Archive for March, 2006

Pink Floyd - "The Wall"

After this one, you may be thinking that I have “a thing” for concept albums. And you’d be right, I do - both because I like albums that tell me something, rather than just being “pleasant to listen to”, but also because concept albums tend to come from a single vision, being more “personal”. This is certainly the case here.

Pink Floyd - The Wall

What more can anyone add about “The Wall” after all these decades? There are thousands and thousands of reviews out there, some of them brilliant (and some of them even on Amazon.com). Unless you think the album, or Floyd in general, are “pretentious” (a term which I’ve found usually means “too intense” or “too good” - how many times have you seen it applied to, say, Dream Theater?), if you know the album, you probably consider it a masterpiece.

So, were I doing a review, I wouldn’t have much to add. Fortunately, this is not a reviews site. :)

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Blind Guardian - "Nightfall in Middle-Earth"

If you know me in person, it’s quite likely that you’ve hear me rave about this album at least once. If you don’t… tough, unless you stop reading NOW, you’re going to suffer the same fate. :)

I love heavy metal, as any reader of this blog will probably have figured out by now. I also love epic stuff. And I love Tolkien’s books, especially “Lord of the Rings”… and “The Silmarillion” (which was edited by his son, from Tolkien’s notes). Blind Guardian’s 1998 album, “Nightfall in Middle-Earth”, is all of those put together… and the result is a masterpiece that both metal fans and Tolkien fans should worship.

Blind Guardian - Nightfall in Middle-Earth

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Black Sabbath - "Dehumanizer"

Those who know me from somewhere are, surely, aware that I have used, on the Net, the alias “Dehumanizer” for some years now. Ever wondered why?

It’s because of this 1992 album, from Black Sabbath.

Black Sabbath - Dehumanizer

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Ehren Starks - "The Depths of a Year"

Variety is the spice of life, it is said. After several metal albums, now comes a very different one: an instrumental album, with only piano (by Ehren Starks) and cello (by Kate Gurba).

And what an album it is.

Ehren Starks - The Depths of a Year

According to Ehren Starks, the album depicts a relationship, which in a way can be seen from the track names, as well as the music itself. Sometimes sad, sometimes joyful, sometimes melancholic. I have to admit my ignorance here, and say that the simple piano/cello combination was completely new to me, and it certainly works very well - I have other albums with just the piano, and it always seems like it’s “missing” something.

I won’t say much more about this album for the moment, other than that I love listening to it, for one reason: it’s not from any mainstream recording company, but from Magnatune, which not only sells albums in a digital format (and, optionally, on CDs) very cheaply, and in normal MP3 or OGG files (that is, no DRM (Digital Rights Management, or, more correctly, Digital Restrictions Management)), but also allows you to listen to all its albums online, through streaming. So you can simply go to its page for The Depths of a Year” and listen to the entire album, to see if it is to your liking. Me, I bought it after I listened to half of it, and it was money very well spent.

By the way, this is one of the few albums I have at work that I can play whenever I want, and nobody complains. :)






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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Portugal