Lamentations (Live at Shepherd's Bush Empire, London) Opeth

Album info

Album-Release:
2003

HRA-Release:
19.07.2016

Label: Music For Nations

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Moderner Rock

Artist: Opeth

Composer: Mikael Akerfeldt

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Intro01:24
  • 2Windowpane09:15
  • 3In My Time of Need06:37
  • 4Death Whispered a Lullaby07:09
  • 5Closure09:46
  • 6Hope Leaves06:12
  • 7To Rid the Disease07:11
  • 8Ending Credits04:22
  • 9Harvest06:15
  • 10Weakness06:04
  • 11Master's Apprentices10:34
  • 12The Drapery Falls10:55
  • 13Deliverance12:38
  • 14The Leper Affinity11:03
  • 15A Fair Judgement13:50
  • Total Runtime02:03:15

Info for Lamentations (Live at Shepherd's Bush Empire, London)

Since their formation in 1990 in Sweden, Opeth has risen to the forefront of the metal world; bringing many aspects of progressive rock/metal to a whole new audience by combining soft acoustic ambience with complex, melodic and heavy guitar. Previously only available on DVD, Lamentations is set to be released for the first time as ReMaster-Edition in High-Resolution Audio. The live album, originally recorded at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire on September 25, 2003 features Damnation (2003) performed in full along with a selection of tracks from Blackwater Park (2001) and Deliverance (2002).

„Opeth will most likely be remembered for adding class and elegance to the typically foreboding and nasty death metal realm. The Swedish group also surprised many by crossing over from black T-shirt-clad punters to musicianly prog rockers thanks to simultaneously recorded sister albums Deliverance (2002) and Damnation (2003), the latter setting aside their trademark forward-thinking, highly dynamic Scandinavian death metal for graceful, melodic, and contemplative excursions. With Damnation deemed a one-time experiment for Opeth, it seems appropriate that Lamentations: Live at Shepherd's Bush Empire documents a unique period in the band's evolution via a two-hour live show recorded in London, as well as an insightful 65-minute documentary, 'The Making of 'Deliverance' and 'Damnation'.' The live gig finds the band Jekyll-and-Hyde-ing through a two-hour set, split into mellow and beastly halves. The first is comprised almost completely of Damnation's relatively delicate Porcupine Tree-inspired mood pieces, best illustrated by the dynamic crescendos of 'Closure' and 'Death Whispered a Lullaby,' the Led Zeppelin/'No Quarter' Mellotron atmospherics of fragile number 'Weakness,' and instrumental 'Ending Credits' (which vocalist/guitarist Mikael Akerfeldt describes to the crowd as a blatant Camel rip-off -- a reference perhaps lost on the theater-full of metal worshippers). While the quieter songs lack the hair-whipping immediacy of Opeth's more aggressive material, Akerfeldt, whose melodic vocal abilities shine on such material, appropriately explains the band's M.O. while introducing 'To Rid the Disease': 'Just because it's slightly mellow doesn't mean it's less evil.' Viewing the two-hour show as a whole, however, one realizes Opeth is simply building tension (or impatience?) for the crowd-pleasing, jagged Swedish ice shards to come: Five expansive and stunningly masterful extreme-metal epics, including the inventive, wallop-packing riffery of 'The Drapery Falls' and 'Deliverance'; Akerfeldt telling the crowd that such songs are 'what we really sound like' -- although the group disappointingly delves no deeper into its catalog than 2001's Blackwater Park. While the group isn't exactly the most visually engaging live band, their lack of gimmickry and intense focus on the music are refreshing, and the live show's overall production keeps Lamentations from being a needlessly arid, two-hour sit-a-thon -- mostly thanks to the anamorphic widescreen presentation, extraordinary 5.1 Dolby digital surround mix, and intimate camera angles (although the Akerfeldt 'orifice cam' gives a few too many close-ups of the vocalists oral and nasal cavities). The documentary, as the title implies, chronicles Opeth's 2002 recording sessions; disappointingly, the film only brushes the surface of the group's stress-filled studio time -- they faced massive technical difficulties and ended up switching studios mid-way through -- but offers plenty of in-depth, equal-time interviews with all the bandmembers and producer Steven Wilson, touching on writing, recording, and influences. Certainly, only the most diehard Opeth-ateers will appreciate the documentary footage, but as an overall capturing-the-moment-type document, Lamentations as a whole serves only to increase one's appreciation for the band's diverse and unparalleled combination of death metal, unwieldy, ambitious prog, and earthy folk -- and exemplifying exactly why Opeth stands head and shoulders above most of its Scandinavian peers when it comes to creativity, musicianship, and intelligence.“ (John Serba, AMG)

Mikael Åkerfeldt, vocals, guitar
Peter Lindgren, guitar
Martin Mendez, bass
Martin Lopez, drums
Additional musicians:
Per Wiberg, session keyboard and backing vocals
Steven Wilson, lyrics on 'Death Whispered a Lullaby'

Recorded 25 September 2003 at Shepherd's Bush Empire


Opeth
An unstoppable force for uniqueness amid a sea of generic swill, Opeth have been setting the rulebook ablaze and ploughing a uniquely progressive and exploratory furrow for nearly 25 years now. Formed in Stockholm in 1990, the band led by singer, guitarist and songwriter Mikael Åkerfeldt began life as maverick and honorary members of the then flourishing Swedish death metal scene, but from their earliest recordings onwards this band have neither conformed nor exhibited any desire to be restricted to a single genre. Displaying a relentless lust for evolutionary motion, Opeth’s first three albums – Orchid 1995, Morningrise (1996) and My Arms, Your Hearse (1998) - set the band firmly apart from everything else that was happening in metal during the 90s. Instinctively brave and effortlessly mysterious, these were groundbreaking records that could be superficially described as ‘progressive death metal’, but which were plainly much more than that: a singular expression of a profound love for music in its bewildering entirety that served the band extremely well over the decades that followed. By the time Opeth released Still Life in 1999 (prompting a spiritual and professional bond with prog icon Steven Wilson that survives to this day) they were simply in a class of their own, taking metal into uncharted territory as a matter of habit as they skilfully weaved all manner of disparate influences into their unmistakable trademark sound.

An instant classic that has gone on to become one of the most revered albums in recent history, 2001’s Blackwater Park proved to be a decisive moment in Opeth’s career, leading them to a succession of extensive tours around the globe and ensuring that the band were universally hailed as something very special indeed. With Åkerfeldt’s musical vision and refusal to kow-tow to current trends propelling them breathlessly forward, the band moved on through the two-headed derring-do of 2002’s Deliverance (winner of the 2003 Swedish Grammy award for Best Hard Rock Performance)and its startlingly mellow and pointedly non-metallic follow-up Damnation (2003), enhancing their credentials as true inheritors of progressive rock’s restless spirit along the way. Perfecting their established sound on 2005’s Ghost Reveries and bending it into warped and disturbing shapes on the critically acclaimed Watershed in 2008, Opeth entered their third decade with a formidable reputation and a huge international fan base. A sold out show at London’s legendary Royal Albert Hall (later documented on a special live album and DVD) signified that the band were now fully deserving of their status as true greats of the modern age.

And then in 2011, with typical audacity, they released their tenth album, Heritage. Although most fans were immediately entranced by the album’s daring reinvention of the Opeth sound, its contents were hugely adventurous and took the band ever further into an experimental realm that most of their contemporaries would never have even considered, let alone conquered with such breathtaking aplomb. Eschewing the death metal vocal style that had long been a part of their arsenal, Åkerfeldt and his band mates were torching the rulebook once again. Yet more tours followed, including some jaw-dropping acoustic shows that threw fresh light on the whole Opeth experience, and despite a smattering of negative reactions from truculent purists, the Heritage era signalled a heartening revitalisation of a band now more than two decades old. And that glorious creative rejuvenation continues on the band’s long-awaited eleventh studio album, Pale Communion.

“The best way for me to write is always to just write the stuff that I want to hear myself,” states Mikael today. “I’m pretty headstrong, so a few negative reactions to Heritage didn’t push me in any way. That album started something new. Every record feels like part of a chain. We wouldn’t have done Heritage without the previous records and the same is true of Pale Communion. I sat down and wrote the songs like I did for Heritage and the one before that. Heritage rejuvenated the band a little bit and I could see a way to continue doing this band without focusing on what we’re known for. We’d done that for so many records that I was a bit fed up with it. Now we have a future and Pale Communion is the continuation of that.”

Yet another compelling evolutionary step and a consolidation of the foundations laid down on Heritage, Pale Communion is simply another sublime piece of sonic artistry from one of the greatest bands on the planet. From the skewed grooves and dazzling atmospherics of the opening Eternal Rains Will Come to the devastating orchestral sweep and melodic precision of the closing Faith In Others, it is an album that expands Opeth’s sonic palette beyond all measure while still retaining that mercurial essence that first made them such a unique proposition. As Mikael explains, Pale Communion is a record that came together intuitively and without compromise, driven forward by the magical chemistry between all five members of the band.

“I would have to say that we’re happy band right now and there have been times when we weren’t happy,” he states. “Everyone’s pulling their weight and it feels like a collective with the same ideas. We’ve been touring a lot for the Heritage record, so we’re a tight unit. We hang out a lot as friends. We play well and we get along well and we have a mutual understanding of where we want to take this band. And I know the guys can play anything. They’re fantastic musicians. As I was writing the songs, Fredrik [Åkesson, guitar] came down to my studio to lay down some solos. He was really involved in the process and listening to whatever I came up with. It was the first record for Joakim [Svalberg, keyboards] and he’s been really psyched about doing this record. Long before we started recording he was saying that he couldn’t wait to be involved, and he really stepped up to the plate. Axe [drummer Martin Axenrot] and [bassist Martin] Méndez are a tight unit too. Axe went over to Barcelona where Méndez lives to rehearse for a few days and then they put everything down in three or four days in the studio. It was easy. It was easy for everybody.”

In keeping with Opeth’s oft-professed love of the classic rock, hard rock and progressive records of the early 70s, Pale Communion was recorded at the legendary Rockfield studios in Wales. Soaking up the atmosphere of the place where such immortal albums as Judas Priest’s Sad Wings Of Destiny and Queen’s Sheer Heart Attack were recorded 40 years ago, Mikael could hardly have found a more suitable location for the recording of his band’s new material.

“I do like many records that were made there and it’s a legendary studio,” he agrees. “We like to pay homage to that stuff. The place where we made Heritage is famous for Abba recording there, for instance! But Rockfield was available, it was fairly cheap, it was a residential studio and they cooked for us! It’s right in the middle of nowhere so we know we wouldn’t be distracted by the city lights or pubs or whatever. That’s why we chose it. But then, of course, Sad Wings Of Destiny was recorded there so it can’t be complete shit! I think we could’ve made a good sounding record anywhere, but the location and the logistics of being there were good for us.”

While Heritage was a proud move away from the digitised uniformity of modern metal and into the beatific warmth of old school analogue, Pale Communion is an altogether sharper and more vivid representation of Opeth’s ongoing development. Overwhelmingly melodic and yet remorselessly diverse and unpredictable, these eight songs are as potent and mesmerising as anything in the band’s illustrious canon. From the exquisite ebb and flow of Cusp Of Eternity – the first new song to be released into the wider world – and the epic, menacing sprawl of the ten-minute Moon Above, Sun Below through to the throbbing instrumental perversity of Goblin (which, of course, was inspired by the Italian prog band of the same name), the lush, country-tinged harmonies and rhythmic rumble of River and the gorgeous strings and pin-sharp melodic thrust of Faith In Others (“the best song Mikael has ever written…” according to Steven Wilson), Pale Communion is another flawless triumph from a band that seem to still be gathering strength and gaining momentum. Who knows what the future will bring…

“It’ll be our 25th anniversary next year and we’re 11 records in. We’ll just see where it takes us, as always,” says Mikael. “I hope people appreciate that we don’t play by the rules. I want us to be in a position where we’re accepted for what we are, and not what people want us to be. I guess we’re a rock band but we do a little bit of everything and that’s what I like about it. It makes it interesting and fresh for us as musicians to not be pigeonholed and to not be pure. It would be complete death for me as a musician to just do one thing. I admire bands that can do that, but are they true to themselves? Don’t they have any other influences? That’s quite impressive and probably harder than branching out. But we can’t do that. It’s impossible for us. I don’t know where we’re going next and that’s exciting to me.”

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