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Opeth - Orchid CD (album) cover

ORCHID

Opeth

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


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diddy
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Do not start with this one! This statement shows that this album is not like the rest. This is their debut and encloses the fewest Prog elements. Orchid is a complete Death Metal album, yes there are some of these parts Opeth got famous for but not this much, yet. What you get here is melodic death metal. I for one like it very much even if I dislike death metal in general, but that's what Opeth is all about, you love them even if you normally don't like the death metal thing. Their weakest album...yes, but for me, as a fan, it is still a good one. BUT caution: If you like to get into the worls of Opeth you'll be better off by starting with "Blackwater Park" or "Still Life". If you don't like heavy music at all, don't touch this one, try another Opeth album, Damnation for example. But this one is a good death metal album and the only pure eath metal album I like.
Report this review (#30999)
Posted Saturday, May 29, 2004 | Review Permalink
jtharbinson@y
5 stars this is far and away the best opeth album. it was their most interesting, their most melodic and their most creative. their first four releases are quite essential; however, ever since the somewhat bland (but still good) "Blackwater Park", the band has seemed intent on endless self-plagarism despite the "progressive metal" moniker. hopefully their next release will bring something new to the table. however, as it stands, "orchid" represents the band possessed by the most integrity and creativity of their career.
Report this review (#31001)
Posted Saturday, May 29, 2004 | Review Permalink
shivinm@hotma
5 stars The Orchid is one of the strongest musical statements made by Opeth.The whole album is a tapestry of great riffs studded with savory,haunting accoustic interludes,catchy and prominent basslines which layer the interesting song structures.

Mikael Akerfeldt's growls like a sinister,lamenting monster on one hand,and sings with a melliflous voice on the other,blending perfectly with the flawless musicianship of the band.

Don't be disconcerted by the "Death Metal" tag(if you don't like death metal,that is) which people associate to this album.This album is more like progressive metal with subtle power- metal influences in sound.

No way this is their weakest album.Period.If you are new to Opeth,or metal,I'll recommemd this album strongly ! This album will keep you interested.

Report this review (#31002)
Posted Saturday, July 3, 2004 | Review Permalink
FloydWright
PROG REVIEWER
2 stars Given that this is a debut album, I have to cut OPETH some slack...however, I can't help noticing the numerous problems with Orchid. I might as well get most of the list out of the way before I begin. The drummer is nowhere near the level of OPETH's second drummer, Martin López, and Mikael Akerfeldt had quite a lot of learning to do at the time, as far as his vocals went (his growl is far too high pitched, and the clean vocals tend to wander on and off pitch excessively, as well as being downright incomprehensible at times). There's also a twin guitar tone that can be quite annoying after an extended time. Some songs seem to run on a bit too long, especially considering that the chord structures are not as striking as what I'm accustomed to with OPETH. Not only that, but there is a lack of flow from one song to the other, and some very odd jumps in the vocal volume and strange empty spaces within the songs themselves. I have to put these problems down to its being a debut album (I would've rated it lower), but it can make this a rough listen that is really only for die-hard fans.

In my opinion, despite these weaknesses, there are four tracks worth checking out as a forecast of OPETH's future: "In the Mist She Was Standing", "Under the Weeping Moon", "Forest of October", and "The Twilight is My Robe". One of the strengths of these tracks is in the bass work, which has a completely different style than what you'll later hear from Martin Méndez. The two are probably about as skilled as each other--but the difference is quite interesting to hear. Some of the acoustic interludes take on an almost medieval-folkish sound that you'll only hear on Orchid and Morningrise...although the almost 1980s, reverb-drenched sound (which I quite like) never appears again on any later works. There is one interlude in "Under the Weeping Moon" that even becomes a bit PINK FLOYD-like, reminding me of the middle section of "Run Like Hell" or perhaps even "Dogs".

Unfortunately, there are some truly problematic tracks on Orchid that make it rough going. First, while quite proficient technically, the piano solo, "Silhouette", seems to have been thrown on the album at random and is quite lacking emotionally, especially when compared to the four strong tracks. In my opinion it should have never made the album. "Requiem", while a pleasant enough acoustic number, is quite bland, even when you figure in the part that the record company mistakenly put with "The Apostle in Triumph". That final track, unfortunately, is where the album goes seriously downhill. For starters, those bongos and tambourines from the second part of "Requiem" sound...ridiculous. That sort of thing should be left to OPETH's next drummer, Martin López, who actually knows what he's doing with them. The vocals here are awful...the screaming is completely inappropriate to the lyrics (later albums seem to take much more care with this), and there is one harmony part that sounds far, FAR too much like the Atlanta Braves chant to take seriously. And, with all due respect, Akerfeldt's problems with the English language bite him in the rear. Especially at the end of the song. To his credit, it is understandable that someone who doesn't speak English as his native language might have this sort of trouble, and he has improved dramatically since then, even from Orchid to Morningrise.

And speaking of unmitigated disasters...I have NO idea what possessed Candlelight (OPETH's label at the time) to slap that terrible demo, "Into the Frost of Winter", on this thing. I have recorded better things on my home computer with a $10 microphone and a $60 piece of recording software. The sound quality is atrocious and the music quality...well, you can't really tell for sure because the sound quality is so bad it sounds like a bunch of banging coming out of a tin can or something. This is the final nail in Orchid's coffin, as if they didn't shoot themselves in the foot enough with "The Apostle in Triumph"!

This is an album mainly for the serious OPETH enthusiast. There are some in the metal community who seem to venerate the raw production, but if you are interested in a bit more finesse, this will probably be a letdown.

Report this review (#31003)
Posted Saturday, December 4, 2004 | Review Permalink
4 stars Being Opeth's first album, it is obviously the rawest in terms of production and recording quality. In particular, the bonus track "Into the Frost of Winter" sounds like it was recorded straight into a laptop using an inbuilt microphone. Furthermore, the intro for the first track "In the Mist She Was Standing" is just far too long and repetivitve. However, that having been said, the riffs are catchy and memorable, the song writing is just as fantastic as the rest of their albums and Mikael Akerfeldt's vocals are as amazing as usual. I was divided whether to give this album a lower rating due to the relative lack of sound editing compared to their other, more polished albums, but decided not to, giving special consideration for how original and groundbreaking this record must have been upon its release, and the simple fact that Opeth were clearly doing their best (amazingly so!) in unchartered territory. And the songs still sound great with that characteristic autumnal Opeth sound to them! Technically, it may be death metal, but it is intelligent, creative, VERY melodic, and has a rich texture contrasting the soft serene accoustic guitar & clean vocal passages and mixing them seamlessly with tastefully delivered and masterfully executed blasts of beastly death metal growls & heavy, distorted guitar work. I'd recommend checking out either "My Arms Your Hearse" (If you like heavy), "Damnation" (If you like soft) or "Still Life" (If you like a bit of both) first, but if you discover that you love Opeth, please do check this out afterwards to see where it all started. This album is one of those milestone moments in metal.
Report this review (#31004)
Posted Sunday, December 26, 2004 | Review Permalink
frenchie
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars This is a really good listen although it has it's problems. I find it to be a very satisfying album, some of it spectacular. the best pieces are "In the Mist She Was Standing", "The Apostle in Triumph" and "Forest of October". The latter being the album's standout piece. This album has quality and production problems and sounds dated comapred to their 3rd album and onwards. "Orchid" and "Morningrise" go well together, they are both great albums that have similar sounding tunes. The vocals on here are really good but lack power. The riffs are speedier and metallic but lack melodic guitar work and their gloomy essence. Overall there are a lot of similarities between this album and Morningrise but i love them both.

This is actually one hell of a debut, Opeth know what sound they are after and achieve it well. This album is full of the heavy riffs and growling vocals, as well as beautiful mellow parts and soft singing. Orchid is a great prototype for their later masterpieces.

In The Mist... is a great opener, kicking in straight away with a cool riff. This track is quite special as it kicks off a one of the best bands i have ever heard. the vocals at the begining are actual whispers before it kicks into the full out death metal vocals. Under the Weeping Moon is a decent piece though it can have its struggles.

Silhouette is a crazy piano interlude, its quite interesting but not as good as some of their other pieces like this such as "Epilogue", "Patterns in the Ivy", "Ending Credits" and "For Absent Friends". It's nice to see that they have included this formula of linking songs together with short bridge pieces though. Orchid really has some of Opeth's best ideas, just perhaps they are not quite as polished, but they had 6 more albums to improve on their songwriting skills. Orchid has great musician skills with some top notch acoustic, riff, solo and vocal work (not to mention the drums and bass).

"Forest of October" is the standout on this album, where most of this album's praise belongs. It has the best range of style and flows beautifully, containing most of their ideas for this album. Some of the solo work is really inspiring. I have a really cool live version of this which turned me onto this album.

"The Twighlight is My Robe" is one of the softer full length pieces on this album. It builds up reall nicely and is a very decent track. "Requiem" is the second interlude piece on this album. This one is an acoustic piece that builds up. Due to no fault of the band, half of this track ends up being put onto the front of the last track, but i think it actually makes "The Apostle in Triumph" sound even better with that cool acoustic opening! The last track is a solid album closer but nothing as spectacular as "Forest of October".

Altogether this album presents some interesting tunes, a great range of ideas. Passion, ambition and emotion. Orchid hasn't aged well as all the albums after are better but i often look back on this amazing album. It is very good, especially for a debut, Opeth seemed to have settled into their sound and formula for success straight away. Production and quality on this album has some issues but its a very good listen overall. Save this album as one of the last to get though, probably more for the true fans.

Report this review (#31005)
Posted Monday, May 30, 2005 | Review Permalink
tehroxxor@aol
4 stars I agree with everyone who said this should not be the starting point if you are new to Opeth. While it is a great album, it is Opeth's worst. But Opeth's worst is up there with the best of most bands out there these days. The opener "In the Mist She was Standing" is a good solid epic song, that Opeth would easily later top. "Under the Weeping Moon" isn't much to talk about. It is good, but it's nothing great. "Forest of October" is a hella solid song and so is "The Twilight is my Robe" which is my favorite song on the album. "The Apostle in Triumph" is also a good solid track with a cool intro that was actually supposed to be the end of "Requiem", but due to a studio mishap was the intro to that song.

Good album, good buy, but Opeth would later top it.

Report this review (#37026)
Posted Sunday, June 19, 2005 | Review Permalink
The Crow
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars This is a great debut album, in my humble opinion!

Here we can find good tracks like In Mist She Was standing, Forest of October and The Twilight is My Robe, being the last one the song I like most from this album. However, it's obvious that they were trying to get their own sound, and we can find a lot of death metal here.... Another weak fact is that this album is maybe a bit too repetitive. The tracks are not different between them. Nevertheless, the quality of all them makes the listening really worthy.

The Fredrik Norström's production isn't bad, but far from the last Opeth's releases. I think that up to Still Life they would not achieve a really good sound... But here, like in Morningrise, we can hear a great bass sound and playing by Johan de Farfalla, who is a great bass player in my opinion (better than Martín Méndez in my opinion... At least he's more original!)

Another interesting fact from this album are the instrumentals, both very good. Silhouette its maybe my favorite Opeth's instrumental song, great job from Anders Nordin here. And they have not released another song played only with piano.

Best songs: In Mist She Was Standing (great opening... It gives a good idea of what the album is), Forest of October (the most complete track in Orchid... A bit slow, with even some doom elements. A little classic) and The Twilight is my Robe (the best acoustic work of the album... Romantic and beautiful tack)

Conclusion: this album is not for Opeth's beginners, because due to its obscurity and not well-developed sound, it can be too hard to newcomers... However, if you are acquainted to the career if this great Swedish band, then I strongly recommend you this album, because apart from its obvious quality, is the beginning of this metal legend. And a really good beginning, in my opinion!

My rating: ***1/2, rounded up to four stars.

Report this review (#41268)
Posted Tuesday, August 2, 2005 | Review Permalink
2 stars I admit to have many problems with progressive metal. As I like the hard rock for what it has of raw product, as I find unbearable this kind of album. Too much saturated, too much uniform, not rather original. I prefer the other albums of OPETH. I find rather pleasant the rather rare acoustic breaks. In brief, a (very) average album for (very) ardent supporters.
Report this review (#44673)
Posted Monday, August 29, 2005 | Review Permalink
Sean Trane
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Prog Folk
3 stars Opeth's debut album (I rented it from the library and it sports a small tin circular case, which I suspect would be a special collectors-edition) is certainly an impressive one. I am not a metal fan (any kind of post-77 metal leaves generally fairly cold) and to be able to tell you whether this would be Death, Black, Thrash or Doom metal, I would even with a quick crash course. But one thing is for sure; there are enough elements on this debut album to make it qualify as Prog metal, without any discussions possible, making me wonder why such a controversy arises when Opeth is mentioned as such.

From the 14 min opener with its good but by no means groundbreaking crunch-power chords, making you more think of 70's (early Judas Priest or early Scorpions) metal than the 80's NWOBHMB, and its other-worldly vocals (it reminds me of the singer of My Dying Bride, but I suspect a lot of bands have adopted this type of vocals), this group appears as a combination of outstanding young musicians out for blood and vengeance, loving guitar melodic crunch without the obligatory masturbatory heroics. However , I must say that the bonus track is really too extreme for me.

More impressive to me are the quieter moments (or even tracks such as Under The Weeping Moon) when I think the band shows best its talents, (even playing an atmospheric piano piece the 3 min Silhouette) displaying their dark and gothic moods (which if not for the singer's voice, I would rather think of them as gloom or doom metal) and with the Flamenco-influenced intro of the almost 14 min Apostle In Triumph, it is clear that Opeth is one of the better bands in the prog metal sub-genre.

Report this review (#55012)
Posted Monday, November 7, 2005 | Review Permalink
Moatilliatta
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Certainly an ambitious debut record for a band in the Death/Black Metal vein. I don't think I've ever heard a band have such contrast with heavy and light, especially in this brand of music. Obviously, they have not nearly perfected this concept, but a few albums later, this band would be churning out masterpieces.

Since it really isn't fair to criticize a band's earlier work based on what they would do in the future, I will review the album as if I had not heard anything else from this group. I will however get a few things out of the way: Martin Lopez had not yet joined the band, which would later have a significant effect on the groups sound. The drumming here is solid, but it does not come near Lopez's work. Bassist Martin Mendez is not here either. The bassist on here does just fine though, and Mendez's absence isn't as prominent as Lopez's. Mikael's vocals are very rough. His growl has a higher pitch, and his clean vocals are weak when compared with the work that was to come.

The album opens with quite a kick. It is catchy and majestic. The high speed remains as Opeth pummel through the first chunk of the song. The first five minutes will certainly keep your interest, but you may start to grow tired of the relentless, heavy music. You may also wonder what, if anything, makes this band special, or out of the ordinary. Shortly after, they break into their first of many acoustic passages. From here on, you can rest assured that this is worth listening to.

The music may vary, but the mood remains the same. There is a depressive aura surrounding the album. This dark aura would stick with the band for the years to come, but it's most apparent in their early years. The music can still be approached and left without having absorbed the mood. I actually am happy when listening to Opeth.

The album's two interludes, "Silhouette" and "Requiem," are short pieces among the five giants that comprise most of the album. The music itself bears some good melodies and the sort, but they are considerably out of place on this record. They do however showcase the band's creativity, and since they aren't too long, they couldn't be a hindrance on the record, even if you don't care for them.

All of the five main songs: "In the Mist She Was Standing," "Under the Weeping Moon," "Forest of October," "The Twilight Is My Robe" and "The Apostle in Triumph" are strong pieces, each with their own mix of high speeds, guttural screams, melodic metal, acoustic passages and clean vocals. Overall, they have a tight, and surely well-rounded sound, but there is much room for improvement. I personally am not a fan of that Death/Black Metal sound that Opeth encompasses on this record, but they do it with enough contrast and character to make it enjoyable for me. Sure, in the shadow of the present Opeth work, this album may come off as poor, but in its own respect, it is a good record. A fine debut from this mold-breaking band.

Report this review (#63500)
Posted Saturday, January 7, 2006 | Review Permalink
4 stars The first Opeth album is a mix of very long songs and short instrumentals. No mellow tracks or ballads here. The voice of Mikael Akerfeldt is pure black metal with some clean/whispering passages. But instead of the fast paced repetitive music characteristic of black metal, the music here is mid paced (not slow, it is not doom metal either) with a lot (and I mean a lot) of mood changes: distorted guitar, acoustic guitar, solos, duos, metallish, folkish...

This first track, "In The Mist She Was Standing", is very characteristic of early Opeth: very long passages without any vocals (in particular the intro - really catchy) and then the black metal growls... I'm not at all favorable to this type of vocals on such music, it kinda doesn't fit well and spoil the atmosphere a bit. "Under The Weeping Moon" is ok, but not great. "Silhouette" is pure classic music: this is not Mozart, but this little piano piece is really well executed. "Forest Of October" is one of the two songs ever written by the band as Opeth and one of my favorites from early Opeth: the acoustic parts here really fit well and the extreme vocals are ok on the heavier and faster parts (songs like this made people call Opeth's music "forest metal", because many songs talk about forests...). "The Twilight Is My Robe" shows again a mix of mellow and heavy parts, with extreme vocals on the slow parts (too bad, with clean vocals it would have been a really good song). "Requiem" is a short acoustic instrumental which continues on "The Apostle In Triumph": very apostolic music indeed (nice intro by the way), with even french folk music influences (which will later appear again on "Black Rose Immortal").

Rating: 89/100

Report this review (#65861)
Posted Saturday, January 21, 2006 | Review Permalink
Marc Baum
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars It’s not very often that a metal band completely redefines a listener’s outlook on heavy music. Opeth’s Orchid is a collaboration of so many different genres and styles of music that it is nearly unclassifiable. There are definitely elements of death metal, traditional metal, doom metal, progressive rock, and even jazz. There are definitely more elements, but Opeth takes all of these different styles and molds them together seamlessly. Exceedingly heavy riffs turn into death metal crunch, which then turns into a haunting acoustic passage, almost as if it was completely natural to bend a multitude of genres into a new sound. That is definitely one of the highlights of this album: it sounds so effortless, yet so perfect at the same time. Well, for the sake of argument, I will just call Opeth a progressive-death metal band.

When one takes a glance at the length of the tracks, some things may come to mind; progressive rock bands like Rush, doom metal, and epic styled Black/Death Metal. While Opeth does have progressive tendencies, like playing incredible complex chord patterns and different riffing patterns, they do not have the “soft” tendencies that many progressive rock bands have. Opeth happen to be a death metal band playing extremely long, well thought out songs. The length of each track doesn’t sound forced. It is important to note how comfortable the band seems to be playing each track for around ten minutes. A lot the time with longer songs, I tend to get bored, but each of Opeth’s songs have so much variety in them, that it is nearly impossible to get bored while listening.

The production is not the greatest, as there are tinny sounds with some of the cymbals, but that is just a minor qualm. The musicianship is excellent. One should notice the difficulty of the riffs that are played immediately, especially if they’re a guitar player as well.

The base of Opeth’s music is definitely death metal. It seems that music is built around a certain death metal styled riff and the other elements the band brings in seem built on top, almost like stone is laid for a wall. The songwriting is excellent; everything seems to have its place. I believe Opeth have found a certain type of perfection in their songwriting that few bands have ever found. To be able to write a ten minute song, and have every part fit perfectly is an outstanding feat!

Each track on this album is exceptional on its own. There is definitely no need to do a track by track analysis; it would be to repetitive and redundant. Each track has a very somber, sad feeling to it, and the acoustic passage help to highlight that feeling even more. The general guitar tone is almost melancholic, while still retaining heaviness and crunch. Even the track that is solely piano has a melancholic vibe. I’m not sure if it is because it is in minor keys or not, but sadness and gloom just ooze out of the track “Sihouette”.

The vocals on this album are definitely influenced by death metal and black metal. There is a very cool rasp to some parts, and some excellent deep growls. More amazing yet may be the clean vocals. They are very haunting, and definitely help to set the melancholic tone even further. The clean vocals, in most parts, are almost whispers; very eerie and almost haunting.

The guitars on this album range from a deep distortion to a very clean, natural sounding acoustic style. The acoustic passages sound very natural to the music, and not forced like some bands seem to do. There are some really amazing tempo changes and some even more amazing riff changes throughout the music. Also are some really cool solos. Once again, not forced, and by no means showy; just another element that fits in really nicely.

Sometimes it is difficult to discuss the bass playing in metal, because frankly, I find it hard to hear on a lot of albums. Well the bass on “Orchid” isn’t the type of bass that can’t be heard. The bass has a nice place in the mix, and there are some really cool lines that the bass player uses. The bass is definitely used as another instrument (instead of like some other bands that simply play the bass as if it were a guitar). There are some really cool parts that, once again, fit in very well in the songwriting scheme of things.

The drumming is definitely not just standard metal drumming, by any means. This is where Opeth fits the jazz element in a lot. The drums, especially in the slower, doomier passages, seem to be played much like a jazz drummer would play. There are some complex patterns, but it is not flashy or all speed like a lot of metal drummers. The drummer definitely shows he can play both fast and slow; when the speed picks up, the drums are spot on!

As one can see, each element of Opeth definitely knows how to use their respective instrument very well. This album is definitely an exciting listen, as it compasses so many genres and molds them into metal. It is hard to believe that an album of this quality came from a band’s debut album. This album definitely gave hints as to the road Opeth would take with later albums.

This album is highly recommended to all who are into Opeth and Progressive Death Metal, as well prog-rockers who want to hear some more extreme music, without letting their sensibility for prog down on the other hand. I think there is definitely something everybody can enjoy on this album. It truly must be listened from start to finish for it to be appreciated fully. Opeth showed the world that they were the masters of progressive-death metal. Like I said before, it is rare when album can redefine how one looks at metal, and this is one of those albums: it’s even rarer when a debut album can do this. This album shows why Opeth would one day climb to the top of the metal world, even the overall-package seems to be lacking in some places yet. But that is tolerable in focus on the age of the musicians at the time of Ochid's recording.

album rating: 7.5/10 points = 73 % on MPV scale = 4/5 stars

point-system: 0 - 3 points = 1 star / 3.5 - 5.5 points = 2 stars / 6 - 7 points = 3 stars / 7.5 - 8.5 points = 4 stars / 9 - 10 points = 5 stars

Report this review (#76937)
Posted Tuesday, May 2, 2006 | Review Permalink
OpethGuitarist
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Opeth's first release here is one of the most groundbreaking albums in metal history. That being said, this album has very little "prog" in it. This is Gothenburg styled Opeth, with many what I would call, meandering songs.

Here we are without the drums of Lopez, and Opeth's music has a different focus than it would on later albums. The focus of this album is on intricate play between the guitars, and while it is very good and interesting, it is not very progressive, even though Opeth has forged a new sound and style than heard ever before.

The most progressive track here is Under the Weeping Moon, which has a very psychedelic progressive vibe in the middle of it. The best track here is In Mist She was Standing and Twilight is My Robe, however, I must warn that these will not be for everybody.

A great Opeth album, but not one that I think the majority of the progressive community would find interest in. I love the album's overall style, it's inventiveness, and it's uniqueness in the band's catalog. All this aside, it's still an excellent album.

Report this review (#83908)
Posted Sunday, July 16, 2006 | Review Permalink
Zitro
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars First Opeth album .. this is how it all started:

Of course, this album (correct me if I'm wrong) introduced the style of mixing two extremes in the Death Metal Genre: the growling heavy side and the acoustic/folk movements. This could make it quite historic for me, but the style was not very well executed here. Anyways, there are elements in this album (and the next one) that won't really be used later. Examples are a cool bass guitar that is easily heard in parts, softer guitars in the style of Iron Maiden, whispering grunts, and acoustic parts being more folky in nature.

Problems: _There is some incoherence among the acoustic/heavy parts ... in terms of where the acoustic parts are placed. _Heavy parts have elegant distorted guitars that are underwhelming if compared to the loud grunts. _Some parts need clean vocals instead of growls, making them out of place. _Acoustic parts are usually instrumental, dull, and repetitive. _Growls are a bit high-pitch for the music. _2 short fillers that have no purpose.

When you think that the opener is the killer song, for me, this is the song that shows all the weaknesses of the album. The guitar riffs and solos are quite above average actually, but the grunts are loud, the acoustic parts are extremely long and sometimes one acoustic bit goes to another acoustic bit which will later be repeated later in the song. However, some parts are really cool, and the ending of the song could be a highlight in Opeth's early career, featuring pounding drums, and an awesome guitar riff.

Under the Weeping Moon has great things, like a sustain mellow guitar riff that unfortunately has grunts out of place that are redeemed by the last grunt which is just beautiful and initiates a repetitive, yet interesting acoustic part that is slightly avant-garde. AFter some uninteresting fast-paced riffs, the second acoustic part is probably the best acoustic part in the first 2 albums from Opeth. It has an acoustic guitar and clean vocals with a beautiful sustain effect that just gives me goosebumps.

Silhouete is a piano instrumental with a dark mood. I don't know why it was here, as it feels a bit out of place. However, like "the clap" from Yes' Fragile album, it is not bad at all!

Frost of October is godd but not great metal with moments of brilliance: guitar solo at minute 5 and the electric lead combined with acoustic playing in minute 6 that is later played in a metal style.

The twilight in My Robe is nothing different from the previous tracks but again is slightly marred by parts that could have been sung instead of grunted.

Requiem is pointless, boring and sounds like an intermissions so that you can go to the bathroom and not miss the show. The problem is that intermissions in CDs are not my cup of tea because I wouldn't miss part of the album as I can just press the stop button! Anyways, this is an extremely bland acoustic part that doesn't develop and seems to last forever when it's only 1 minute long.

The Apostle in Triumph has a great acoustic intro, but the song isn't spectacular at all. Only one interesting acoustic part in the middle and a solid guitar riff are memorable besides the intro.

So, this is a pretty good Death Metal album that combines the heaviness with acoustic parts. However, they didn't master this style yet. LAter in their career, they use that style more efficiently so that the heavy parts bang you with surprise or the acoustic breaks sound better and act as a relief rather than just putting acoustic music for the heck of it in the middle of a song. The best song is Under the Weeping Moon as it uses this style better than the other songs.

Should I recommend it? Only after you listened to all of their other albums. The next Opeth albums are similar, just better executed. Damnation is the only different one since it is grunt-free and relaxing.

Highlights: Under the Weeping Moon

Let Downs: Requiem, The Apostle in Triumph, The Twilight is my Robe

My Grade: C-

Report this review (#84960)
Posted Thursday, July 27, 2006 | Review Permalink
4 stars As far as debut albums go, this is about as impressive it gets. When Orchid was released upon an unsuspecting underground metal scene, it represented an original, innovative and richly talented band in a scene where such traits are a frequent rarity, especially among new bands. Merging various forms of metal and taking in influence from outside the metal spectrum, Opeth were immediately unclassifiable. Were they black, death or doom? What genre do they fit into? Critics struggled with applying appropriate terms to describe and label the music of this truly gifted entity from Sweden. Rarely does such a band come along, and it seemed that something truly special had been delivered with Opeth's arrival.

The fact is that Opeth's music is neither death nor black metal, though it does contain elements of both (particularly within the vocal approach) as well as many other styles. The best way I can describe the Opeth sound is to imagine an obscure 70's progressive rock act trying their hand at melodic death metal. Of course, there is much more to the equation than that, but as an attempt to sum it up in a short context, it's about as accurate as I can get. With the exception of two instrumentals ("Requiem" and an impressive piano instrumental performed by drummer Anders Nordin, " Silhouette"), the songs are quite lengthy, averaging close to the ten minute mark, and are highly involved constructions. Within any given track on the album, there can be heard melodic, Gothenburg-styled metal, ethereal/folk acoustic sections, slow, melancholic moments, complex rhythm structures etc., etc. etc,...But it must be noted that during any given style, let's say for instance, the melodic death oriented moments (which never reach even mid-thrash tempo, the band usually operating at mid-pace), it is performed in such a fashion that is enough to inform the listener of the influence, but unable to link it to any particular band. That is the secret to Opeth's individuality. They take in their inspirations, but not once do they emulate them, instead, fusing them with their own ideas as to create something wholly unique.

All four musicians that make up Opeth are very talented, from the impressive rhythm section (who can go from holding down a solid foundation to complex, intricate patterns in a flash) to the guitar tandem of Mikael Akerfeldt (who is responsible for the majority of the writing) and Peter Lindgren, who manage to create some quite stirring atmospheres by way of electric and acoustic means. In fact, that is what the music of Opeth revolves around: atmosphere. As involved and complex as this material can be at times, things never sound clinical. There is feeling in every passage of every song. Akerfeldt's vocals are monstrous, scathing and very convincing, also proving his talents in the clean singing department during certain moments. But the most impressive aspect is in how these lengthy epics flow, never allowing the listener to become bored or inattentive, such is the masterful crafting and arranging on display.

Report this review (#86100)
Posted Monday, August 7, 2006 | Review Permalink
2 stars Now that I've finally caught up with Opeth's productions, I can say with 100% confidence that this is the worst album that Opeth has put out to date. That does not mean that this is a weak album or isn't worth listening to, but I'd definitely not start with this album if I were picking up the band for the first time.

To begin, the production is rather lousy. The guitars are over-gained, which tends to muddle the riffing somewhat. The drums are, well, unimaginative to say the least, and of course, the vocals are nothing next to what Mike has evolved into over the years. This album also sports a less "proggy" feel. This was definitely the band's pure metal era, before they really started experimenting with prog.

With all that said, this is still a rather nice album. I find that all of the tracks seem to run together into one. The feel actually evokes images of flying through a misty forrest every time I listen to it. It's rather nice to just kick back and enjoy this album.

Ultimately, I'm going to have to throw it 2 stars. It's a good album until you compare it internally with Opeth's other work. Unless you're a fan/collecter, you really have no need of this album, grab any of the others instead.

Report this review (#92415)
Posted Thursday, September 28, 2006 | Review Permalink
3 stars The debut album of a fabulous band!

From the beginning of this record you can understand the band's intentions. The record starts with a drum break and soon the distorted guitars come in. Some double bass and also Mikael's growl vocals (which at the time sounded more like screams) come in. Not much interest here for the first few minutes until it brakes for the first acoustic part of the record. It's really nothing great and lasts only for a few seconds but it's enough to give you hope again. It's a scale-like passage, played on an acoustic guitar and while Mikael whispers. It soon goes back to the distorted guitars and growl vocals until later on the same song where there is the first big acoustic interlude. This time the guitar plays what it did in the previous acoustic part while an electric guitar does a few atmospheric effects. The acoustic guitar pattern changes and then it gradually goes to heavy again. First the bass comes in (which I don't really know why has a horrible sound), the hi-hat and then the guitars change to distorted. The heavy stuff keeps going while one riff changes to another without any warning or bridge which is also interesting. The last acoustic part comes in which evolves some cymbals this time. Yes, you guessed right the guitars change to distorted and play a riff similar to what the acoustic guitar played in the last acoustic interlude until the end of the song. I wrote all this cause the opener track, "In The Mist She Was Standing", might be considered as a summary of the whole record.

Heavy parts are nothing special really but not as bad as they may seem to you the first time you listen to this one. Of course they are not to be compared with Opeth's heavy parts on the later albums. It's obvious that the compositional skills of the band as well as Akerfeld's growls have really evolved from this album. What I really love in this record is the acoustic interludes. Simple really but magical arrangements dominated by acoustic guitars. One of the highlights of this record is "Under The Weeping Moon" where Akerfeld does clear vocals for the first time on the record.

Most songs are very similar, in terms of structure and length (more than 10'), to the first one, with the exceptions of "Silhouette", "Requiem" and "Into The Frost Of Winter" (for those who have the reissue). Silhouette is a three-minute piano interlude. It's a beautiful song with very good piano work done by Anders Nordin. Requiem, is a short acoustic instrumental track which apart from a very good track, it's a very good bridge to the next song, "Apostle In Triumph". Originally, the beginning of "Apostle In Triumph" was meant to be part of the Requiem but in the mixing process, this changed. Into The Frost Of Winter, is taken from a demo of the band recorded in 1992. It was recorded during a rehearsal and as a result the sound is really bad. There are however a few good ideas and parts from this song were used in the song "Advent" in Opeth's second studio album, "Morningrise". The funny thing about it is that if you listen carefully, you can listen a member of the band, probably Mikael, turning around a paper (obviously sheet music).

Overall, it's a good album. The acoustic parts are really outstanding and the way they are used is really something I haven't seen before. The sound is not that great (even though the production was done by Don Swano). It's an album that every Opeth fan must have, and a good option to prog fans who doesn't have a problem with death- metal music. The artwork isn't bad but it's not really Opeth's later artworks, which are better and more similar in terms of aesthetics.

Report this review (#95730)
Posted Thursday, October 26, 2006 | Review Permalink
4 stars Altough it is not the best made album in the career of the band, it still one of the greatest rock (metal, prog) album ever made. IMO this work is very underestimated.

As well, this is not a masterpiece because of the weaknesses of their playing and of their (growing!) composition talents BUT...

I have to listen to it again and again and again. Not only because of the deep tone of the songs. The whole album remains interesting from its very first moment till its last song "The Apostle...", even after several listening. (The bonus song is not the part of the band's intention for this work just an extra addition from the starting years!) And honestly nobody can say that I am a death metal fan, that is far from me.

This album has a very magical emission. Sometimes days after the listening of it I realize myself that I am crooning one of the songs from "Orchid".

I think this album should become the part of every prog fan's collection. (And this whole review have reference to Opeth's next album "Morningrise")

Report this review (#132492)
Posted Friday, August 10, 2007 | Review Permalink
russellk
PROG REVIEWER
2 stars The modern masters of melodic death metal emerge, and it's rather a tame beginning.

'Orchid' was good enough to capture the interest of fans beyond Sweden, and it certainly has plenty of riffage, but what you're hearing here is a band learning to play together, and trying to figure out what they wanted to do with themselves. The longer songs aren't integrated wholes, instead being a loose amalgam of riffs and interludes. While this tendency is most obvious on the disjointed 20-minute 'Black Rose Immortal' from 'Morningrise', it's clear here even on the interesting and proficient opener, which has a fine last two minutes somewhat divorced from the rest of the track. The SABBATH-like 'Forest of October', the album's 'keeper' track, is a little more progressive, but apart from that it's just churn out the riffs, growl and scream about morbid stuff, and double-kick for all you're worth.

So what's the difference between this album and the widely acknowledged masterpieces from 1999 onwards? Compositional structure and songwriting confidence, mostly. Though their deficiencies as a group are plain to hear: at the beginning of 'Forest of October', for example, the rhythm section struggles to keep time. Notorious for not over-rehearsing (to put it politely) their studio material before recording it, it's a surprise that OPETH sound even this proficient.

Two stars doesn't mean the album is bad, merely that, in the context of OPETH's discography, this is a fans-only release. You'll hear much better on their later recordings.

Report this review (#147715)
Posted Sunday, October 28, 2007 | Review Permalink
UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars "Orchid" is the debut full-length studio album by Swedish progressive death metal act Opeth. The album was released through Candlelight Records in May 1995. Opeth was formed in 1989 by then lead vocalist David Isberg, and went through many lineup changes (including the exit of Isberg), before settling on the four-piece lineup, who recorded "Orchid": Mikael Ĺkerfeldt (electric and acoustic guitars, lead vocals), Johan De Farfalla (electric and acoustic bass guitars, backing vocals), Anders Nordin (drums and percussion, piano), and Peter Lindgren (electric and acoustic guitars). "Orchid" was produced by the prolific Swedish producer/musician Dan Swanö.

In the early years the band played a more conventional old school Scandinavian death metal style, but as the band grew and developed as songwriters, they began composing more structurally complex and progressive tinged material. The tracks on "Orchid" are for the most part very long (four out of seven tracks on the album exceed 10 minutes in length), and feature many different sections and dynamic changes. While the basis of the music is slow- to mid-paced doom/death metal with growling vocals and heavy riffs and rhythms, the music also features melancholic acoustic sections, piano, clean vocal, and extensive use of harmony guitar parts. There are also the occasional black metal influenced moment and an ethnic Scandinavian folk atmosphere to some of the parts. Ĺkerfeldt sings a few clean vocal parts on the album, but the vocal style is predominantly growling (and sometimes a slightly blackened type of growling).

The material are generally well written although the structural complexity of the tracks and the stylistic consistency of the material sometimes scream for a little more diversity and moments which stand out. At 65:30 minutes it´s a pretty long album and after a while the tracks have a tendency to sound a bit the same. Individually every track on the album are high quality compositions though. The sound production is decent considering that "Orchid" is a debut album, and the musicianship is on a high level on all posts too.

So upon conclusion "Orchid" is a promising first album by Opeth, but it´s also the sound of a band who were not even close to having found their identity yet. The journey towards finding that identity is sometimes the most interesting part of an artist´s career, and there are certainly some interesting ideas and experiments featured on "Orchid", but overall it´s not a perfect release and could probably have prospered from some culling and a little more structure. Still a 3.5 star (70%) rating is fully deserved.

(Review originally posted on Metal Music Archives)

Report this review (#161486)
Posted Sunday, February 10, 2008 | Review Permalink
3 stars This album, honestly, is quite impressive for a first record. I found it to be somewhat repetitive however. For example, I go for long bike rides to clear my mind, I put Orchid on. I thought I was listening to one song. The drumming is basically garbage, with some incredibly random fills. The singing and growling however, sounds very good. The best i've heard it.

In The Mist She Was Standing, basiclaly just sounds like Melodic Death Metal, nothing more. Althought some of the parts were pretty good, like the part with the nice bass line, the song overall conufses me with random drumming and no structure. (6/10)

Under The Weeping Moon, is a great deal better than what preceded it. The drumming is way better and the song isn't pointlessly long. The break in the middle leads into these weird guitar sounds, which I liked a lot. Then into a bass and drums combo, then back into the regular death metal twin guitars format. Overall good song, just not special. (8/10)

I liked Silhouette a lot, It had some nice piano arrangements, but in the end it's just a segue. (8.5/10)

Frost Of October, sounds WAY better than anything. At least in the beginning. It sounds like somethign from Still Life. It really does remind me of Moonlapse Vertigo in some ways. But, it sounds like every other song on this album which sort of frustrates me. (8/10)

What I did with each song on this album is skipped one minute with my media player to see if the formula is still there. METAL 1:00-5:00 ACOUSTIC 5:00-7:30 METAL 7:30-11:00. Basically The Twillight Is My Robe is the same as every song on this album. (5/10)

Requiem, was pretty much random. I didn't find it too tasteful, just another wannabe classical piece written by some head smashing metalheads. (6/10)

The Apostle In Triumph starts off really nice, only to find out, in some error in the mastering sessions, the ending of Reqiuem got smashed into this song. Meh, no wonder. But then, in some twist, the actual song sounds promising, with some decent drumming and nice guitars. Then oh no, more melodic death metal. Wait a minute, this sounds different. This song is actually a little of what future Opeth sounds like. It morphs back into crap metal though, but th acoustic break in this song sounds very interesting. Using the volume pedal to create some nice effects. The end of the album, you actually hear Mikael's voice! No growls! (8.5/10)

Overall, I can safely say this album is sub par to what Opeth is doing now. The drummer is horrid in this album, but basically Mikael just got a bunch of studio musicians to do his stuff. He just didn't get good ones.

3 stars.

Report this review (#174618)
Posted Saturday, June 21, 2008 | Review Permalink
horsewithteeth11
PROG REVIEWER
1 stars "What else could possibly go wrong?" That's the thought that comes to mind when I think of this album (I'm past the point of being able to listen to it). Pretty much everything about this album makes me recoil in disgust, and keep in mind that I'm a severe Opeth fanboy. This album reeks of very generic death and black metal sounds, the songwriting isn't very mature in my opinion, Akerfeldt is still working on his death growls, and to make this pile of dung even worse, the production quality is absolutely as bad as it can get for a 90s album. It sounds like Opeth tried to record this album in a factory where all the machines were breaking down at once. Akerfeldt uses practically no clean vocals, his death growls aren't yet up to par, and the instrumental work is very average for Opeth, although the fact that the drummer is awful drags that down some. Unfortunately, Opeth wouldn't get the correct formula down until it reached Still Life, however they did at least improve on each of their next two albums. As for this one however, nothing seems to go right. If you feel you must get it to complete your Opeth collection, resist the temptation. You'll get a few semi-prog moments and ideas of what's to come later on in Opeth, but you won't get any of them fully developed on this album. I'd normally have sympathy and give this 2 stars since there are a few good ideas beginning to be developed, but the awful production quality brings it down another star, causing me to give this album a mere 1 star, although I'm not sure if it even deserves that.
Report this review (#189550)
Posted Sunday, November 16, 2008 | Review Permalink
Bonnek
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars The first two Opeth albums are an acquired taste. Two of the most alluring qualities of Opeth were still very under-developed:

First of all the singing. There's almost no clean singing at all here. There's bits and pieces scattered throughout the album but they are still very insecure. Also beware of the gruff vocals, Mike's grunting here resembles more a black metal rasp then his full-bellied demon attack we all came to love him for on the later albums.

Secondly, the progressive rock element is still missing. Yes sure, the songs are long and long and long and long, but they're made up of folksy riffs that are just sequenced, rather randomly, one after the other. The intricate epic metal riffs with their jazzy and Camel flavours is still far away.

This album is worth a listen for historic reasons but there's not much guarantee you'll like it unless you can stomach the predominant black metal leanings.

Report this review (#236668)
Posted Thursday, September 3, 2009 | Review Permalink
3 stars This album does not show Opeth at their best seeing as it was their first album. It is not at all that the tracks are of a low standard but they are just not particularly produced well (i feel as if the sound is too airy and should be more bassy). I am also not a fan of Mikel Akderfelts screaming in this album because its very high pitched all the way through. However i do have one praise for this album and that is the majority of the acoustic parts. I believe they are executed perfectly and do not suffer from the bad production that the tinny guitars in the metallic bits do.

I think this album contains some fantastic parts but it is definately lacking something that the later opeth albums have.

The best track for me is actually the piano piece in the middle of the album called (silhouette). Each note is expertly played and not just techincally but with true emotion aswell.

Report this review (#252312)
Posted Monday, November 23, 2009 | Review Permalink
4 stars To be honest, I don't think it's fair to compare this album to the later Opeth releases, due to the fact that there other albums where achieved when Opeth really had achieved the sound that they were searching for.

Many fans of Opeth (I have seen Lamentations, and I think that the testoesterone driven metal fans have only respect for the death metal side of Opeth, and seem to ignore the brilliant musicianship that was presented in their acoustic passages, the trait which attracted me to them in the first place.) seem to not have any real respect for this album, being ignorant to the fact that the album was basically a demo, the production is quite bad due to the fact it was their first recording and that (in my non perfectionist way), the music is still present, so stop worrying about the production and listen...with ears.

The songs aren't the strongest Opeth songs, and they didn't really seem to have much hooks. The music presented is well crafted and their some lovely folky like acoustic passages. The vocals, which seem to be growls throughout nearly, I really enjoyed. When it comes to growlers, Mikael is probabbly one of the most unique and one of the best. His early growls almost have a Cradle Of Filth ambient feel to them.

Some people may say that the songs have no real structure, but I did develop a pattern. Most of the songs followed this specific pattern.

I. Instrumental section II. Verses with growls III. Acoustic section. IV. Return of verses with growls V. Another acoustic section. VI. Instrumental outro

I like this way of organising music. It reminds me of classical forms like sonata, binary and rondo. My band Eternia, also organise our long songs in a similar fashion.

The lyrics seem to have a concept, but to be honest, if it is, it's about a man who is journeying through...A FOREST (nudge nudge nudge wink wink wink), trying to find his soul, who appears to be a woman.

1. In Mist She Was Standing - After an early Fates Warning and Iron Maiden like melodic metal intro, mixed with black metal undertones (kind of like early In Flames), the song then portrays elements of Genesis like dramaticism and a dollop of Morbid Angel like growls. The slow section is very reminiscent of Pink Floyd. The random screams add to the atomesphere of the almost folk like passages. To be honest, the music is spectacular. The song seems to be quite lengthy, but due to the fact it is almost like a musical journey...it really succeeds itself.

2. Under The Weeping Moon - This song is very doom orientated, and sounds like My Dying Bride (the kings of doom). The middle section sounds like the dark sections in Rush' Cygnus suite. The instrumental sections ae very dark and eerie and leave you feeling uncomfortable, but in a good way. To be honest, to spot a production error, there is way too much echo on Mikaels clean vocals.

3. Silhouette - Weird piano instrumental. The production is quite poor, but it adds to the ghostly feel to the song.

4. Forest Of October - A very Candlemass like intro, with a cool scream from Mikael. This is another dark piece, with some random acoustic sections. But they work...somehow. Another doom filled piece.

5. The Twilight Is My Robe - A darker version of Iron Maiden (isn't that Cradle Of Filth?) I feel that the acoustic passages could have been extended. This song sounds alot like The Carpenter by Nightwish. Probabbly the most interesting song on the album.

6. Requiem - A nice wee interlude.

7. The Apostle In Triumph - The intro of this song is very folky and reminds me of traditional music. The acoustic parts with added percussion are cool. The middle section is quite eccentric and reminds me of Antonius Rex. The layered vocals on this song sound quite good as well.

CONCLUSION: If you love Opeth, don't but this album, but the rest, then buy The Candlelight Years. This album is great album, and is amazing as a debut, but buy albums from Still Life to Ghost Reveries first (to be honest, Watershed was a bit of a let down.)

Report this review (#262441)
Posted Monday, January 25, 2010 | Review Permalink
3 stars Opeth's first album and one that calls into question the notion of whether the performer's age is relevant to a record's merits. If a group of 35 year olds produced this record I would be fairly ho-hum about it, but if you factor in that the group were around 21, the performance and composition of songs like In Mist She Was Standing- the album's best track- becomes a lot more impressive and moves me to be charitable. Amidst the standard Scandanavian death metal that will drive a lot of prog fans away, Orchid features a lot of interesting moments (love that long dark section on Under The Weeping Moon where the drums drop out) and the use of piano, acoustic guitar and atmosphere suggests a precocious group with plenty of talent who don't quite know how to use it yet. I hesitate to call this a straight death metal album because there is certainly a sense that the group have "big ideas" that their chosen genre can't quite hold, even here on the very beginning. The raw materials for Opeth's eventual domination of prog-metal are certainly here, but the songs lack personality and character, something that would be solved immediately on the next album as Akerfeldt began to write with topics in mind which would give the songs a purpose and make the compositions come alive- he has admitted that many of these are about nothing and it shows. You could mix and match sections from different tracks without changing the flow of the album. That is not to write it off though because there is plenty of stuff here that can be enjoyed in an uncomplicated way for its cool, hard, rocking sound, but it lacks the dazzling musicianship, emotional pull or memorability that later Opeth records would possess. These songs bleed into each other after a while and cheap production doesn't help. Additionally, Akerfeldt's voice is notably higher (again, he's only 21) and isn't yet earning the "best growl in metal" accolade he's routinely given these days. He's also fairly unintelligble here, where on later records he gets a better handle on growling and enunciating at the same time. However, Orchid is one of those debuts that will forever be rated lowest of all their work because if one gives this four stars, then everything else they've ever recorded becomes five stars because it is all significantly better. Some say that's wrong, that you should review an album based on its own merits and not in light of what happened earler or afterwards, but I find this unrealistic because we cannot help but view things in context, whatever the situation. Three stars for Orchid then but in a way it's a compliment to the level of excellence the band maintains throughout their discog that their debut has to be scaled down to make room for emphasising the excellence of their other material.
Report this review (#267365)
Posted Sunday, February 21, 2010 | Review Permalink
Conor Fynes
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars 'Orchid' - Opeth (6/10)

As one of my favourite bands (and the band that got me into death metal in general,) I had listened to Opeth quite a bit before moving onto their first record; 'Orchid.' With a raw production and a sound that can be likened to blackened death metal, 'Orchid' has many of the traits that got me to fall in love with this band's music; just unrefined. This early on there trademark melodic hooks, brutality interspersed with acoustic segments and an eerie vibe to the music. What makes this release a bit of a step down from latter albums however, is that it doesn't have that overall feel of cohesion and function alot of the others do, as well as being a little too long for it's own good.

With five of the album's seven tracks clocking in anywhere from ten to fifteen minutes, it can be difficult to listen to the album from start to finish without some level of fatigue. Each of the tracks (including the two interludes) have qualities about them, but they don't sound so much like effective compositions as they do a collection of (albeit good) riffs and inspired sections clumped together in different tracks. This is not at all to say the songs are not 'good,' but it's hard to tell most of the songs apart from one another.

The grand exception to this rule however, is the highlight to the album; 'The Twilight Is My Robe.' Although the first listens to this interesting album didn't distinguish this song from the others, it quickly grew on me that this track was quite a bit more accomplished then the others in terms of composition. A galloping intro and mournful verse structure segues into one of the band's most beautiful acoustic passages before erupting into a headbanging instrumental section reminiscent of Iron Maiden. While the song set up is much akin to the other tracks (heavy/light sections,) the riffs here are more vibrant and above all; memorable than on the other songs. The metal instrumental section rates as being one of the highlights of the album, as it had me pumped from the first intent listen onwards.

The good news here is that Opeth would go on to perfect this style with their next album 'Morningrise' and lead to a much more functional album. As far as 'Orchid' goes, it's clear that Opeth was still trying to work out some kinks in their act, and while this debut is impressive and gives a good idea of what the band is about, the compositions (and eventually, the production) would be cleared up to make way for some of the best heavy music ever written. A great album for riffs and some really inspired sections, but not quite as good as some of the real gems Opeth has to offer in their repetoire.

Report this review (#270277)
Posted Sunday, March 7, 2010 | Review Permalink
Evolver
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams
2 stars Ahhh, death metal. There's nothing like a bunch of guys playing aggressive heavy guitar licks, while vomiting out lyrics about a subject near and dear to their hearts, like death and Satan. At least I think that's what they are vomiting. It actually sounds more like "BLARRRGH NYAMMEN FLBBBTH SHNAAAHHHH TVOOONEE!"

Okay, maybe I'm exaggerating a little. But only a little.

I know Opeth is a favorite of some here. I even enjoy some of their music, when they either don't "sing", or show they know what a melody is. And they actually demonstrate some hints of prog here and there, on this album, know more as a pure death metal set. But the throat clearing noises throughout just make this nearly unlistenable.

Two stars, only because the instument playing shows promise.

Report this review (#296921)
Posted Tuesday, August 31, 2010 | Review Permalink
3 stars Not so prog, yet so true!

I want to preface my review with an announcement which is necessary to understand my rating of this album. I write this humble opinion from a progressive rock point of view. From "normal" point of view I would give it 4 stars. Why? Well, the answer is very easy. It's an outstanding album, ambitious, original and beautiful in a way. But it's not... excessively progressive .

ORCHID is an ambitious death/black metal with dark medieval and classical elements. Just listen to the first seconds of In the mist she was standing and you'll imagine headbanging Mozart along with Beethoven in bovver boots. But seriously, these harmonies are built in a very classical way and it is admirable. Mike was always a master of beautiful harmonies. But the way he develop his compositions is too stiff and clumsy. It's not a bad thing after all, but most people appreciate well flowing composition instead of bridgeless fifteen minutes' pieces with themes changing unexpectedly or very long atmospheric passages springing suddenly into a death rage.

ORCHID is extremely genuine record, devoid of professionalism or experience. Mikael realized his dreams, created music which he considered beautiful and moving, he didn't care about trends in the music or coherence of the work. That's why it is so captivating - there are genuine emotions, raw sound and great harmonies. It's absolutely must-have for extreme metal fan. For a prog fan not necessarily.

Report this review (#308104)
Posted Wednesday, November 3, 2010 | Review Permalink
3 stars A little introduction.I'm glad that my 1st review is for an opeth album because maybe is my favorite band.Well,some people consider Orchid the most metal album from them.It's logical because it is also considered when it came out one of the gems of doom/death metal.My favorite tracks are:In mist she was standing,silhouette,forest of october,the twilight is my robe and requiem.Almost the whole album!This album has more death metal vocals and screams than clear.I don't have problem with that because I like death/black metal.There are progressive moments in the album like the long atmospheric period from Under the weeping moon.The strange rhythms and many changes(in musical climate and in time signatures)also exist.I believe that Orchid deserves a listening and for people that who don't like death metal vocals.My grade:7,5/10
Report this review (#309800)
Posted Tuesday, November 9, 2010 | Review Permalink
Sinusoid
PROG REVIEWER
1 stars I've been an admitted progressive rock fan for a few years now, yet the massive force known as Opeth has always escaped my grasp in one way or another. That is until I finally pulled the trigger and bought ORCHID, Opeth's debut. Going in, I knew that I would hear death grunts galore, and to be fair, they're actually the best part of the album. But I never expected what I really did hear.

There are five songs that stretch either near or well beyond the ten minute mark. So it looks like Opeth wanted to start with a bang in the epics department in length, and to be fair, the instrumental skills of the band are impressive enough and the production is decent. ''Silhouette'' is a very beautiful piano solo played by drummer Anders Nordin. However, my main issue with ORCHID is the songwriting.

It may not seem like that big of an issue, but the overall songwriting is horrifically weak. Not one riff is distinguishable from another in a separate song unless you've ingrained the album in your brain. The tracks sound like demos of several songs pieced together unorthodoxically to make a thriteen minute piece. For a man used to long jams that used only one idea expanded upon, these twenty idea things are way too much for me.

ORCHID is an insanely fractured and disjointed album that never really gets off the ground despite the players' skills. For those really into Opeth's career or those unconditional death metal fans, this could work for you. Anyone only halfway interested ought to stay away.

Report this review (#342011)
Posted Friday, December 3, 2010 | Review Permalink
3 stars Orchid ? 1995 (2.8/5) 10 ? Best Song: The Apostle In Triumph Opeth, Sweden's progressive death metal darlings weren't always the way you might know them as. In the beginning, they played a mean metal, without any letup, following suit with the aggression and growling of your ordinary Gothenburg melodeath group. The one thing they possessed this early in the game that beats the pants off a host of pathetic jokesters like At te Gates is chops ? we aren't talking about blindly jarring, monotonous riffs where a man idiotically roars in an incomprehensible maelstrom of garbage, Opeth actually know how to play, and right from the beginning, as silly as it might be implemented at this stage, they do attempt diversify themselves. I suppose what I'm saying is that a man like Mikael Akterfeldt has a musical history involving more than old Venom 8-tracks. Even if 'In Mist She Was Standing' seems to want no more than to bludgeon you over the skull for the first five minutes of its more than 14 minute running time, once you get past that the song shifts into a calm, autumnal interlude. It isn't amazing ? it's pretty mundane, but it does set the band a step or two above Dark Tranquility. 'Silhouette' is a gothic piano dirge that doesn't go anywhere. It's pretty enough, but fairly aimless. To be honest, I like Orchid. The death metal segments are amateurish messes, and the subdued interludes don't hit my ears fluidly, but god damn it, they're trying to do something different, and you don't just come out with this much balls and still expect to retain your dignity ? they were taking a kind of risk. Edge of Sanity would only do this type of thing a year later, with the guidance of Mikael, anyway. Take it as a raw debut ? the band learning their ropes. They'd eventually shed their heavy 1990's metal influences.
Report this review (#441742)
Posted Monday, May 2, 2011 | Review Permalink
3 stars Opeth exploded into the scene with this album and has been declared as gods forever.

I have never really caught the Opeth bug. Mostly because I have never bothered listening to them. A decission I have now overturned.

This is supposed to be their death metal album. Really ? I find little death metal here. This album has been recorded and released on the shoulders of the debut albums from Dissection and Dimmu Borgir. The music here is not death metal. It is melodic black metal with a lot of folk elements.

Opeth and this album exploded into the scene because of the quality of the material here and because Orchid takes over the baton from Dissection and other melodic black metal bands into a much more progressive rock scenario. It is pretty obvious that this album set a new standard back then. A standard no other folksy melodic black metal album has matched.

A revolution back in 1995, it still stand the test of time in 2011 to a large extent. Yes, bands like Vintersorg and Borknagar has probably taken the baton a bit further down this road. But Orchid has a lot of really good songs and it feels like a coherent album. I am no longer a fan of this music, but Orchid has found a good home in my castle.

This is a good album and I am looking forward to explore the other Opeth albums too.

3 stars

Report this review (#557122)
Posted Tuesday, October 25, 2011 | Review Permalink
J-Man
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars For those only familiar with what Opeth would release from My Arms, Your Hearse forward, the first two albums from these progressive death metal juggernauts should come as a bit of a shock. Orchid is the debut album from these Swedish lads, and instead of hearing the trademark mix of seventies' progressive rock and death metal that made them famous, this observation instead shows the band in their musical infancy - while not an immature or unfocused effort by any means, Orchid shows Opeth without the precision and sense of direction that characterized their future masterpieces. This album has more of a black metal influence than any future Opeth albums, and the leanings into jazz and progressive rock territory aren't found too frequently here. While the extremely long compositions are somewhat progressive by nature, most of Orchid's progressive qualities are due to its blend of melodic black metal, death metal, doom metal, and folk music, which (at the time) was quite unique. This is probably my least favorite Opeth album, but it's a very solid entrance into the scene nonetheless.

Aside from two short instrumentals, all of the songs on Orchid are well over nine minutes long; you could definitely say that this is a tough nut to crack if you don't give it your full and undivided attention. I've been listening to this album on and off for quite a bit of time, though, so I have given it plenty of time to grow over the past two years or so. Even though Orchid has a few flaws which I will address shortly, I do have a pretty great time whenever I take it out for a spin - while they aren't particularly concise or cohesive, it's clear that Ĺkerfeldt and company had plenty of great ideas on this debut, even if the compositions tend to be a bit too sporadic for my tastes. Most of the musical fragments that make up Orchid are individually spectacular, but the transitions between sections are something Opeth would perfect over the course of the next few albums. For songs this long, most of them seem to lack any sort of unifying theme or cohesive structure to latch onto. Most of them kind of just 'happen', and while I do enjoy listening to the album a great deal, it lacks the dynamic power and compositional prowess that makes Opeth such a terrific band. There are notable exceptions ("The Twilight Is My Robe" is one that comes to mind), but the transitions tend to make this a somewhat incoherent release, especially from a band who would later on compose some of the finest musical masterpieces ever penned.

Though Opeth could've still improved as composers at this point in time, they were very accomplished musicians from day one. The fantastic use of acoustic guitars, fast paced metal sections, and melancholic folky parts shows the diversity and talent of these young musicians, and the guitar section has always impressed me here. The twin lead solos are truly spectacular, and I think that (although Opeth would later endure many lineup changes) they were well-rounded players from the very beginning. Unfortunately, the production (courtesy of none other than the legendary Dan Swanö) could have used a bit of work - though the man is undoubtedly a spectacular producer, the sound on Orchid is a bit thin and powerless. Everything's certainly audible, but it doesn't pack any sort of dynamic punch that I would've liked to see.

While I am a bit dissatisfied by the production and generally weak transitions on Orchid, this is still a promising and rather impressive debut from Opeth. Many better things were to come, but it is here that the band began to plant the seed for their unique brand of progressive melodic death metal. And, while the sections joining these sections could've been more fluid, there are still plenty of memorable moments throughout Orchid. This is probably the last Opeth album I'd recommend purchasing, but that's not saying much when you have a discography as spectacular as theirs. 3.5 stars are deserved for this promising and original debut.

Report this review (#587188)
Posted Monday, December 12, 2011 | Review Permalink
Nightfly
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars If Orchid had been the first Opeth album I'd heard then I would most probably never have bothered with them again. Released in 1995 it's their first album and is clearly a band finding their feet. Opeth started life as a death metal band though even at this early stage it's clear that they were attempting to move beyond genre boundaries though it has to be said, with limited success.

While death metal elements are prevalent, including the controversial growling vocals Orchid is still an album with plenty of light and shade, something the band would become well known for. There's the occasional glimpse of a good idea here and there but on the whole Orchid is lacking. The riffs lack tautness and are often repetitive and unimaginative and certainly lacking that killer punch later work would have. This takes away from the heaviness to an extent and while they do blend them with mellower sections the required effect is not present. One of Opeth's greatest strengths is the way they can match moments of ethereal beauty with killer riffs and that's just not happening here.

I don't want to be too harsh, this is after all a debut album and there are one or two moments where it works. Perhaps best of all is Forest Of October where they capture a captivating melancholic vibe alongside some of the better riffs on offer but this is the exception rather than the norm. Despite a fondness for death metal I'd always prefer clean vocals over death metal growls, even with Opeth they've always been something to tolerate rather than enjoy - the price I have to pay for some jaw dropping music over the years. Here though, even for me, they are lacking in power and simply annoying. Mikael Akerfeldt does sing cleanly at times, though less so than on later releases but it's still clear he has the makings of a decent singer even though he's still searching for his style.

They'd be another two albums after this before Opeth would really prove what a great band they could be which they did on Still Life in 1999. Orchid remains an average album at best and not a good place to start in your Opeth exploration. A little over 2 1/2 stars so rounded to 3.

Report this review (#590712)
Posted Sunday, December 18, 2011 | Review Permalink
4 stars I write this as a huge fan of both black and death metal music so those of you turned off by either of those styles may want to pass by this review. With that said, fans of Opeth's recent "observations" may want to stay clear from their debut album as well as its follow up Morningrise as neither feature the polished "clean" vocal sound that later albums exhibit.

Orchid is a dark album laced with Death Metal vocals and an abundance of guitar harmonies complimented with thundering bass lines and fast drumming. The lyrics are poetic but ambiguous enough to allow you to interpret them any way your imagination sees fit. I admit to not often being captivated by the lyricism in most music but with Opeth's early outings the exception is rewarding. The words read like poetry behind a medieval sound scape of absolute Black Metal inspired mayhem. To me, Opeth perfectly blend the transcendent beauty of nature with the harshness that is reality all at once. There are no ballads or overly personal croons that exist on this record and the only odes and serenades are those that pay homage to the changing of seasons and folklore.

If you are a fan of long, brooding songs peppered with heavy singing and, at times, groovy, psychedelic instrumental passages Orchid is for you.

My only complaint is the production error that incorrectly places the end portion of "Requiem" to the beginning of "The Apostle in Triumph." This mistake is minimal and to no fault of the band, as far as I know. However, I find it tampers with the overall feel of the album a tiny bit and as a result effects my score. Also, I feel as though the placement of some songs could have been done in a more thoughtful way to create a more interesting flow as a whole.

Orchid: In the Mist She Was Standing - 10/10 Under the Weeping Moon - 10/10 Silhouette - 10/10 Forest of October - 10/10 The Twilight is my Robe - 10/10 Requiem - 8/10 The Apostle in Triumph - 8/10

Report this review (#734609)
Posted Saturday, April 21, 2012 | Review Permalink
2 stars Opeth's debut was a waste of time of my life. They are the superstars of the progressive extreme music. This album is not their pride, and not a big deal. Orchid is a melodic and blackened death metal album, sounding different than most of the swedish death metal acts. The songs are lenghty. Five 10 minutes track, but don't go for that, only bad expectations, and this is the worst point of the whole album. To write a lot of lenghty tracks in a debut without a concept or regular musical structure, playing standard melodic death metal riffs section by section. The duration of the tracks are boring, seems to never end, and the guitar riffs are cliche melodic metal, any finnish band could do the same and better. Somehow, these guys were famous in some towns for attracting the neo-gothic / gothic metal fans, including a lot of girls, something unusual to death metal bands. I don't think this is depressive enough for that, this is very far from Katatonia. Maybe because of the dark melancholic feeling and the cover art of the album, but I still don't agree with this 1995 gothic reception. This debut album is lame for any musician or even Opeth fans. The fine moments are the environmental and dark ambient passages. But nothing could save those uncantchy tracks.
Report this review (#1049008)
Posted Monday, September 30, 2013 | Review Permalink
3 stars This album starts a very unique and interesting career for a band so well beloved in the progressive and metal music communities. Opeth has become well acclaimed for its mix of death metal with traditional progressive rock and folk melodies to create diverse masterworks, and this is where it all began. Orchid takes a dive into folk and black metal-like territory with Maiden-esque melodies along with complex song structures and long song lengths (a well-known trademark through their whole discography). Mikael Ĺkerfeldt's harsh vocals are still in their developing stages, not nearly as deep and wrenching as the guttural roars he would unleash on such albums as Still Life and Deliverance. This may sound like a complaint, but it suits the sort of adolescently ambitious nature of this album, showing the starry-eyed young band with a great deal of energy and thrill performing on their first album, much like Queensr˙che belting away "Queen of the Reich" or Metallica blasting away on their Kill em' All album. All-in-all, a good debut showcasing the band's strong knack for songwriting and a very promising sign of things to come.
Report this review (#1064289)
Posted Monday, October 21, 2013 | Review Permalink
4 stars Premise: Released in 1995, Orchid starts Opeths musical career off with a bang. It is very much a death metal album, but is interlaced with great acoustic passages that offer a glimpse of Opeths future.

Conclusion (For those that don't want to read the long song by song review):

Orchid is a long, unique, brutal ride that is very much a great listen, and showecased what Opeth was all about and the greatness that was to come. Yes it can drag, and isn't terribly coherent, the song transitions are sometimes out of nowhere, but these are the woes of a band starting out, and still trying to find their footing. The songs are still heavily reliant on riffs upon riffs, mostly without strong transition, but for what its worth, it doesn't really make the listen less enjoyable. My favorite song is The Twilight is My Robe with its amazing acoustic passages and crazy metal guitar solos. Followed by Apostle In Triumph, which is a strong closer with a truly breathtaking opening. The other songs are all strong, some very unique, others less so. Orchid is an album that mixes brutal and bleak death metal riffs with beautiful jazzy influenced acoustic passages, and even though Opeth haven't quite found their peak of creativity and songwriting, it is a strong, depressing experience, that is well worth the listen for fans of any of the types of genres that it encompasses.

For those that want a more detailed, song by song review (written as I was listening to the CD and is composed of the notes I took while listening, and thus, less structured)

1. In Mist She Was Standing (14:09)

Starts off with two minutes of ripping guitar riffs. It really sets off the mood for the album. Akerfeldt's famous growled singing come in after. The sound quality is not quite up to standard, so his growls sound a bit muddled, but still quite good. By 3:40 and again at 5:30, we already see the famous heavy/hard transition that Opeth became famous for. Very nice spacey guitar feel between 5-6:30. Then a well done, catchy, bass laden transition leads to some more growls. This is one of those songs that is plagued by too many riffs stacked on top of each other without too much direction, but I still think its rather well done, and remains interesting throughout most of the song. Its a bit too long though, could have easily been 2-3 minutes shorter. And starts to drag between the 8-10 minute mark. And yet, as Opeth always do, they redeem themselves, with a beautiful acoustic guitar arrangement into the 11th minute that sounds very medieval and minstrel like. Then it blows up for the finally with some very nice guitar work and a catchy yet foreboding riff that slowly fades out and finishes the song. Overall its a nice piece, too long yes, but nice, interesting, and really helps set the mood for the album. 8/10

2. Under the Weeping Moon (9:52)

Starts off with a very cool and interesting acoustic riff that than develops into a great guitar one. It picks off with the same driving intensity as the first song. A strong chugging riff with growls on top continues into the 3rd minute. Overall a very dark mood, something that I always enjoy. Things change with a strong transition to another dark spacey acoustic passage with eerie background sounds, I really like this part. Things slowly build up over the course of the 4th and the 5th minute, with the distorted guitars making for a great mood in the background. In the 6th minute things explode with the bass entering and taking over. To be honest, the climax is a tad bit weak, its good, but feels a bit anti climatic after the great build up. Yet more transitions after the climax, and then at the 7:40 minute mark, we finally get some clean vocals. Its a beautiful transition, and really adds to the mood of the song. The acoustic guitar is also beautiful. The ending is one of my favorite moments on the album, with a nice ending riff with heavy guitars in the same vain as the song before. Although here it is a bit more climatic, and makes up for the slightly weak part before. Overall great guitar solo to end the song, great ending. 8.5/10

3. Silhouette (3:07)

Wow! This is such a surprising song. It doesn't have anything to do with what came before. And yet, with its Medieval beauty, it just fits in. Its a short Piano driven instrumental. Its got a frantic feel to it which fits with the album. Overall its short but sweet, and gives much needed breathing room for the listener. 8.5/10

4. Forest Of October (13:04)

Things pick up were they left at the end of the second song with a nice strong opening. Then things get back into a dark growl heavy passage that is in the same vain as the first song, but maybe a tad bit darker. We actually hear a short clean sung passage in the middle, which is a nice touch. Around minute 5 we get back to another similar spacey part with some background acoustic guitar with distorted heavy guitars, similar to the second song although not quite as long. It blows up with a cool guitar solo that is very nice and a strong moment in the song, before getting back to a spacier build up. Its a strong build up that flows nicely. And should have probably ended in the 8th minute instead of continuing, but that is the case with this CD, some of the songs are a bit inflated. We get back to heavy growling after the 8th minute, and a continuation of never ending stacked riffs. The 11th minute segues way into the finally, which is strong, with some nice guitars, and a very nice acoustic final minute. Overall another good song, that could have used a bit of fat cutting. 8.5/10

5. The Twilight Is My Robe (11:01)

Another strong frantic start, with fast chugging metal riffs. There are nice metal guitar riffs that sound very sharp and Medieval (use this word too man times). Then the growling comes in until the 3.5 minute. Then a sharp transition into an amazingly beautiful and sorrowful acoustic guitar part. There is also a little clean singing on top of it. So far the strongest part on the CD for me. The acoustic guitar is really breathtaking with a playful yet mournful pitch. Then the bass transitions it all around 6 minutes, and we are back to the catchy metal riffs. But it then quiets back down, and again beautiful acoustic guitars come back in and slowly builds things up for a crazy souring guitar solo. Then we get some growling, with then more guitar solos before quieting down in the 9th minute. A nice slow acoustic passage that slowly builds up, and you can feel the suspense, before imploding majestically for the finally. Overall my favorite song on the album, its the most proggy with its stark and constant transitions. A true piece of art that still ranks highly on their discography. 9.25/10

6. Requiem (1:11)

A cool, very short (1 minute) bass and acoustic led passage. Feels like it could have been a nice longer song potentially. Very nice! 8/10

7. The Apostle In Triumph (13:01)

What could be the coolest opening of any song ever, seriously. Song starts off with an amazing spanish guitar passage with great bass. Overall amazing part, wish it was longer. Then the actual song comes in completely unrelated. That short 1 minute opening is really a masterpiece, 10/10, moment, wish it was somehow expanded upon. Anyway, the actual song starts off slowly, with a nice souring opening. Then things transition to a nice quiet acoustic part that has a very nice eerie sound, very nice. Around 4 minutes we get back to the heavy growl led riffs of the earlier songs. There is a nice catchy guitar part at around 5 minutes, before getting into a very heavy growly part. Awesome transition at 7:30, very cool sound created here. Really nice clean sung part starting at 8:30, which transitions back and forth nicely with the growls, followed by a guitar solo, this whole part with the transition is a very cool climax for the song. It should have probably ended at the 10 minute mark. But again on their first CD, the story is that they left a little too much int the songs, not knowing when they got the message across. That said, there are really strong guitar solos to cap off the song, followed by ominous clean vocals that end the song on a high note. Overall a strong finisher, with an amazing opening, even if it does not really fit the rest of the song. Could have lost a minute or two, but very strong effort. 9/10

Overall: 4.2/5 rounded to 4 Very Good to Excellent

(Orchid is an album that mixes brutal and bleak death metal riffs with beautiful jazzy influenced acoustic passages, and even though Opeth haven't quite found their peak of creativity and songwriting, it is a strong, depressing experience that is well worth the listen for fans of any of the types of genres that it encompasses.)

Report this review (#1114667)
Posted Wednesday, January 15, 2014 | Review Permalink
2 stars The beauty of hindsight is in credible. My absolute favourite band at the earliest stage. It's hard to imagine that Mike had so much potential brewing in him because this album really is nothing special to me and leans way too closely to the style of Black Metal than I really like. I guess this shows to pay attention to bands when they are starting out because if it wasn't for Still Life maybe none of us would know the band and maybe we would never have heard such gold as Ghost Reveries and Water Shed. I even like their new prog direction with Heritage, its actually stunning.

While there was promise in the long songs and interesting compositions, there was a lot of room to grow for these Swedish boys and boy did they. Confusingly "Under The Weaping Moon" is still a great track to me even though its a bit black metally. Only can give this 1 2 stars unfortunately.

Report this review (#1218746)
Posted Monday, July 21, 2014 | Review Permalink
Necrotica
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Colaborator
4 stars Opeth might be considered one of the giants for modern metal, specifically death metal and prog metal these days; However, their influences were a bit different in the early days. Sure they had a similar take on minimalistic, atmospheric progressive metal, their debut album Orchid suggests that the band had roots in other genres as well.

In such an album, you'll find genres like death metal, black metal, folk/neofolk, ambient, classical, and progressive metal. The compositions are still very long, so Opeth fans need not worry; aside from interludes (and bonus track), the shortest song clocks in at about 9 minutes. The album is brimming with the same twists and turns we've come to expect from an Opeth album, with a few interesting surprises of its own. Orchid shows the band in a more acoustic, dark environment here, and the very hollow production offers a lot of support in this way.

Mikael Akderfeldt's vocals here range from death growls, to black metal screeches, to folk-styled clean vocals, and each style is handled in an extraordinary way. His guitar work evades the usual metal shredding for something more substantial, offering clean runs, sweet acoustics, and even touches of jazz here and there. The other band members have no trouble keeping up with Akerfeldt either; Peter Lindgren is an exceptional player, capable of harmonizing with Akerfeldt's style cleanly while offering a wide dynamic range all his own. Johan DeFarfalla isn't heard a great deal here, but keeps the rhythm in place; Finally, Anders Nordin is a very diverse, talented drummer all his own, as well as an excellent pianist (we'll get to that later).

The material here is presented in a very raw fashion, with the heavier songs boasting buzzing guitars and visceral drumming. The acoustic sections are placed well, and keep a black metal atmosphere about them; The opening track, "In the Mist She Was Standing," is a perfect example of this. The song has absolutely no trouble blasting through the speakers and making its presence loud and clear. After an excellent intro, a full-on vocal attack cuts through the noise, with powerful contrasting screeches and growls. After everything settles down, a very sinister acoustic riff is heard, a premonition of sorts for when the next assault begins. Overall, the track embodies all of Orchid's beauty and visceral power.

Some songs are very differently executed. Take the first interlude, "Silhouette." Anders Nordin switches from the drums to the piano (!) for one of the best short songs of Opeth's earlier career. The song maintains the same dark feel, but adds a dose of the classical influence I mentioned before. It starts out in simplicity, Anders playing a slow gloomy melody; The song soon picks up the pace, sounding like a real old-fashioned classical piece from the likes of Mozart or Handel (except obviously darker than either of their styles). "Silhouette" is a very underrated gem in Opeth's discography.

One of the biggest letdowns here is the pace-killing "Requiem." It's a nice-enough interlude, but it seems really out of place compared to the rest of the album. The band could have at least attempted to make the song a bit longer or more fitting, but instead it acts as a blemish leading into such a great finale like "The Apostle in Triumph." Luckily, it's a small problem in the album, but I simply couldn't ignore it.

All in all, the album is still astounding by any standards, and remains an underrated piece of quality work by Opeth. Later albums like Blackwater Park and Still Life might get the most praise, but we can't simply leave Orchid behind either.

(Originally published on Sputnikmusic)

Report this review (#1445890)
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 | Review Permalink
FragileKings
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars So here we have the very first Opeth album, released by Candlelight Records in 1995 but recorded in the spring of 1994. By the time Opeth hit the studio, none of the founding members remained in the band, the last one, David Insberg, having left two years prior. On the current roster were a young Mikael Akerfeldt (vo/g) who was joined by Peter Lindgren (g), Anders Nordin (dr/piano), and Johan De Farfalla (bass/backing vo ) for the debut.

This album and its successor, "Morningrise", show Opeth as they never would sound again. Though labeled as death metal with some black metal aspects, Opeth were from their first platter already showing prog tendencies. The songs are mostly over ten minutes and are composed in multiple parts with tempo and meter changes, not to mention the frequent acoustic breaks. I'll admit here that my knowledge of death metal is rather sparse and lacking and so I did a bit of research, first reading the Wikipedia article on death metal and discovering that I already was familiar with its origins (which as it turns out are close to those of black metal). In the eighties I had in my cassette collection albums by Venom, Bathory, Hellhammer, Celtic Frost, and Possessed, and it was these bands among others that inspired both the death and black metal movements. To further educate myself, I found a playlist on YouTube with 224 videos of old school death metal and I listened to the first two dozen songs. From those I conclude that early death metal was fast like trash but featured growled, or perhaps more accurately roared, guttural vocals. This matched my loose impression prior to hearing the album. When someone somewhere commented that early Opeth albums were more straightforward death metal, I imagined something like early Gorguts: fast, technical, and brutal.

The guitar sound strikes me as rather primitive for the day. Though we are talking mid-nineties here, the distortion sound, the tone, and the use of delay are similar to albums I picked up in the eighties. The one that comes to mind most readily is an EP by Ruthless. The guitars have a rawness to them and sound a bit high tone compared to the city-leveling, bombastic, full-on distortion whump! of later albums like "My Arms, Your Hearse" and "Blackwater Park". But the dual guitars play complex and melodic riffs that more than once remind me of Paul Di'Anno-era Iron Maiden. This cannot just be me because I read someone describe the guitar playing as Celtic-influenced and I have read the same appraisal about Iron Maiden.

Rather amazingly, this debut death metal album opens with a 14:10 mini-epic that introduces more than a couple of harmonized dual guitar riffs for the first 2:20 of the song before the vocals finally come in. Around the 3-minute mark the speed picks up, but with more emphasis on slower melodic riffs I feel the music is more akin to early nineties thrash bands like Sacrifice, Slayer, or Annihilator because raw speed has given way to complexity in music and song structure. The first acoustic break comes at 3:48 and get used to it because this is what the band is going to build its career on: frequent acoustic breaks in heavy songs. True to melodic form, the lead guitar parts are not wailing or shredded but exude a taste for style and feeling over volleys of notes.

Three of the next five tracks are all lengthy numbers featuring more melodic riffs, a few speedy sections, some wonderful mid-eighties early death metal heavy riffs, frequent exploitation of acoustic guitars, and some noteworthy bass guitar highlights. There are moments, especially in "The Twilight Is My Robe" when the acoustic passages become frequent to the point of redundancy, I felt at first, the uniqueness and surprise quickly wearing off. However, by the end of the song the quick binges of speedy heavy parts actually seem more like the breaks while the acoustic parts carry the weight of the song.

Throughout these tracks, Mikael's death growl is harsh and demonic, sounding like his vocal chords are being given a good shredding while the lead guitars eschew shredding altogether and stick to being melodic and emotive. There is still room for some great trad metal guitar moves in places. On the down side, the clean vocals here often sound weak as though they were deemed a necessary part of the songs but no fully adequate singer was available. Mikael would certainly perform clean vocals much better later on down the road.

There are two short instrumental pieces. "Silhouette" is a piano composition by drummer Anders Nordin. It could have been rather pretty but I feel the playing is clunky and graceless. The keys are pounded throughout and the tempo seems ready to derail at inappropriate times. "Requiem" is an acoustic guitar number with bass guitar, and despite the band's insistence on working in acoustic guitar sections into their songs, this instrumental is unremarkable.

The true highlight of the album for me is in the final track, "The Apostle in Triumph". Beginning with an upbeat acoustic piece, it sounds like something that might have been an outtake from Led Zeppelin's third album, hand drums and a restless bass guitar adding to the interest. Then bizarrely, the music fades out and for two seconds there is only silence. Another acoustic composition begins, and you might be wondering here what has happened as "Requiem" was followed by two more acoustic only bits. But "Apostle" is a mighty track of 13 minutes with some ominous guitar riffs and brutal vocals. Much more emphasis goes on the heavy music than on any other track, I presume. At 7:25 a huge surprise is dropped on our cochleae with an instrumental segment that features a guitar that sounds more like a viola. I suspect it is played by adjusting the volume dial but done with such a speed and agility that I would not be surprised to hear another technique had been employed. After the first two listens to this album, this song had cemented itself as my favourite track of the album and one of my top ten favourite Opeth tracks, at least until I acquired more albums when the list had to be expanded to a top 20.

Though Opeth would go on to release many excellent albums later on, this earnest debut, though a little rough in a few spots, establishes the band as more than just another death metal outfit. Rankings of Opeth album usually put "Blackwater Park" or "Ghost Reveries" at the top but at least one list I found has "Orchid" in the number one position.

A more straight forward death album this is not. These four young men produced quite an achievement in their early days as Opeth and set their course for progressive melodic death metal.

Report this review (#1718164)
Posted Saturday, May 6, 2017 | Review Permalink
siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
5 stars When it comes to progressive extreme metal, no story would be complete without a reference to Sweden's OPETH, a band that started out as just another pioneering death metal band from the Swedish underground but would soon blossom into one of the most unique metal bands of any genre. While long associated with Mikael Ĺkerfeldt who has been the only member to appear on every single OPETH release, the band was actually formed in 1989 by the original vocalist David Isberg who after finding a lineup would soon solicit band membership from former Eruption band member Ĺkerfeldt. For whatever reason the other band members rejected this decision and soon departed and the pair were left together to start anew.

Interestingly the band name came form the word "Opet" which was taken form the Wilbur Smith novel "The Sunbird" and is the name of a fictional Phoenician city in South Africa which translated into "City Of The Moon." After a ridiculous amount of personnel changes, the whole thing became too much for founder Isberg who left the band in 1992 which allowed Ĺkerfeldt to take control of the project and the rest is history. After the tumultuous start Ĺkerfeldt took the bull by the horns and recruited the new lineup of guitarist Peter Lindgren, percussionist / pianist Anders Nordin and bassist Johan De Faralla. OPETH was quite lucky in the fact that they circumvented the whole demo thing after Lee Barrett of Candlelight Records offered to sign the band with a mere exposure to a rehearsal.

OPETH were also fortunate to have tutelage of the metal veteran Dan Swanö who participated in not only the production and engineering but also provided the necessary funding and mentoring of what he deemed a promising talent emerging. While 1994 was spent developing the band's sound and recording the debut ORCHID, the album finally emerged in May 1995 to mixed reviews. Riding the initial explosive underground growth of both the death and black metal scenes as well as the progressive rock revival of the early 90s, OPETH was one of the most audacious bands to emerge in the mid-90s with roots in all of the above and delivered an epic progressive death metal sound well beyond the scope of other extreme metal contemporaries. ORCHID was both bellicosely brutal as well as tenderly melodically beautiful.

Unlike the following OPETH releases, ORCHID is a far more diverse album that introduced the reverie of classic 70s progressive rock wrapped up in blackened death metal clothing that allowed complex epic length tracks to unfold on ever-changing journeys that embarked on heavy death metal riffing, folk music, subdued acoustic classically inspired guitar parts and piano parts along with death metal growls, black metal shrieks and even clean melodic vocals. The mood is one of complete depressive annihilation with pummeling distortion and frenetic vocal insanity to sublime twin guitar sweeping melodies that evoke calmness, placidity and the light of eternal hope. This rollercoaster ride is a true metal mood swing as the alternating dynamics sound as bipolar a concert that would feature Morbid Angel playing with Simon & Garfunkel.

ORCHID is the test of perseverance and patience as the original album clocks in close to 66 minutes and most later releases contain the early underproduced demo "Into The Frost Of Winter" as a bonus track. The inclusion as a bonus was a wise move as it demonstrates how quickly the band had grown from a brutal raw black / death metal band to the sheer sophisticated prowess of this debut studio album where five of the seven tracks exceed eleven minutes, one is close to ten and the only two short tracks are the acoustic interludes of "Silhouette" and "Requiem." Ĺkerfeldt was obsessed with the occult during these years and likewise the lyrics are dark and twisted about Satanism and evil and likewise the downtuned guitars and overall sound was created to accompany the gloominess of the underworld.

In many ways ORCHID encapsulates the entire career of what OPETH would become on the more successful following albums. The brutal death prog that mixed extreme metal and 70s progressive rock was already fully developed as were the myriad ingredients of heaviness with folk, classical and even jazzy extra touches. While i may be in the minority, i truly find ORCHID to be the most captivating album of OPETH's entire discography as it embraces a wider spectrum of sounds that would be jettisoned for the more streamlined albums to come. One of my biggest complaints about the majority of OPETH albums is that the percussion is tamped down to simply keep the beat of the compositional flow. Not so on ORCHID where fully fueled bombast is allowed off the leash as much as it is tamed into submission.

Likewise this is the album that is allowed to express the most extreme examples of death metal with faster tempos, blastbeats and absolute fury delivered in Ĺkerfeldt's unique vocal style. While many may find this one a bit too long for its own good, i find the opposite true as it more than any other OPETH album has enough changes in the tempos, dynamics, intensity and stylistic shifts that allow the melodies to exhibit extreme beauty and the bombast to pummel the senses. Even within the greater OPETH canon, ORCHID is utterly unique and single-handedly launched a completely new strain of death prog just at the time when bands like Dream Theater and Anglagard were reviving the progressive rock scene from its lengthy slumber. Yes, i stand in a lonely room but ORCHID is the epitome of what i consider the perfect OPETH sound and there is not one track that doesn't shine as brilliantly a supernova in the heavens above. A woefully underrated masterpiece to my ears.

Report this review (#2170355)
Posted Sunday, March 31, 2019 | Review Permalink
2 stars Opeth first album was already a one of a kind in the metal genre yet not showing band's potential. All band members were in their formative years and the drummer and bass player to be replaced be the trademark alternatives. Singing both clean and growling are average and on the top of the game as we know Ĺkerfeldt from the turn of millenium.

While you can hear diversity in the sound ranging from brutal death metal, decent heavy metal and acoustic mellow guitars, even a great short piano piece, the compositions are not astonishing. The mood is dark but not nihilistic or anti-Christian. It is surprising that the short acoustic track is not guitar-driven like in almost all cases in the future, it is pure piano beauty. Riffs are usually memorable even though not yet in the typical evil Opeth spirit.

To a progressive rock and even metal fan, this album won't be so pleasing so I will give it 2.5 stars but personally I like it more.

Report this review (#2477548)
Posted Thursday, November 19, 2020 | Review Permalink
Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Although I previously hadn't "got" Opeth, I recently decided to give them another chance and thought the best way to do it was to give a listen to this debut album of theirs, on the basis that whilst it doesn't get as much praise as later works, it forms a foundation for their work and I might find a better way to unpack their sound if I track its development from here.

The album leads off with a clear statement of intent in the form of In Mist She Was Standing, in which a positively jaunty instrumental opening section gives way to a mingling of death metal aggression, vocals, and production style with prog- derived musicianship and compositional extravagance. In fact, but for two brief numbers (Silhouette and Requiem), the entire album consists of reasonably long multi-sectional compositions which find Opeth sketching out their initial vision of prog-death metal.

Indeed, it would be fair to say that whilst death metal might be the centre of gravity for the album as far as its metal contributions go, a broader palette of metal techniques are drawn on than just the standard death playbook, with some sections taking on a sort of epic majesty reminiscent of the more serious-minded types of power metal. And genuinely non-metallic sections appear too, with some gentle moments reminiscent of the most pastoral moments of early prog bands (think Anthony Phillips' acoustic guitar work on Genesis' Trespass as an example).

With Dan Swanö producing, it's hard not to see this as carrying forward some of the ideas originally explored by Edge of Sanity - though notably, Edge of Sanity's progressive magnum opus Crimson was not yet recorded when this was released, so perhaps it's better to say that there was a cross-fertilisation of ideas at work between the two groups. Either way, if you're into death metal and into prog and feel like you should like Opeth but have previously bounced off their mature works, it may be worth your while giving Orchid a listen, because this is the flower whose seeds grew Opeth's future harvests.

Report this review (#2629969)
Posted Tuesday, November 2, 2021 | Review Permalink
Dapper~Blueberries
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Opeth as a band is one I never actually listened. In terms Prog Metal, I am more familiar with Dream Theater or TOOL, but I always at least knew Opeth existed, but I never really, experienced them like many people. But I decided to go ahead and give Opeth a shot, started with their debut, and here are my thoughts.

The first song is In The Mist She Was Standing. It wastes little to no time in establishment of the sound of the album. It's kinda adventurous in the sound, however since Opeth is said to be more in line with death metal, it has some screamo voices. The voice is pretty cool, gives a sorta feeling like this is a tale told by a dead man. It's pretty cool in a way. I also like the quieter bits with acoustic guitars, it really makes this song sound a little more sinister in the wake. I think this is a great start. Next song is Under The Weeping Moon. The sound is still as adventurous in nature, however near the middle with the acoustics, there are some weird noises, probably guitar feedback since that song leads into a pretty guitar section. Still has the screamo vocals. Now after that song, we get to Silhouette, a piano song. The piano is pretty sinister sounding, like a dark knight has entered into a castle and is ready to make plans for the princess' life. Pretty damn cool. Now after that, we got Forest of October. This is a pretty rocking and pretty slow moving in the beginning, and even when the vocals kicked in. Also in some bits, there isn't any screamy vocals and more fluid vocals in there too. They sound pretty nice, I think I dig them more than the screamo. Next song is The Twilight Is My Robe, and this is objectively the best song on the album. The guitar riffs are so fluid and smooth, yet so intense, that awesome bass at the start, the beautiful acoustic guitar in the middle, and how the songs comes back ahead after the middle is over is so awesome. It's like a whole entire adventure. Very damn cool! After that, we got Requiem. Like Silhouette, it's pretty short, and it primarily uses one instrument, being an acoustic. It is a pretty song, and I think it is a good little song to lead into the next song, The Apostle In Triumph. I say this is a very good last song. It ties things up. It establishes the sounds, the heavy death metal, the adventurous sound, the slow moving acoustical parts, and even introduces more folk like elements to in the beginning. It is a very good song, and I thought it was a really good closer for an album like this. Very nice debut.

So in terms of everything, I think this is a very great debut. It introduces some cool sounds in a metal landscape. With some complex instrumentation, awesome vocals, and some stellar work with non traditional metal instruments like acoustics and pianos to really make this some damn good progressive metal. Very nice, very good. Hope their next album is even better.

Report this review (#2636644)
Posted Wednesday, November 24, 2021 | Review Permalink
4 stars Orchid is an album that has its flaws, but honestly, it's a great debut, there's a unique and otherworldly atmosphere that surrounds this album every time i listen to it, be it the raw mixing, the abstract black metal lyrics, the lack of structure of the songs and the constant change of rhythm, this is an album that has a very peculiar and unique sound, the experimentation that the album has is something that i admire and really like, one thing that i find very interesting about Orchid, is that one of the characteristics of Opeth which are the acoustic parts, while in other albums they are used to convey melancholy and calm, in Orchid i feel that it sounds more sinister and disturbing, which is really cool. It's not a perfect album, what makes Opeth Opeth is here, but it's quite initial, it has a lack of cohesive direction, however, Opeth in this debut right away proved themselves to be a different band and their potential, it's worth the effort. especially for songs like ''In The Mist She Was Standing'', ''Forest of October'' and ''The Twilight Is My Robe'', really great album.
Report this review (#2961930)
Posted Monday, October 16, 2023 | Review Permalink
Hector Enrique
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Originally from the lands that cradled the sordid tonalities of death and black metal, the Swedes Opeth give a twist to the characteristic rispidity of the genre and its gloomy guttural voices, adding folk and progressive elements to conceive "Orchid", their debut album, a novel mixture of chiaroscuro that mutates smoothly from the extreme instrumental gravity to luminous acoustic landscapes.

"Orchid" shows an almost natural inclination for long developments (a characteristic that will be repeated in later works) in humid wooded scenarios and crepuscular reflective moments that Mikael Ĺkerfeldt describes with his guttural voice transformed at times into crystalline and peaceful. From the opening "In the Mist She Was Standing", surely the most outstanding piece of "Orchid", the atmospheric "Under the Weeping Moon" and its pinkfloydian airs delays, or "Forest of October" and "The Twilight Is My Robe", the pieces are around ten minutes or more, and resort to the constant play of Ĺkerfeldt and Peter Lindgren's raspy riffs combined with their arpeggiated acoustic guitars, sustained by the correct percussion of Anders Nordin and the at times unmistakable double bass drum at the speed of a fugitive pursued by the police, and the almost invisible bass of Johan de Farfalla.

And in between, to give a greater contrast to the album, the interesting piano solo "Silhouette" by Nordin, something unusual being the percussionist of the band, and the very short and acoustic "Requiem", are a breath of classical airs and prepare the onslaught of "The Apostle in Triumph", another powerful theme that refers to nature with mystical touches and that ends the first musical adventure of Opeth.

Still with a sound to be polished and rudimentary at times, but already showing their particular way of doing things, Opeth begins with "Orchid" to outline their own path.

3/3.5 stars

Report this review (#2969461)
Posted Saturday, November 25, 2023 | Review Permalink
VianaProghead
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Review Nş 784

Opeth have traveled a long way since their humble beginnings in Huddinge, a small town south of Stockholm. Formed in 1990 by David Isberg (vocals) and Mikael Akerfeldt (guitars), the duo enlisted Akerfeldt's former Eruption band mates Anders Nordin (drums) and Nick Doring (bass). Not long after, a second guitarist Andreas Dimeo was added to the line up. After a few gigs, the band splintered, with Dimeo and Doring exiting for personal reasons. It was the introduction of Peter Lindgren (bass, then guitar), where things started to get more serious. Even the departure of Isberg in 1992 didn't heavily affect the newly established core of Akerfeldt, Nordin, and Lindgren. But, it wasn't until the entry of the bassist Johan De Farfalla that Opeth was formally complete. With this line up Opeth released their debut studio work "Orchid".

So, "Orchid" is the debut studio album of Opeth and that was released in 1995. The line up on "Orchid" is, as I mentioned, Mikael Akerfeldt (lead vocals, electric and acoustic guitars), Peter Lindgren (electric and acoustic guitars), Johan De Farfalla (backing vocals, Hofner bass, Washburn fretless bass and semi-acoustic bass) and Anders Nordin (drums, percussion and piano). "Orchid" had also the participation of Stefan Guteklint (bass), as a guest musician.

The Opeth's debut album "Orchid" isn't mentioned much by Opeth's fans but it's certainly a great work. The band that would forever change the face of metal over the years by incorporating progressive rock and folk elements into their music like no other launched this debut onto an unsuspected and amazed public. This wasn't an ordinary death metal album. Of course we have Akerfeldt's growls, but he tempered them with scattered melodic clean passages that were quite beautiful. In addition, plenty of intricate, folksy acoustic guitar interludes were woven into most of the songs from Akerfeldt and Lindgren that when mixed with the complex and heavy electric guitar parts made for an uncanny sound that was surely metal, but highly reminiscent of the great progressive bands of the 70's. This was a great debut album.

"Orchid" has seven tracks. "In The Mist She Was Standing" shows its strength with an epic and powerful riff. On this album Opeth proved to be a band that knows exactly how to make introductions to their songs. They don't get too long, they don't get boring because the construction of riffs and melodies is very good and not to mention the attention they add after the intro of each song. "Under The Weeping Moon" has a soft beginning but with a quite intriguing riff, which then evolves into a devastating and emotional sound. In fact the style of composition in the guitar melodies are quite similar to Katatonia. It has a more psychedelic and generally creepy atmosphere, introduced by acoustic guitars before yet another switch into full distortion. "Silhouette" is a beautiful, almost classical sounding piano interlude composed by Nordin, a real rarity for Opeth. This excellent piano interlude is very short, a magnificent piece with several different melodies and key changes to be found conjuring a mystic nocturnal atmosphere. It's simply beautiful and should never be overlooked. "Forest Of October" has some of the most beautiful and sorrowful melodies of the whole album and it really are yet another truly memorable and perfectly composed song. It's one of the best tracks on this album and it's also a song of great historical importance when it comes to Opeth's evolution from the more standard Death Metal to what they are now. "The Twilight Is My Robe" is another lengthy epic. It's arguably one of the album's easiest tunes to get into due to its high amount of catchy riffs. It has some of my favourite Opeth's acoustic passages on the album. The band embraces once again their prog rock roots, with mesmerizing acoustic sections, complex electric passages, and overall it just drips with atmosphere and emotion. "Requiem" is their first acoustic interlude and although rather short, it's still a superb piece of acoustic material. It's quite lovely, and it's a shame that it's as brief as it is, but there's barely time for a breath. "The Apostle in Triumph" is like some up tempo yet gloomy folk piece. Despite the overused acoustic guitar, Opeth proves they are capable of mixing other instruments into their songs in a brilliant way. The soaring guitar harmonies seep into the mix with loads of melancholy and despair increased more due to the Akerfeldt's death vocals.

Conclusion: I confess that I expected a much weaker album according to the ratings on Progarchives. But, it seems I was wrong. It's true that "Orchid" isn't a perfect album but is a very solid album, especially for a debut from a new band trying out an original music style. Although maybe not as well executed as some of their later albums, but definitely has earned its place in the progressive metal history. "Orchid" still shows all the great characteristics that would come to the forefront on such mammoth albums as "Still Life", "Blackwater Park", and "Ghost Reveries". It's very well executed through an interesting and highly sensitive musical style that its creators used to explore both musicality and emotion. There's a large world to roam and plenty of parts that you'll be surprised to remember without too much effort. Each Opeth release is considered a classic in the eyes of many that also believe this band not yet released a weak album.

Prog is my Ferrari. Jem Godfrey (Frost*)

Report this review (#3060074)
Posted Sunday, June 16, 2024 | Review Permalink

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