Emerald Forest and the Blackbird

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17/20
Band Name Swallow The Sun
Album Name Emerald Forest and the Blackbird
Type Album
Erscheinungsdatum 01 Februar 2012
Recorded at Finnvox Studios
Musik GenreDeath Doom
Mitglieder die dieses Album besitzen90

Tracklist

1.
 Emerald Forest and the Blackbird (ft. Aleah Stanbridge)
 09:57
2.
 This Cut Is the Deepest
 05:20
3.
 Hate, Lead the Way
 06:13
4.
 Cathedral Walls (ft. Anette Olzon of Nightwish)
 06:46
5.
 Hearts Wide Shut
 05:55
6.
 Silent Towers
 04:01
7.
 Labyrinth of London (Horror Pt. IV) (ft. Aleah Stanbridge)
 08:29
8.
 Of Death and Corruption
 05:00
9.
 April 14th
 08:29
10.
 Night Will Forgive Us
 06:41

Total playing time: 01:06:51

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Swallow The Sun



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Review @ VesselsOfBlood

10 Juli 2012

Majestic Death Doom Metal

Swallow The Sun is a legend in the metal scene. Hailing from Finland since 2000, this group has painted their reputation in the music world as one of the pioneers of dramatic, doom-induced, and melancholic death metal alongside My Dying Bride. After the release in 2009 of “New Moon,” one of the band’s best and most beautiful releases up to date, it was questionable whether the group could top themselves in their following record. However, in early 2012, this Finnish sextet answers that question with a simple “Yeah, we definitely can,” thanks to their fifth full-length album “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird.” As this band appears to be starting to point their fingers towards a new direction in their prolific genre of emotional metal, Swallow The Sun flawlessly proves that their awesome craft hasn’t ran thin at the very least after all these long years.

While “New Moon” offered a more raw and death metal-oriented sound, “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird” sets the band’s sights to a more atmospheric, operatic, and mellow sound. Their new sound parallels to the gothic and dramatic music that bands such as Draconian and Katatonia play, but not to the point where it’s simply a blatant rip-off of either of those band’s works. This is really a good thing, because it completely underlines the gloominess and the drama that Swallow The Sun has been generating before this record came out. One very good example of this is the album’s title track, which is everything that a death-doom metal song should be: Slow-paced, mystical, gracefully transitioning, highly dramatic, and darkly operatic. The softer and mellower segments of this track, which fittingly include the ghostly voice of female singer Aleah Stanbridge, only add to the boldness of the explosiveness of the heavy parts of the song, where vocalist Miko Kotamäki’s seamlessly transforms his soft singing into powerful screaming and growls. This sort of formula appears also most other tracks, especially in tracks such as “Silent Towers,” which brings back memories of their previous record, and the soaring “Of Death and Corruption.” On the other hand, tracks such as “April 14th,” show the much softer side of this band’s music.

All these tracks are just great, but the best that “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird” has to offer to its listeners is the song entitled “Cathedral Walls.” Like the other tracks, this song stays true to Swallow The Sun’s melancholy and emotional roots, until about halfway into the track, there is yet another bold gothic death metal segment that storms its way throughout until it gracefully fades back into the music’s dark subtlety. Speaking of those beautifully trailing segments of this particular track, they feature the voice of singer Anette Olzon, the current singer for legendary symphonic metal act Nightwish. This could not have been a more perfect and fitting guest appearance for a mostly benevolent track such as this, and ultimately adds to the music’s sorrowful effect. Out of all of the others, “Cathedral Walls” is probably the largest of all of the gems that are concealed within “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird.”

If the music itself wasn’t enough, even the lyrics also bear the same mark of darkness and emotion as the songs themselves. Instead of some generic and emo lyrics about how some guy got heartbroken from breaking up with or being betrayed by his girlfriend, Swallow The Sun defines sorrow not only musically, but also lyrically in quite possibly the most poetic and beautiful way imaginable. Going back to the title track “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird,” at the start of the track and onward, Miko Kotamäki poetically and quietly reminisces the death of a child through a parent’s perspective, declaring how “[he] will bury [his child] on the highest hill, beside the tallest tree where winter will cover [him] and build the biggest castle” and “soon the angels will carry [him] over the edge over the world.” This type of lyrics perfectly match the dark yet emotional mood of the music, Another strong example of the poetic lyrics that overlap “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird” lies in the final track “Night Will Forgive Us,” which looks back into one’s painful and tragic past through a long and dark poem, including lines such as “Time won’t heal, it just buries the pain, and slowly changes form” and “Loneliness, so hard to bear, when these rooms breathe emptiness.” However, the lyrics contained in this particular track also sheds a flicker of light to it, which once again, fits the emotion of the song greatly, where it states “Time will wait for us in this early hour, like the ghosts still lingering on the flowers” and “But still your heart was strong to lead us all through.” Lyrics such as this bulk up the emotional and dramatic flow of the music, and only serve Swallow The Sun in this record as pure poetry for purely dark and dramatic metal.

To make a long story short, Swallow The Sun has made an awesome return 3 years after the release of “New Moon” in 2009. The question is, is “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird” any better than the previous installment? Maybe, but this record easily brands the mark into this Finnish sextet’s history as one of their best and most stellar records yet. Everything about this record is so well-crafted and dramatic, in both the music and lyrics. The fusion of mellow and emotional segments of the tracks and the slow but bold operatic death metal uprisings render “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird” as one of the greatest of Swallow The Sun’s efforts that everyone should give a try, even for those who aren’t too deep into the metal scene. With the new gothic metal direction this band is taking in “Emerald Forest and the Blackbird,” it will be even more interesting to see what this stellar group will do with it.



EDIT: For those who have read this review earlier, the rating was lowered for this album (20/20 to 17/20) for a couple reasons: One, the screamed vocals can sound a tad forced, and two, the production feels a bit empty. It's a stellar and powerful record, nonetheless.


4 Kommentare

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Crinn - 10 Juli 2012: That is one of the coolest album covers I've ever seen o.o
VesselsOfBlood - 10 Juli 2012: Oh yeah, definitely. :D
VoxMonster - 13 Juli 2012: I'm so happy to see the reviews on this site lately. You really hit the nail on the head. This was my album of the year until just recently being slightly edged out by Meshuggah's Koloss. Just slightly and they are two completely different albums so it's a tuff call. This is definitely one of the best albums this year no matter how you look at it. I give it a 19/20 only because the final track is not quite as good as the rest of the album, but this is a landmark release for this band. I was lucky enough to see them open for Katatonia at The Lab in St.Paul, MN. They did tracks from this album. It was an amazing show!
VesselsOfBlood - 13 Juli 2012: Thank you so much! Yeah, not sure just yet if this is MY album of 2012, but it's definitely on the list. Also gotta remember to check out Koloss soon...
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Review @ Crinn

03 Januar 2013

18/20 A Melodic Death Masterpiece

Just like their brothers in Eternal Tears of Sorrow, Swallow the Sun has always been one of the most melodic death metal bands out there. For some reason, Swallow the Sun never really got the attention they deserved from the majority of metalheads out there. Their major breakthrough album, Hope, got the attention of all of Europe and much of the people here in the states where I am. Hope’s follow-up, New Moon, didn’t prove to be as successful as far as attention and sales though; but the album received generally positive feedback from the critics. When Emerald Forest and the Blackbird was released, it was like the whole world completely forgot about the new Arch Enemy album and wouldn’t stop talking about “this amazing Finnish melodic death album”. Almost every webzine, magazine, reviewing site, metal blog (now including myself), and metal news source that I’ve looked at have reviewed this album. Well, I can at least somewhat understand how the immense hype for this album was possibly created, because well…look at the goddamn artwork! Just seeing the artwork on the ad I saw on the internet made me check it out (and of course my pre-existing love for Swallow the Sun); that and the slightly over-mentioned and over-hyped fact that Anette Olzon (Nightwish vocalist at the time) makes a momentary guest appearance on the fourth track.

One aspect that I keep coming across again and again about what people say about this album; in this case the people that had a more critical opinion towards it, is the trendiness. I’m going to be honest right off the bat, I love this album, it’s amazing, but I also know that there are several trends that Swallow the Sun have chosen to partake in (whatever the reason was). This is something that’s popped up very recently, there are suddenly A LOT of people that absolutely BASH any death metal or black metal album that has a lot of orchestral and symphonic elements. What the fuck happened? Last I heard, it was cool to have tons of epic keyboards and symphonies in your music. But when I read several reviews on newer albums like Scar Symmetry’s The Unseen Empire, Wintersun’s Time 1 (that pisses me off), Ex Deo’s Caligvla, Dimmu Borgir’s Abrahadabra, Epicloud by the Devin Townsend Project, and Stones Grow Her Name by Sonata Arctica, for EVERY single one, the PRIMARY reason for most of the criticism is one or more of the following: “too many keyboards”, “too digital”, “too dependent on symphonic and orchestral elements”, “the fact that there’s a real orchestra instead of keyboards is made too big of a deal”, or something like that. I guess I’m way behind everyone and what’s “in” and what’s “out-of-style”.

There’s always a risk that metal bands take when using an excess amount of keyboards and symphonies in their music, and that’s cheesiness. It’s just WAY too fucking easy to unintentionally compose and arrange the symphonic parts in a way that sounds really hokey and cheesy. In some cases, it’s on purpose, but it sounds cool (i.e. Epicloud). But there are some bands that have recently figured out how to have that epic sound created by the symphonies without the cheesiness (like Wintersun, Ex Deo, Septicflesh, etc.). Except the mood that the orchestras and keyboards in Swallow the Sun creates is much different than most other bands. Instead of the mood being a really epic, powerful, and upbeat one, the mood that the keyboards in Swallow the Sun’s music creates is one of deep emotion, tenseness, sorrow, and pain. And to be honest, it’s one of the most beautiful moods I’ve ever heard a melodic death album create. My evidence to back this up: the first track (also the title track) when the heavy guitars and the agonizing growls and screams come in with undeniable intensity and edginess. Swallow the Sun has always had this quality about them in their music, but now that I’ve heard Emerald Forest and the Blackbird, I now know that they have truly mastered it. Bands such as Katatonia, Eternal Tears of Sorrow, and Agalloch are among some of the other metal bands that have mastered the depressive sound without going full-on raw black metal like Xasthur and Woods of Desolation.

The vocals in Emerald Forest and the Blackbird are particularly interesting because you hear every vocal style that has been used throughout the band’s career. You can hear the extremely deep, mouth-watering growls and the tranquilizing singing from Ghosts of Loss and The Morning Never Came, the nasty screams from Hope, and the high-pitched shrieks from New Moon (although every album had its fair share of that BEAUTIFUL singing). Going back and using all of those different vocal styles helps create a vast number of possibilities for more original-sounding material (see, recycling isn’t always bad, it doesn’t ALWAYS have to be completely new). The deep growls aren’t NEARLY as deep and powerful as the growls in Ghosts of Loss and The Morning Never Came. If they were to bring those exact same-sounding growls back to be used in this record, the power of the overall sound would have skyrocketed. But, since they haven’t, the extremely powerful, but not QUITE as deep growls that we hear in Emerald Forest (that’s what I’m going to call that album from now on) are what we’re going to have to live with; and don’t get the impression that I’m saying the growls on Emerald Forest aren’t anything short of demonic.

Now that I’ve listened to Emerald Forest more than three dozen times, I can now say that this is Swallow the Sun’s most melodic album to date. This moving in a much more melodic and less death metally direction is another one of these so-called trends. Since the newest releases by melodic death and progressive death bands like In Flames, Opeth, Amorphis, Scar Symmetry, and Wintersun (not really much to work with) are much farther from a pure melodic death sound than their earlier works, people are pointing fingers at Swallow the Sun and considering them part of this trend because, seemingly out of pure fucking coincidence, this is their most melodic album to date. For me, since they still hold that extremely gothic doomy sound, the vibe of Emerald Forest seems to fit Swallow the Sun very comfortably.

Oh, but how could I write a review on this album and not mention the major guest-appearance!? Anette Olzon, at the time, frontwoman of the biggest symphonic metal band ever, Nightwish (well, it actually seems to be a tie between them and Apocalyptica, but you get the picture). Yes, I do think that Anette’s voice is beautiful and unique, but it’s obvious to everyone that the reason Swallow the Sun has made such a big motherfucking deal about her guest appearance (it’s mentioned in every single press release the band and their label made on the album before and on its release) is publicity and sales increase. OH FUCK, THEY’RE SELL-OUTS! Yeah, you can fuck off now, because that’s not the case. Because although this helped boost album sales and attractiveness as well as the artwork, Anette’s singing truly does add in an outside touch that helps further the beauty of the ballad-like song that she’s on. It’s actually really surprising how much of a positive effect Anette’s voice has on that one song. But seriously, the significance of it is over-exaggerated and was over-mentioned to the point where it was beyond obvious that they were taking advantage of her fame and using it as a marketing tool to boost sales. Why not make it a cameo appearance and have it secretly mentioned in the liner notes? Like when Suicide Silence had Frank Mullen of Suffocation on one of the tracks from The Black Crown.

Emerald Forest and the Blackbird is Swallow the Sun’s best album to date. Thanks to excess marketing, advertising, and a guest-appearance from one of metal’s most loved (and most hated) female singers, this album and the band have acclaimed well-deserved and much-overdue success and attention. Not only to fans of doom metal, gothic metal, and melodic death, but to any fans of emotional, melodic, and dark music is who I would give out high recommendations for this album (and band). Swallow the Sun achieve many obstacles, including completely mastering several things that they have been doing for their entire career. The only question left is: what’s next? I can’t possibly begin thinking of possible directions that the next album will go that would make it better than Emerald Forest. I would give Emerald Forest and the Blackbird 18/20.

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