Excalion - Waterlines
Apr. 29th, 2010 12:06 pm
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Rendered covers always look awkward and Poser-y to me - I'm now in a position to say it's no exaggeration that I've released albums with better cover artwork than this. |
The word has also been applied to this band, but admittedly, I can sort of see why the accusation is made because they're one of the most accessible new bands that I think I've heard in a while. There are none of the genre's more off-putting elements here - there is a complete lack of eighteen-minute epics about the emerald sword of the cybernetic angels, and indeed it's strange to see a track list where the majority of songs are around the four minute mark (with the only exception being the questionably-titled Soaking Ground at the end which is a bit more ambitious at six and a half). The songs don't really break away from a standard ABABCB structure and concentrate on a couple of motifs and melodies each, never getting particularly heavy at all and staying around the early Stratovarius/Sonata Arctica territory.
The album opens with this, which literally screams "this is a power metal video" from the very start, but then it immediately settles into something catchy and upbeat (and the video calms down as well in a worse way - it's just four minutes of them all performing unenthusiastically against a 3D Studio MAX background and can safely be ignored).
The man with the unfeasibly large mouth there is Jarmo Pääkkönen, a vocalist with the almost unique distinction of not having been in anything else before, but he quickly shows off that he's fluent in gibberish like the best of the genre's singers. He sounds, as you might expect, rather like a fusion of Timo Kotipelto and Tony Kakko.
Musically they sound like a decent stand-in for Stratovarius (when they were good), but seem to suffer from the same indescribable problem as them as well for me - most of the songs have good, memorable tunes and there are some outstanding high-energy choruses, but somehow, everything feels a bit... bland, as if it's not quite as amazing as it really could be. Perhaps because it's aimed at being too commercial. Damn it.
Power Metal
Date: 2010-04-29 07:46 pm (UTC)Re: Power Metal
Date: 2010-04-29 08:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-04-29 08:26 pm (UTC)Gonna get the other CD too.
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Date: 2010-04-29 09:56 pm (UTC)This is basically why I stopped looking at reviews on Encyclopedia Metallum. They absolutely vivisected Allen/Lande for the exact same reasons they are my single favorite musical act at this point. Masterplan's Aeronautics (my favorite album of theirs, naturally) didn't exactly get off light, either. Or maybe it did and that was exactly their problem with it.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-29 09:57 pm (UTC)Come a little closer
You and I
Affiliates forevermore....
no subject
Date: 2010-04-29 11:13 pm (UTC)That said, there's one review on Encyclopaedia Metallum that I really loved for this album, including such observations as "soaring vocals by a man whose trousers sometimes seem to be just a bit on the tight side" and "If you can tell Timo Tolkki from Tony Kakko and (perhaps more importantly) listen to both without feeling ill, "Waterlines" will be a worthy inclusion in your collection". It was one of those moments where I was reading something and really hoping that I also write like it.