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TIME LOSTEnchantHeavy Prog |
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Things get started with "Blind Sided" that is highlighted by the low end guitar melody that comes and goes throughout the song. "New Moon" is an old tune that is all about the great vocals of Ted Leonard. Some good but short synth work, and the song ends with an extended guitar melody. "Under The Sun" is one of my favourites on this record, opening with a gentle guitar melody, this very good song features crisp drumming, some good synth work and some great guitar.
"Foundations" opens with a keyboard passage and is another mid-paced song. "Interact" is another old song that features tasteful guitar throughout. "Standing Ground" is the first song that has some life ! Opening with heavy drums and more in your face guitar, but it's short lived, although the drumming is fantastic throughout. The final tune "Mettle Man" is the other song I really like. Lots of keys and guitar and is pretty much an instrumantal as vocals come in right at the end of the song.
Overall a good release that doesn't live up to the first two records.They originally were going to release this as an EP, but had enough unreleased songs to make it a full lenghth album. I do recommend this though, even if there isn't much variety on it, it's still ENCHANT.

So with mathematics: a slight edge for the 4 stars (3.5 actually)

I wonder how the hell these guys were so much inspired during this period, we're talking about partly leftover tracks in here, but the material is so good it often surpasses the ''normal'' Enchant tracks of the first two albums.''Time lost'' is high-octane Heavy/Neo Prog with powerful, super-tight songwriting, headed by a young and passionate singer and an excellence on finding the balance between dynamic grooves, atmospheric soundscapes and melodic moments.It falls into the category of lyrical Progressive Rock, which gives emphasis on thoughtful texts and atmospheric climates, but never forgets to add some complexity in the process.Long tracks with some superb keyboard and guitar moves, although the instrumental sections are rather reduced compared to the vocal passages, but this team had a unique way to combine both in the appropriate doses.Ted Leonard's screaming, irritating vocals and the period synthesizers maybe give a touch of AOR taste in the album, but the music is far more adventurous and demanding than any AOR band I know.RUSH are again a certain source of inspiration along with heavier bands of the Neo Prog movement and pinches of Prog Metal.On a personal note ''Blind sided'', ''Foundations'' and ''Under the sun'' are my personal favorites in here, filled with both dreamy and dramatic moments and a few bright instrumental parts.
A great point to start your experience with Enchant.Magnificent Heavy Prog with a sense of melody and varied atmospheres, even likely to please fans of Prog Metal.Fantastic and highly recommended effort.

The style Enchant play is soft progressive metal. If you like the Wounded album from Enchant Time Lost is a must as the four outtakes from that album which appear here on Time Lost are very good and they could just as easily have been on the original album. Some of them are IMO even better than the songs on Wounded but strangely enough they were cut from that album. Blind Sided is probably my favorite Enchant song from the early Enchant ( Before Break) and both New Moon and Under the Sun are also very strong compositions. Foundations is good too.
The three pre-album tracks Interact, Standing Ground and Mettle Man are all good but it´s very obvious that these are early songs from the band. Interact is too long while Standing Ground doesn´t really do much and the almost entirely instrumental Mettle Man is just an average track too.
The musicianship is very good. Ted Leonard steals the picture on Time Lost IMO as his vocals are brilliant.
There is no doubt that if you should invest in Time Lost it should be to get a hold of the first four outtakes from Wounded because even though the last three songs are good they are a bit below standard for Enchant. Time Lost will get a 3 star rating from me. I´m not sure but I think Wounded can be purchased with Time Lost as a bonus disk and if that´s the case I would recommend you buy that one instead of course.




There is a debate about whether Time Lost should be considered a proper original studio album by Enchant or instead a compilation featuring improved versions of older demos. Regardless of which, Time Lost contains some of Enchant's best ever material and also some of their most progressive. Indeed, this is the album that is closest in style to the band's excellent 1995 debut A Blueprint Of The World - and this one is very nearly as good! Insofar as it is true that some of these songs were discarded from the band's second release - 1996's Wounded - it is very odd as most of these songs are much better than most of those found on Wounded.
Time Lost features seven tracks, most of which are fairly long with the 80's Rush-like Interact exceeding the ten minute mark. Picking out highlights this time is hard since all of the songs are equally powerful. The musicianship is very strong throughout and the sound quality is up to par with that of A Blueprint Of The World, though less good compared to Wounded.
I'm not alone in praising Time Lost - many fans seem to have a soft spot for this album. If you are new to Enchant you would do best by starting at the beginning with A Blueprint Of The World. If you like that album, Time Lost is an excellent companion and a great set of songs in its own right.

Time Lost consists in four new tracks plus three unreleased three compositions, produced by the guitarist Douglas A. Ott.
And maybe that's the main reason that this album sounds like a mixture of their first and second efforts, because the different band stages when it was composed. So the more heavy and straightforward guitars in the vein of Wounded are mixed with some symphonic and neo-prog elements typical of the first band's release.
But maybe for this reason, this album is also a bit more dynamic and not so repetitive like Wounded. And despite it does not reach the quality of A Blueprint of the World, it's also worthy of the attention of 90's heavy prog fans mainly because the awesome vocals of Ted Leonard and the excellent guitar work of Douglas A. Ott.
Best Tracks: Under the Sun, Foundations and Mettle Man.
Conclusion: despite having been composed in different sessions and times, Time Lost is a cohesive record with a pair of very fine songs and a solid work of the whole band, especially the splendid (but a bit repetitive to be honest) Ted Leonard and the colourful riffs of Douglas A. Ott.
My rating: ***

As such, the last three songs (Interact, Standing Ground, and Mettle Man) in fact consist of pre-Blueprint of the World material, with Ted Leonard adding in vocals and Ed Platt redoing the bass since the original recordings dated from before they were in the band. One might think that this would result in a confused, disjointed mess, but it ends up working surprisingly well.
Perhaps part of this stems from the nature of the songs cut from Wounded. On that release, the band generally shifted to a somewhat heavier sound, with lots of Dream Theater and Rush influence, compared to their sound on A Blueprint of the World; by comparison, the Wounded off-cuts here are all a bit less prog-metal-ish, and so are a bit closer to the band's neo-prog roots than that release was. This already means that they sit fairly naturally next to the earlier material, which of course would have predated their injection of Dream Theater influence into their sound. (The major touchstone I'd identify for both halves of the album, in fact, would be synth-period Rush.)
As you might expect, the fact that this is an odds-and-ends album does mean that consistency is an issue; in particular, I found Foundations sufficiently uninspiring that I nearly gave up listening partway through it. The other three Wounded off-cuts are decent, but as far as Foundations go... well, the kindest thing I'll say is that the decision to leave it off Wounded showed good and sound judgement on the part of the band.
However, I thought things really perked up with the early tracks - Interact is a ten minute epic which really helps make up for the comparatively simplistic Foundations, and Standing Ground and Mettle Man might be the band's best tributes to the Rush sound to date. With the album ending on such a high, it's easy to forgive a slump in the middle of the running order, and I'd say on average this is actually an improvement on Wounded, which given its disjointed origins is truly impressive.

When regarded as a proper full-length album, Time Lost disappoints because the heterogeneous material that the record is compiled of, does not make for a smooth, cohesive listening experience. The first 4 tracks follow the more accessible and heavier approach Enchant embraced on Wounded, with more focus on guitar riffs and hooks rather than on the technical complexity and intricate arrangements that are typical of progressive rock. In the remaining 3 songs, however, Enchant turn the tables and fully embrace their proggy side, with multipart structures, long instrumental sections, layered arrangements and guitar/keyboard solo pyrotechnics, in a style that is more reminiscent of the band's debut album A Blueprint of the World. The change in aesthetics between the two sets of songs is too conspicuous to go unnoticed, as it's almost like having two albums crammed in one single release.
However, if one takes the album in the spirit in which it was originally intended - as a compilation of "leftover" material - it's hard not to marvel at the quality of the songs included here. The four "Wounded" tracks are as good as, if not better than, the material that was actually included in Wounded, to the point that I do not quite understand why they did not make the final cut. "Blind Sided", in particular, is awesome and features excellent dynamic transitions from the moody verses to the rousing choruses, strong melodies, and really great atmospheres. It somewhat reminds me of "Pure" from Wounded, which may be the reason why the song was eventually excluded from that album's tracklist. "New Moon" and "Foundations" are also strong tracks, maybe a tad too fragmented in their development, which is probably due to their "rawer" form compared to the songs eventually included in Wounded ("Foundations", in particular, was the last song written during the Wounded recording sessions and so did not have a lot of time to "mature" into a fully-fledged Enchant track, as the album's liner notes explain). The three "early-days" songs are also very good and will especially appeal to those who consider A Blueprint of the World one of Enchant's best releases. These songs feature a mix of original recordings ("Mettle Men" even features Enchant's original bass player Brian Cline) and new recordings by Enchant's 1997 line-up. These songs are perhaps slightly meandering and overly complex, giving away the signs of the band's youthful exuberance at the time they were written, but they do contain some awesome sections nevertheless.
All this makes Time Lost an odd album to rate. It contains some of the best material Enchant have released through their discography, including some of their most sing-alongable tracks ever ("Blind Sided", "Foundations"). The fact that these songs did not make it on the final tracklists of the band's previous albums - A Blueprint of the World and Wounded - befuddles me. However, no matter how good these songs are, they just do not work well together as part of the same LP, as the stylistic gap between the first and second set of tracks is simply too vast. So here is the gist: Time Lost works great as a compilation/EP, but lacks the consistency I normally seek in a proper full-length record.

I can't even give criticism constructively, this album just isn't working for me. The musicianship is of a high standard and the production is good for a 90's prog band, everything is as it should be. But for whatever reason, the songs just aren't hitting their mark. With the exception of two? opening track 'Blind Sided' is an absolute banger, and closing track 'Mettle Man' has some great melodies and instrumental performances in it.
Sadly, the rest of the album is very forgettable to me. I love Enchant, I really do, but I don't think I'm likely to come back to this one anytime soon. Sorry guys!
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