The music itself races along with the likes of furious power riffs such as on 'Solitaire', and then settles into bells chiming, and preternatural sounds on 'Part III The Journey'. The essence of the music is encapsulated within the beautiful arrangements, the crystalline vocals are mesmirising emanating from the incredible Tommy Karevik. The metal is left to the accomplished guitar execution of Thomas Youngblood, who is well backed by a rhythm machine from Sean Tibbetts' bass and Casey Grillo's drums. The symphonic textures are courteous of the sweeping keyboard finesse of Oliver Palotai. It is not a heavy album by any stretch of the imagination but has the kind of Nightwish sounds where metal meets Gothic with embellishments of keyboards. This is certainly the style that is becoming more popular with the teenage obsession with Gothic culture, especially as a soundtrack to 'Twilight', or 'True Blood'; listen to Continuum at the end of the album and you will hear the Gothic references. It has angelic choral voice intonations, soul stirring violins, and a crescendo of sweeping strings that flow organically to the end of the album.
One glance at the Kamelot backlogue of albums is enough to cement their reputation as lovers of the fantasy realm and the surreal on a very dark level, usually adorned by witch like beings of dark beauty that glare out menacingly or curl up into the shadows with their serpentine bodies preparing to pounce, in a background of castle gates and birds flapping around them in the glow of the moonlight. There is a market for this enigmatic imagery and music for all the reasons outlined, though I am not personally as taken with the Gothic metal meets symphonic genre as some will be. The album races by quickly and I had to focus to work out where one song ends and another begins. However, I can appreciate that the music is well performed, the vocals are top notch and it will appeal to the Kamelot fanbase. 'Silverthorn' is no masterpiece but a decent quality album with some haunting atmospherics and a sense of grandeur with sumptuous musicianship and just the right amount of metal thrown into the cauldron.
AtomicCrimsonRush | 3/5 |
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Source: http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=849199
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