straight out of Hell sounds relatively laid-back despite being one of their heaviest to date. Though keeping the super-heavy texture and production of 7 Sinners, it tends to be lighter in mood, turning back to the more whimsical tone of their earlier albums. So "World of War" has a big, symphonic, bombastic sound to it that sounds pretty classic, over detuned, rapidly chugging guitar riffs, an interesting blend of old and new. "Far From the Stars" and "Waiting for the Thunder", in addition to ditching much of the abrasiveness of 7 Sinners, seem to be channeling some Stratovarius (but with less keyboard), and "Burning Sun" almost seems like the continuation of something from Keeper of the Seven Keys. There is also progress. The title track is another excellent merger of Helloween's melodic and heavy sides, and the opening song, "Nabataea", is a very strong 7-minute epic. I found myself humming its pre-final-chorus bridge when I realized why it was so catchy: it's the chorus melody from "Everytime We Touch" (also by a German artist...coincidence?). Straight Out of Hell may not be Helloween's top album from their "modern" period (that would probably be either Gambling with the Devil or Keeper of the Seven Keys: The Legacy). Though it introduces (or, often, reintroduces) some interesting ideas, it seems like a bit of a toned-down version of 7 Sinners. (Its similarly overcompressed production doesn't help with this) Not my first recommendation for recent Helloween, but a  pretty good album.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Sennheiser HD800s: Pure Sonic Perfection

I used to poke fun at people who would pay hundreds of dollars for a pair of headphones (Bose Triports; this was before Beats became huge). I feel like after having spent half my bonus on these things, I have forfeited that right. They have come.
This is how listening on the HD800s makes me feel.
The HD800s have been Sennheiser's flagship headphones since 2008, replacing the HD650s (previously reviewed here), and are branded as "the world's finest headphones". Though my extremely high expectations from wanting these headphones for years have probably colored my impressions, I'm inclined to agree with this assessment.
The HD800s are the result of Sennheiser basically telling its top engineers, "make the best-sounding headphones you possibly can, cost is no object". They have been designed for perfection from the ground up, bearing no resemblance to any of Sennheiser's lesser headphone lines (except the HD700, which came and is intentionally styled after them) or, indeed, any other headphone in existence. Sennheiser's design is normally sleek and ultramodern, but the HD800s can only be described as "futuristic". Though most of the design is plastic except for the driver housings and part of the band, they feel like the very opposite of cheap. Everything fits together precisely.
It's to be expected that a headphone this expensive should be extremely wearable (my biggest concern with the Audeze LCD-2), and this is definitely true of the HD800. The pads are not velour like I was expecting from the HD555 and HD650, but some kind of cushy foam (apparently microfiber fabric) that is extremely comfortable and provides a nice acoustic seal around the enormous earcups. They have the same split-pad design on the band as the HD650s, but much less caliper pressure. As a result, they are about as comfortable as the Audio Technica ATH-AD700s, feeling like a pillow on the head, but with less worry about them slipping down. (Though because of the low pressure they feel like they could slip forward or backward if I tilt my head) When I wear them, I don't want to take them off, even without any sound.

Unlike most headphones, the HD800s make little effort to hide the fact that they are basically small speaker cones positioned over your ears. The HD5x8 line has its "eargonomic acoustic refinement" reflector design to improve their imaging; the HD800s simply position the drivers farther away from the ears and at an angle so that sound enters the heads as naturally as if it were coming from the "real world". The result is by far the best, most lifelike imaging I've ever heard.

Speaking of drivers, the HD800s also reflect a truly unique driver design. Larger drivers produce better sound, especially at the low end, but they also allow for more harmonic distortion, especially in the middle which is allowed to oscillate freely. Sennheiser's solution was to give it a patented ring-shaped driver, which allows for much greater control of the driver surface and therefore allows the driver to be the biggest of any dynamic headphone, 56mm, with a frequency range of 8 Hz to 50 kHz.
So, with all of this precision German engineering, how do they sound? In a word: perfect. Contrary to my last review, I have mostly been preferring the HD650s for their overall balanced sound and strong low end, good for metal. But after hearing the HD800s, I could swear someone snuck into my apartment and replaced them with cheap knockoffs. The difference is barely tangible, but impossible to ignore.

The HD800s' frequency response is the most neutral and even I have ever heard (except possibly some electrostatics at a headphone meet). As the chart below shows, the HD650 has a bit of a bass "hump" around 100 Hz before dropping off at the extreme low end, and is also a bit lacking in treble performance (I was familiar with that; they didn't sound bright like the Beyerdynamic DT990s do). The HD800 evens out all of these discrepancies. No frequencies dominate or get left out; everything is perfectly balanced. The bass is strong and clear, but not overpowered; the treble "sparkles" but not to a distracting, sibilant degree like the DT990s; the mids, as expected from any Sennheiser headphones worth their salt, sound great.
And, of course, the transparency. The enormous ring-shaped transducers result in vanishingly low harmonic distortion. Switching between them and the HD650s, I could actually sense the "veil" that seemed to be in front of the latters' sound, fuzzing everything out almost imperceptibly. With the HD800s, that veil is gone. Of the sonic impurity that remains, I think more is due to the recording process (which was probably done with lesser headphones) than my amp. These headphones have no personality. You don't "hear" them; you only hear your music. And, of course, the other elements of your signal chain; I am planning to build a β22, a solid-state headphone amp renowned for its transparency, in the coming months as the perfect companion. Since I heard my first pair of "nice" headphones four years ago, my goal has been a sound system that just gets out of the way and puts no barriers between me and my music. In the HD800s, that goal has been realized. Worth it.