Iâve written many reviews on albums that I discovered in a particular point in my life. That point in time was from early 2007 to the spring of 2008, which was when I FIRST really actually GOT INTO extreme metal. Many of the first extreme metal bands I discovered at the time were melodic death bands. These bands were
Scar Symmetry,
Amon Amarth,
Nightrage,
Arch Enemy,
Wintersun (the last band I discovered during that time period), and
Dark Lunacy. I found
Dark Lunacy on this Pandora-ish website (NOT Pandora) where I found other metal bands like
Fleshgod Apocalypse,
Vomitory, blessthefall, and
Impending Doom. To this day, I remember that the exact song I heard on here by
Dark Lunacy was the masterpiece known as
Serenity (Iâll talk more about that particular track later in the review). In
Dark Lunacyâs first album, they lay down a lot of experimentation with emphasis on the mixture of baroque/classical elements and crunchy melodic death chunks. The unfortunate thing is that they through all those hard chunks into the blender, but they didnât let the blender run for long enough; so the smoothie didnât flow with ease and everything wasnât perfectly mixed together. In other words, the band didnât put enough effort into refining and perfecting the mixing of the two elements; they had a really hard time flowing together in a smooth and efficient manner. Three years after the release of
Devoid,
Dark Lunacy puts out their sophomore follow-up,
Forget Me Not.
Forget Me Not puts a little less emphasis on the baroque elements and a little more focus on the metal side of things. Hereâs the interesting part: there isnât as much of an improvement on
Devoidâs HUGE fault as I would have liked to see. In the track after the intro, the guitars are noticeably louder than the classical instruments; but the classical instruments still seem to be REALLY out of placeâŠbut not as out of place as they were in
Devoid. The violin in Lunacyrcus cuts through the music with no trouble at all like a brand new razorblade sliding across soft skin. The baroque elements sound a little less baroque-ish and more traditional. That minor change right there made the baroque elements fit the music SO MUCH BETTER! My favorite new element that
Dark Lunacy put in is the accordion during the really atmospheric parts.
The BIG improvement that
Dark Lunacy made during this album is that every musician seemed to get ten times better in every way imaginable! The new drummer has much more creativity and color in his playing. He also has the ability to play with considerable speed and technicality and use blast beats during the perfect times. The guitarists have a very dark and powerful sound that screams with emotion. The bassist actually plays a MUCH bigger part in the music on this album than on
Devoid. The bassist plays little âsolosâ here and there all throughout the album and he never sounds dry and empty like some bassists do; this guy plays with color. And last of all, the vocalistâs growls fit the definition of truly powerful growls. There really isnât much else I need to say about the vocals other than that.
The strongest and best song off this album is
Serenity. Although this track is broken up into sections that alternate between soft piano ballads and SUPER melodic death metal storms; the song is pretty much 50/50 as far as balance between the two sides goes. Iâve never forgotten the part that the piano plays in the very beginning of the song. Itâs one of those things that you donât have to listen to it to jog your memory, itâs one of those song clips that engraves itself in your memory to the point where you can play it in your head on command and it sounds EXACTLY like the original recording. I wouldnât be surprised if this particular song doesnât do that for you, but Iâm more than positive that you know what Iâm talking about and that itâs happened to you before.
Serenity is one of the most melodic and depressive melodic death songs as well as being one of my favorites. And itâs RARE that a single SONG speaks out to me this much; so donât take what I just said lightly.
Forget Me Not is a HUGE improvement from
Devoid, but it still has a whole lot of room for more improvement. Now that
Dark Lunacy improved both the baroque side and the metal side of their music, itâs time that they put their primary focus on successfully mixing the two elements together to make something amazing. I would give this album 16/20 for being a very memorable album and for just being awesome. I would recommend this to EVERYONE.