Overrated Classics: The Revenge

What held it back for me was the drumming. The drummer wasn't terribly proficient with double-bass, kind of one-dimesional and somewhat behind the rest of the band talent-wise.

Have you ever read interviews with Dan Swano (at whose studio they recorded the album) about the amount of work he had to put into editing the drumming to even get it to that point? Apparently the guy couldn't even stay in time... what a joke!
 
I did, but I deleted it. I get tired of arguing with morons about the same shit over and over so I'm just going to ignore threads like this from now on. People need to get a life and listen to whatever they want. I don't care what anyone else thinks about an album, because I probably hear it differently than you.

if everyone had this attitude the only on-topic thread we'd need here would be the recommendations thread

i think you get way too worked up over posts on an internet forum fyi
 
now if only the whole message board had the intelligence of spectacular views than we wouldn't need a message board at all.
 
Sacramentum - Far Away From the Sun

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Even in the insular world of black metal, celebrity and sensationalism often serve to shape perception in ways that obscure the actual nature of reality. A classic case in point is illustrated by the relative notoriety of Dissection when compared with other Swedish black metal acts of the mid 1990s (most notably Sacramentum and Dawn). Despite being considerably inferior to and far more conventional than their peers, Dissection is seen as the leading light of Sweden's melodic black metal movement, largely due to the relentless self-promotion of band leader Jon Nodtveidt (who spent much of the 90s making empty threats against Burzum's Varg Vikernes), as well as Nodtveidt's much publicized arrest and conviction for the brutal (and unprovoked) murder of a homosexual. The hype propelled Dissection to a deal with metal major Nuclear Blast at a time when its contemporaries were languishing on small European labels with limited (or no) access to British and North American distribution channels.

As a result, brilliant albums like Sacramentum's Far Away From the Sun remain quite obscure (or worse, simply dismissed as 'Dissection clones') while a mediocrity like Storm of the Light's Bane is widely hailed as a genre-defining classic. This, of course, could not be farther from the truth. Far Away From the Sun is no Dissection rip-off, and, indeed, not only far exceeds anything Dissection released, but must be counted among the very best metal albums ever recorded.

That isn't to say that there aren't some superficial similarities between the bands. Like Dissection, Sacramentum developed an approach that focused on the melodic possibilities of black metal, as well as bringing a level of technical precision hitherto uncommon in the genre. However, where Dissection offered a summary of several generations of metal technique through allusions to death metal (percussion), black metal (vocals and riff texture) and heavy metal (tonal consonance and Maidenesque guitar harmonies), Far Away From the Sun finds Sacramentum firmly rooted in black metal while looking back and forward to a more classically constructed expressive form.

Technically, this album is masterful. While the playing isn't showy or athletic, it is highly complex and pulled off with absolute precision by the band. Music like this doesn't just happen, it requires great skill to play and great intelligence and passion to create. Far Away From the Sun is like a Gothic cathedral, a towering monument to darkness and light that yields its secrets reluctantly, but rewards the patient listener with a work of ecstatic beauty (the mix is excellent, making use of a subtle layering of instruments that is both echoing and dense at the same time, while still leaving each distinctly audible). Flowing, labyrinthine melodies with a distinctly classical turn are the order of the day, and this sense is heightened by Sacramentum's frequent use of polyphony and counterpoint (both between guitar lines and between guitar and bass), giving Far Away From the Sun a decidedly ancient aesthetic weight.

Where Far Away From the Sun truly excels is in its ability to create and sustain a sense of unfolding unfolding drama, both internally within individual songs, and holistically, when taken as an album. A overriding tension between creation and dissolution dominates the album, played out through the clever manipulation of contrast: consonance wars with dissonance and ambiguous resolutions, long legato melodic phrases are deconstructed by frenetic bursts of blasting percussion, and the essential beauty of the music is set against the throat shredding vocal performance of singer/bassist Nisse Karlén. While none of the songs are particularly long by metal standards, Sacramentum's mastery of dynamic tension (which emerges not so much in overt variation of volume, but in the more subtle manipulation of riff textures, chord shapes and rhythmic patterns to create contrasts in intensity) renders each song a truly epic mini-opus driving toward a conclusion that is simultaneously hopeful yet ultimately tragic.

10/10
 
SotLB is pretty average; I've always felt so, but the concensus is that it's a classic. Maybe I'm missing something since I didn't hear it at the time it came out or anything. I heard most of the classics first, and SotLB never even came close.
 
Yes: Far Away from the Sun > Storm of the Lights Bane.
Well, yeah, both in longevity and composition. Still I think Storm of the Light's Bane is worthy of praise(The Somberlain moreso). Some people are just too quick to label anything that isn't perfect as mediocre shit. Sad.