Pyramaze - Immortal
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Published September 28 2008
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*=Staff's pick
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Arise
Year Of The Phoenix*
Ghost Light
Touched By The Mara*
Legacy In A Rhyme
Caramon's Poem*
The Highland*
Shadow Of The Beast
March Through An Endless Rain
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Genre |
Power Metal |
Matt Barlow
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Vocals
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Tracks |
10 |
Michael Kammeyer
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Guitar
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Runningtime |
45 Min. |
Toke Skjønnemand
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Guitar
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Label |
Locomotive
Records |
Niels Kvist
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Bass
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Release |
30 May 2008 |
Morten Gade Sørensen
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Drums
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Country |
Denmark |
Jonah Weingarten
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Keyboard
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Similar artists |
Evergrey,
Iced Earth, Tad Morose |
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Before re-joining the band he was originally famous for,
singer Matt Barlow chose to make his highly-anticipated return to the
metal world with Denmark's Pyramaze. His one and only studio venture
with Pyramaze before return to Iced Earth, Barlow replaces former singer/founder
Lance King. Though not an entirely unorthodox choice for Barlow's return,
the sound of Pyramaze's previous records were definitely in a style
more melodic and European than anything he had done with Iced Earth,
causing many to wonder what the synthesis of styles would yield. It
can be safely said that the experiment was largely a positive one.
The combination of Pyramaze's original members and Matt
Barlow is somewhat of a symbiotic, if conforming-to-styles, relationship.
On the one hand, Barlow brings to the band his talented and wide-ranged
pipes, adding much more variety and emotion to the all-too archetypical
vocal stylings of former singer King. However, while Barlow raises the
bar for quality vocals, the band at the same time has written songs
more in line with what fans of Iced Earth might expect, or at least
more towards what the band perceives to be Barlow's predominant vocal
range.
By this I mean that the songs are much more riff-oriented,
sounding more like something from an American power metal band or one
of the more aggressive European bands like Tad Morose. By no means is
this a bad thing, as I find the generic European melodic power metal
bands to be rather boring, as per Pyramaze's previous work. However,
the band looses a some points on creativity by aping Jon Schaffer's
guitar style in more than a few sections of their songs, for better
or for worse. Whether this is the band's attempt to cash in on recruiting
Barlow and/or appeal to a wider audience (read: American) is anyone's
guess
In many ways, Immortal is greater than both Pyramaze's
previous works and Iced Earth's most recent offerings. In fact, it could
be said that Immortal is the missing Iced Earth record, being both in
the vein of said band's better-known works and of a higher caliber than
the most recent two or three records that band has put out (including
Barlow's return recording). This is no small accomplishment, making
Immortal a success despite a few of its shortcomings and sometimes uninventive
songs, and is a consistent, emotive, and hooky power metal offering
that does its best to avoid the pitfalls associated with the genre.

See
also review of: Disciples
Of The Sun , Legend
Of The Bone Carver
Performance
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Originality
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Production
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Vocals
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Songwriting
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Summary
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