| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||
Lost to the Living [Slipcase] (CD - 2008)UPC: 00803341232518As low as $15.88 from CD Universe Artist: Daylight Dies Label: Candlelight Records (Metal) Genre: Heavy Metal - Death Metal Album Description: Personnel: Nathan Ellis (vocals); Barre Gambling (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Matthew Golombisky (strings, woodwinds); Jesse Haff (drums).Audio Mixer: Jens Bogren.Recording information: 12/2007-02/2008.If melodic death metal seems like a contradiction in term... read more Personnel: Nathan Ellis (vocals); Barre Gambling (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Matthew Golombisky (strings, woodwinds); Jesse Haff (drums). Audio Mixer: Jens Bogren. Recording information: 12/2007-02/2008. If melodic death metal seems like a contradiction in terms to you, then you probably haven't heard Daylight Dies. Combining elements of death-, doom-, and prog-metal, the North Carolinan band is a study in contrasts on their third album, LOST TO THE LIVING. Savagely thrashing guitars rub shoulders with carefully crafted melody lines; roaring, demonic vocals alternate with atmospheric moments of gentle beauty. Clearly, Daylight Dies cares little for upholding the dogmatic restrictions of metal sub-genres; LOST TO THE LIVING shows them to be moving towards an ever-expanding new metal paradigm. Some albums are relevant to extreme metal because of the vocals more than the music itself; Daylight Dies' Lost to the Living is a prime example. The thing that does the most to push this goth-influenced melodic death metal disc into the extreme metal category is the vocals, which favor the stereotypical "Cookie Monster" growl that death metal is famous (or infamous) for. Lost to the Living contains some clean vocals as well, but most of the time, the "Cookie Monster" prevails and enjoys the spotlight. Take away the "Cookie Monster," however, and you are left with an album that -- although aggressively hard-rocking -- isn't all that extreme. Lost to the Living is never flat-out vicious the way that so many extreme metal recordings are flat-out vicious; in fact, the performances are decidedly melodic, combining death metal elements with gloomy, brooding melodies and a pessimistic outlook that says "goth" in no uncertain terms. If you are looking for happy, feel-good escapism, you certainly won't find it on tracks like "Woke Up Lost" and "A Subtle Violence"; this 2008 release shares goth rock's melancholy and makes no bones about it. Nor will you find material that is groundbreaking; anyone who has spent a lot of time listening to Katatonia, My Dying Bride, or Paradise Lost has heard plenty of plenty of CDs along the lines of what these North Carolina residents offer on Lost to the Living. But all of the material is solid and well executed, and Daylight Dies continue to be one of the American bands that has no problem sounding convincing on European-style extreme metal. ~ Alex Henderson minimize
©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company. All rights reserved. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||