In less than a decade,
Nightwish had taken the world by storm, inventing a new subgenre of metal and inspiring a legion of European-bound imitators in the process. They were become the biggest thing to come out of Finland in the
Music world, to say nothing of the world of metal. Where else was there to go from here?
Alas, with the benefit of hindsight, this album may very well mark what would become the beginning of the end for
Nightwish.
Which is not to say that 2002's
Century Child is a bad album: by no means! This ranks perhaps as the best and most consistent album since
Oceanborn. Powerful headbangers like "Slaying the
Dreamer" or my personal favorite "
End of All Hope" positively soar, resting comfortably alongside more mellow and somber affair like "Forever Yours" and "
Ocean Soul". Tuomas'
Dead Boy is brought back for "
Dead to the World" and the epic album closer "Beauty of the
Beast", which hearkens back in name, if not in subject matter, to the Villenueve fairy tale from
Angels Fall First. There's no shortage of good tracks, and the inclusion of
Tarot bassist/vocalist Marco Hietala adds another powerful voice to the already mighty sirenic wail of
Tarja Turunen.
So why is this the beginning of the end? Well, it all turns to our perpetual sad-boy Tuomas. On this album particularly, and on the next three to follow, we find him wrestling with being suddenly a big band. Whether intentional or no, this lead to him steadily altering the sound of
Nightwish. Oh it's still metal, and high quality: just like
Oceanborn, you can throw a dart at the track list on this album and land on a solid piece. But it's worth noting that the sound is nevertheless being steadily altered. Empuu, a shred-master in his own right, is being delegated to riff-master and in some cases, doing nothing more than playing chords over which Tuomas can show off his compositional skills. Granted, the Finnish halfling does a good job with what he's given, and one can see some
Megadeth influences in the second half of "Slaying the
Dreamer". But that, tied with
Tarja's typically dark vocal tone brightening up considerably - noticeably on the aforementioned "Slaying the
Dreamer" and "
Ever Dream" - not to mention a killer take on
Broadway showtunes (hey, Disney is basically that and they already went there on "FantasMic"), are indications of the band's shift from a symphonic power metal band to what can be referred to - both lovingly and a little sarcastically - as a "Tim Burton metal" band.
That is to say, a band that makes the same kind of catchy, dramatic, darksome, dare I say "poppy",
Music as Burton's regular
Musical collaborator Danny Elfman.
This style of the band would continue on for the next nine years of the band's existence (yes, even into the much maligned second era). Whether or not that is a good thing sonically is up for debate, but it bears notice that here the band settled into a sound that could very much be called "their own." No matter how many bands have tried to imitate them over the years, they never quite got the emotive style that this album here fashioned. Unfortunately, as stated above, that meant that we would be in for a lot less headbanging power metal pieces and more down-paced somber affair.
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