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cursestar
Forum Groupie
Joined: April 20 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 67
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 13:25 |
Lanor wrote:
I've really been there and done that.Absolutely loved them. Still Life is among my favourites of all times, and I'm assuming that's because of my attachment to it as the first I got into.I found it fairly difficult to get into them initially, most likely because of the death vocals, which are actually unlike any other in that they're not delivered in monotone. I'd often listen to a full song and wait for the softer sections because I loved them, and having to put up with the rest of it I ended up loving every part of Opeth equally.Their structures at first are a novelty."oo wow, heavyyy....woow...soffttt.. that was a biggg surprise there...this is so unpredictable"Then I realised an overall view reveals that's what the main gist of it is and the novelty wears thin. |
If you think that's the only purpose of Opeth's music, then I don't think you ever understood them.
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FruMp
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 16 2005
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 322
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 13:33 |
ProgBagel wrote:
Theres plently of 'death metal' bands that don't have
lyrics about death, mutilation etc... I believe they just refer to the
vocal style as death metal. There's genres called Christian Death
Metal...
Opeth is an excellent band...like you said I too get the same
feeling, classic progressive rock except in metal. By no means is
Opeth's music not techinical though, they have some fancy acoustic work
but its not terribly complex. |
Hmmm it's not technical death metal though, especially when compared to bands like atheist and gorguts.
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Trickster F.
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 10 2006
Location: Belize
Status: Offline
Points: 5308
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 16:29 |
cursestar wrote:
Lanor wrote:
I've really been there and done that.Absolutely loved them. Still Life is among my favourites of all times, and I'm assuming that's because of my attachment to it as the first I got into.I found it fairly difficult to get into them initially, most likely because of the death vocals, which are actually unlike any other in that they're not delivered in monotone. I'd often listen to a full song and wait for the softer sections because I loved them, and having to put up with the rest of it I ended up loving every part of Opeth equally.Their structures at first are a novelty."oo wow, heavyyy....woow...soffttt.. that was a biggg surprise there...this is so unpredictable"Then I realised an overall view reveals that's what the main gist of it is and the novelty wears thin. | If you think that's the only purpose of Opeth's music, then I don't think you ever understood them. |
If ."oo wow, heavyyy....woow...soffttt.. that was a biggg surprise there...this is so unpredictable" is your thoughts while listening to Opeth, I don't even dare to imagine what you'd think if you listened to RIO.
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Lanor
Forum Newbie
Joined: September 28 2007
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 32
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 17:24 |
Trickster F. wrote:
cursestar wrote:
[QUOTE=Lanor] I've really been there and done that.Absolutely loved them. Still Life is among my favourites of all times, and I'm assuming that's because of my attachment to it as the first I got into.I found it fairly difficult to get into them initially, most likely because of the death vocals, which are actually unlike any other in that they're not delivered in monotone. I'd often listen to a full song and wait for the softer sections because I loved them, and having to put up with the rest of it I ended up loving every part of Opeth equally.Their structures at first are a novelty."oo wow, heavyyy....woow...soffttt.. that was a biggg surprise there...this is so unpredictable"Then I realised an overall view reveals that's what the main gist of it is and the novelty wears thin. | If you think that's the only purpose of Opeth's music, then I don't think you ever understood them. |
And what is it exactly that someone is meant to understand about Opeth? I was a fan of the band for a long time man, I appreciate what Mikael does but I just know what to expect from the next album they bring out. I've heard their albums loved them all (especially Still Life as I said before), and as a conclusion of that, looking at everything they've done, thinking about all the albums mashed into one big picture, one overall view on the whole discography, I can see how formulaic it is. I only realised this when I stopped looking too deeply into Opeth. e.g. understanding.
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Yontar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 07 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 131
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 22:30 |
P.H.P. wrote:
Yontar wrote:
Firefly wrote:
Gothenburg bands do melodies with death metal is a different way, or at least, the mood and vibe are completely different. There's no Gothenburg in Opeth. |
Oh and btw how so are the melodies different because i see several similarities with opeth and dark tranquilities early works (one of the most well known gothenburg bands). And on top of all of that if you have ever heard the album the jester race by in flames although it is slightly lighter than opeth, sonically there are a lot of comparisons i could make.
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If you really understand the idea behind Opeth you'll inmediately notice that they just don't play death metal, also you'll understand that they're not just another band, and the melodies and sophistication of Opeth are Prog rock inspired, certainly closer to rock than to metal, and I can really tell you In Flames or Dark Tranquility are not Prog rock inspired at all, those are just metal bands, death metal bands.
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ok im assuming hear for a second that you have only heard opeth albums beyond still life. Orchid was extremely black metal and folk metal influenced, and you could easily lump morningrise in to the gothenburg category. Im not disagreeing that opeth isn't progressive but at the heart of things they are a metal band. Their newer material is a big departure from their earlier works but over 60% of the material falls into the black/death metal genre whether it is progressive or not. Their original intentions were to make metal that was focused on songwriting. I'm guessing you haven't heard many other heavy progressive metal bands otherwise you wouldn't say things like this. I would say that some of their material is more on the prog side of things, but dream theater is far lighter than opeth and THEY are considered prog metal, so why shouldn't a band that is twice as heavy as one of the founders of the genre be considered progressive metal as well????
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basically in a few words, prog metal owns!
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Yontar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 07 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 131
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 22:31 |
Yontar wrote:
P.H.P. wrote:
Yontar wrote:
Firefly wrote:
Gothenburg bands do melodies with death metal is a different way, or at least, the mood and vibe are completely different. There's no Gothenburg in Opeth. |
Oh and btw how so are the melodies different because i see several similarities with opeth and dark tranquilities early works (one of the most well known gothenburg bands). And on top of all of that if you have ever heard the album the jester race by in flames although it is slightly lighter than opeth, sonically there are a lot of comparisons i could make.
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If you really understand the idea behind Opeth you'll inmediately notice that they just don't play death metal, also you'll understand that they're not just another band, and the melodies and sophistication of Opeth are Prog rock inspired, certainly closer to rock than to metal, and I can really tell you In Flames or Dark Tranquility are not Prog rock inspired at all, those are just metal bands, death metal bands.
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ok im assuming hear for a second that you have only heard opeth albums beyond still life. Orchid was extremely black metal and folk metal influenced, and you could easily lump morningrise in to the gothenburg category. Im not disagreeing that opeth isn't progressive but at the heart of things they are a metal band. Their newer material is a big departure from their earlier works but over 60% of the material falls into the black/death metal genre whether it is progressive or not. Their original intentions were to make music ROOTED in metal that was focused on songwriting. I'm guessing you haven't heard many other heavy progressive metal bands otherwise you wouldn't say things like this. I would say that some of their material is more on the prog side of things, but dream theater is far lighter than opeth and THEY are considered prog metal, so why shouldn't a band that is twice as heavy as one of the founders of the genre be considered progressive metal as well????
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basically in a few words, prog metal owns!
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P.H.P.
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 01 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 334
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 22:51 |
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Yontar
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 07 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 131
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 23:00 |
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basically in a few words, prog metal owns!
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P.H.P.
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 01 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 334
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Posted: October 04 2007 at 23:48 |
Yontar wrote:
um you haven't heard much black metal i assume. There is alot of extremely melodic black metal that could be compared with opeth easily. For example Bal Sagoth or Emperor both write lines very similar to opeth riffs just sped up.
And in your previous you called Opeth rock more so than metal so don't tell me now that they are metal. Read your own posts before you post them.
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I've obviously heard black metal, so that's why I'm saying what I'm saying..., so just don't assume anything...anyways black metal isn't my cup of tea, Don't take me wrong, I said that Opeth's music is truly Prog ROCK inspired, I'm not saying they're a Prog Rock band, that would be just wrong, they're a Progressive Metal band, and so as Steven Wilson from Porcupine Tree himself said, that Opeth's music hasn't to do with metal at all, and he's talking about that Opeth's music doesn't feel like metal really, it is metal, but the feeling is more rock oriented than a true metal one.
Edited by P.H.P. - October 04 2007 at 23:54
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themaninblack
Forum Newbie
Joined: July 07 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 16
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Posted: October 05 2007 at 02:41 |
I only got into Opeth this year but they are up there as one of my fave's now, brilliant band, really innovative, will have to catch them live soon.
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Trickster F.
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 10 2006
Location: Belize
Status: Offline
Points: 5308
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Posted: October 05 2007 at 18:07 |
Lanor wrote:
Trickster F. wrote:
cursestar wrote:
[QUOTE=Lanor] I've really been there and done that.Absolutely loved them. Still Life is among my favourites of all times, and I'm assuming that's because of my attachment to it as the first I got into.I found it fairly difficult to get into them initially, most likely because of the death vocals, which are actually unlike any other in that they're not delivered in monotone. I'd often listen to a full song and wait for the softer sections because I loved them, and having to put up with the rest of it I ended up loving every part of Opeth equally.Their structures at first are a novelty."oo wow, heavyyy....woow...soffttt.. that was a biggg surprise there...this is so unpredictable"Then I realised an overall view reveals that's what the main gist of it is and the novelty wears thin. | If you think that's the only purpose of Opeth's music, then I don't think you ever understood them. |
And what is it exactly that someone is meant to understand about Opeth? I was a fan of the band for a long time man, I appreciate what Mikael does but I just know what to expect from the next album they bring out. I've heard their albums loved them all (especially Still Life as I said before), and as a conclusion of that, looking at everything they've done, thinking about all the albums mashed into one big picture, one overall view on the whole discography, I can see how formulaic it is. I only realised this when I stopped looking too deeply into Opeth. e.g. understanding. |
Huh? I've never said the line you quoted.
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pelican
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 18 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 112
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Posted: October 06 2007 at 21:28 |
I'll tell you what Opeth is good for - drowning out your neighbors horrible country music! I live in a nice suburban devolopment and came home to my neighbors playing the worst country music you've ever heard. I live in the Northern United States and we are at 85 degrees at 9 o'clock at night. I want to sit outside and not hear banjos. Thank You Opeth!
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Berenger
Forum Newbie
Joined: October 06 2007
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 12
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Posted: October 06 2007 at 21:37 |
hah, funny how I read this thread while listening to "Black Rose Immortal", which is 20 minutes of total awesome
I can certainly see the gripes people have about Opeth or any band with "cookie monster vocals" (I listen to a lot of these bands so personally I've learnt to ignore the vocals). Personally I think Opeth should have taken a page from Camel's book (at least in the early days of Mirage, I'm no connoisseur of the band's entire career) and just omitted all of the growls. This is different from "replacing" the growling with clean vocals because I'm suggesting that their songs have only a few vocal passages so that the listener can focus more on the actual instrumentation.
The occasional song with growling (demon of the fall, etc, those types of songs) wouldn't be such a big deal though.
EDIT: Oh also my favorite album is probably Morningrise... or My Arms, Your Hearse... maybe Still Life, I honestly don't know. For a new listener I would definitely suggest Still Life though
Edited by Berenger - October 06 2007 at 21:42
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: October 06 2007 at 23:01 |
FruMp wrote:
ProgBagel wrote:
Theres plently of 'death metal' bands that don't have
lyrics about death, mutilation etc... I believe they just refer to the
vocal style as death metal. There's genres called Christian Death
Metal...
Opeth is an excellent band...like you said I too get the same
feeling, classic progressive rock except in metal. By no means is
Opeth's music not techinical though, they have some fancy acoustic work
but its not terribly complex. |
Hmmm it's not technical death metal though, especially when compared to bands like atheist and gorguts.
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I know....I said it's not terribly complex, read.
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