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Divine Conspiracy

EpicaAudio CD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)

Price: $11.49 & FREE Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Music, 13 Songs, 2007 $8.99  
Audio CD, 2007 $11.49  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Indigo 2:07$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  2. The Obsessive Devotion 7:15$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  3. Menace Of Vanity 4:15$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  4. Chasing The Dragon 7:42$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  5. Never Enough 4:49$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  6. La'Fetach Chatat Rovetz - The Last Embrace 1:48$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  7. Death Of A Dream - The Embrace That Smothers Part 7 6:05$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  8. Living A Lie - The Embrace That Smothers Part 8 4:58$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  9. Fools Of Damnation - The Embrace That Smothers Part 9 8:44$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen10. Beyond Belief 5:27$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen11. Safeguard To Paradise 3:48$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen12. Sancta Terra 4:59$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen13. The Divine Conspiracy13:56Album Only


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Divine Conspiracy + Design Your Universe + Requiem for the Indifferent
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (August 28, 2007)
  • Original Release Date: 2007
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Nuclear Blast Americ
  • ASIN: B000TGQDZQ
  • In-Print Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Music
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,148 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

2007 release, the third studio album from the Dutch Symphonic Metal band. The concept that guides the songs is that God created many different religions for humanity to figure out and overcome them so as to discover that, in nature and essence, they were all in fact the same one (hence the name, "The Divine Conspiracy").

Customer Reviews

Their music is well orchestrated, and Simone Simons voice is incredibly beautiful. D-Man  |  13 reviewers made a similar statement
This is one of the best CDs I've heard in a long time. Edith Hammond  |  8 reviewers made a similar statement
This album, in my opinion, is the epitomy of symphonic metal! A. Cooper  |  3 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
43 of 48 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Epica: The Art of Music February 22, 2008
By D-Man
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Ok, you have to keep in mind that this kind of music is not going to be for everybody. It is very different, and in my mind, it is an acquired taste. You're not going to hear it on the radio, or on MTV, because it is music as an art form. It is not adulterated by commercialism due to the monetary interests of a record company's desire to attract that "younger" brainless audience so they can cash in and run happily to the bank. This is ARTWORK.

With that in mind, Epica is simple an amazing band. I was disappointed for a very long time because I thought that good music had died back in the mid 90's. It took me a while to come across it again, but I found it! Yay! Their music is well orchestrated, and Simone Simons voice is incredibly beautiful. I find myself listening to this album whenever I am feeling frustrated or bummed out, because the music really helps to remember that regardless the darkness that comes around from time to time, life is truly beautiful. That is what music is supposed to do, and this is why Epica is an incredibly talented band. They create beautiful works of art.
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57 of 66 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Stunning Siren Simone Simons Scintillates October 4, 2007
Format:Audio CD
If I were reviewing only Simone Simons, the vocalist, this would be a five-star album. The young mezzo-soprano is flawless in her performance with a voice as shatteringly beautiful as her appearance on the masterpiece of an album cover. Unfortunately, she is under-utilized, and this excellent album is marred by over-used "death grunt" gutterals, and musical composition that at times tempts one to rename the band "Frantica" and the album "The Digressive Cacophony." Buy this album, certainly, but be aware that it is an acquired taste unless you're already an Epica fan, or into gutturals and manic double-bassing. However, it's a taste you'll grow to like, and a spoonful of Simone Simons' singing will make just about anything go down smoothly.

1. Indigo--A beautiful classical/choral intro worthy of any good symphony or soundtrack.

2. The Obsessive Devotion--This piece is down-right schizophrenic, combining some extraordinary vocals by Simons with a great bouncing bass-line, classical composition and excellent choir parts. However, there are too many abrupt transitions. Sudden bursts of frantic double-bassing really add nothing, and often drown out Mark Jansen's "grunts" which would be better used more sparingly and in call-and-response fashion to Simons' operatic parts. An inserted voice-over spoken by a female guest vocalist is also abrupt and its import is lost for being unable to understand half of Jansen's vocals beforehand. A unique feature of this song is Simons' uncharacteristic snarl on the lyric "Don't ever trick my mind" in which for a split second she captures the sound of a she-wolf in bad temper with fascinating fidelity. Despite its flaws, this piece actually works as a sort of multi-part mini-opera. It's just not smooth.

3. Menace of Vanity--This piece is forgettable, with too much of Jansen's grunts, the choir and double-bassing. As you listen to this album you will begin tuning this song out and wondering what happened to the time between tracks 2 and 4.

4. Chasing the Dragon--A tour de force for Simons, this piece starts slow and lovely and then lets Simons roam about her vocal range most impressively. The transitions are much more smooth than TOD, and the bouncing bass-line returns momentarily. The choir and orchestra are once again excellent. Jansen's grunts and whispered snarls, and the rapid double-bassing only come in near the end as the piece spirals to a climax. This is how these devices should be used.

5. Never Enough--Another showcase for Simons, with a more "commercial" sound--at least in the opinion of some fans that seem to think a band has jumped its stylistic shark if anyone but their narrow sub-genre might enjoy a song by them. In fact, this piece is thoroughly metal enough for any real fan. The bass-line is fantastic; Simons soars; Jansen provides just the right guttural vocal insertions; the keyboard and guitar work are superb. The only thing missing is an overwhelming choir part, but they're there if you listen closely. Simons' ten-second closing note will shame you out of singing in the shower for at least a week.

6. La'petach Chatat Rovetz--A superb classical and choral interlude misused as an intro to track 7.

7. Death of a Dream--Crashes in upon the heels of the preceding track too abruptly and shares a number of the flaws of TOD as far as musical composition and transitions. What saves it is that it does flow more smoothly, shares the recurring bouncing bass-line, and as always Simons performs superbly. Her parts are uniquely sinuous and even saucy at points, and always beautiful. The double-bassing is over-done, and occasionally Jansen's and guest "grunter" Sander Gommans' gutturals depart intelligibility. Still, it's a powerful piece, another mini-opera, and superior as a whole to TOD. It also starts a lyrical arc that continues in tracks 8 and 9.

8. Living a Lie--Initially this seems like it will be weak, like MOV, until Simons comes in on vocals, at which point it focuses your attention nicely. A good balance is struck between Simons and Jansen in this song, and although the choir can be over-powering, its contributions are short. The Latin voice-over of the priest's part makes sense and is easier to fit into one's comprehension of the song than the voice-over in TOD. A good, if lesser track compared to 4, 5, 9, 10 and 12.

9. Fools of Damnation--Wow! Simons is why Odysseus had to be lashed to the mast. Any Nightwish fans in deep mourning for Tarja Turunen's departure from the scene can listen to Epica for their opera fix. Simons simply soars! Beyond her blistering belting, this piece is everything TOD and DOAD were trying so hard to be. The transitions, the double-bassing, the voice-over, the choirs, the gutturals and Simons' operatic perfection all gel in a superb work that is also a perfect lyrical take-down of the shared hypocrisy of the world's major religions. The one verse of snarled gutturals observes: "Believing is the cure/Religion is an opium/You'd better feed them all/Before they start eating you." It's a warning religious demagogues everywhere ought to heed.

10. Beyond Belief--This track begins an arc of three in which Simons is the star and relatively undisturbed by gutturals, although the choir gets quite loud on this track. Thematically the piece sums up a large part of the clash of science and religion without necessarily coming down on either side. The background voice-over insertion and Jansen's gutturals actually compliment the piece, providing useful contrast. This one sticks with you and yanks you into the theme at the bottom of the entire problem: "We struggle with our certain death." This song is as lyrically good as FOD.

11. Safeguard to Paradise--Obviously recorded while the double-bass pedal (worn from too much use) was being replaced. A pretty ballad, this piece lyrically questions the methods of coercion and persuasion at play on the minds of suicide bombers. Not exactly the topic you would expect from what is otherwise a light, sweet little piece (at least, by this band's standards...).

12. Sancta Terra--The double-bass pedal was obviously back from the shop for this song--with an admonition not to abuse it. Instead of frantic double-bassing we get a return to the bouncy bass-line, and a nice storm-treader beat. The lyrics deal with the seduction of a false paradise. Simons and the choir are superb, with the latter getting the opportunity to show off its individual components.

13. The Divine Conspiracy--You have to wonder if Tuomas Holopainen of Nightwish, and Mark Jansen of Epica are competing to channel Hans Zimmer...and whether we should be trying to spot them both as extras in recent pirate movies... Epic in length at nearly 14 minutes, the title track opens like a pirate movie sound track and progresses into Jansen's gutturals backed by a nice galloping beat for once instead of the distracting trip-hammer of double-bassing. Simons' refrain is clear, haunting, and pointed: "Who possesses your time/Also possesses your mind." The choir is used to good effect. Sadly, some of the transitions are abrupt and the piece as a whole doesn't flow as smoothly as it perhaps should. After starting on a pirate movie note, it ends in a Bond-movie motif. Another mini-opera, like several others on this album, it is overshadowed by more polished gems.

Over-all this album gives the impression that Epica may be trying too hard. Trying to over-shadow Nightwish; trying to be classically artistic; trying to maintain its death-metal "street-cred." Turn the amp down from 11 to 10; stop slipping uppers into the drummer's Red Bull; forget about anything Tuomas Holopainen might be doing; and don't worry about some child whose self-image is overly invested in the band. You're good, already! Relax and enjoy what you do and you'll shine.

Only Simons isn't overdoing things. She is spot-on and scintillating. To my ear she combines the power of Tarja Turunen, the clarity of Liv Kristine, the technical capability of Sharon den Adel, the verve of Christina Scabbia and the honeyed smoothness of Nell Sigland. A mezzo-soprano, her vocal range permits her to rove over the aural landscape in ways that sopranos and contraltos cannot. She shares her range with the similarly extraordinary Enya, and if you've ever wondered--in one of your more perverse turns of mind, no doubt--what it would sound like if Enya sang metal, Simone Simons is your answer. Follow this young woman's career with keen interest.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Epic evolution September 20, 2007
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
This release has put Epica into it's own. This is one polished piece. The vocals, supported by tight bass, rhythm, guitar, and orchestral highlights puts the listener into an adrenaline soaring, head banging, yet refined euphoric state. I did not think it was possible to mix dark metal, classic vocals, theatric orchestration, and synthesizers together with success. I have been proven wrong. I have been blasting this CD with my with my windows down for a month now. More than once I have been asked "who is that?" by an instant Epica fan. I just hope the band recognizes what an achievement they have done with this release and will continue to evolve this creative style.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Great band!!
If you like female vocals, and a hard metal band, then this is the band for you! I first discovered them by a remake they did of Phantom of the Opera. It did not disappoint!!
Published 3 months ago by Crystal M. Vassil
4.0 out of 5 stars Great
Beautiful voice, great music, good writing. However, the symphonic aspects get a little, little, bit old to quick sometimes. Word. (they said i needed one more Word)
Published 3 months ago by Kerry Colling
4.0 out of 5 stars symphonic + cookie monster
I really like the guitar, orchestra/synth, drums, and the female vocals. But everytime the male vocals (that to me just sound like cookie monster) start up, I just cringe and hope... Read more
Published 3 months ago by David A. Olson
4.0 out of 5 stars voice of an angel
I gave this cd a four out of five stars because simone simons has a beautiful voice and the metal mixed with orchesra music is a unique mix. Read more
Published 4 months ago by C. L. West
5.0 out of 5 stars cd
this is a cd i haven't had a chance to listen too. i dont know much about this group this was a gift for someone else.
Published 4 months ago by Rebel
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely
I really like it, beautiful music to hear at home or work. I am not a fan of buying albums on line but this one is very good.
Very happy with my choice.
Published 5 months ago by Diana
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing!!!
Amazing vocals, seems to prove that although is a metal group the singer actually can sing. And of what range!!!
Love every single song.
Published 6 months ago by Ildiko M Laszlo
5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional
My fave Epica album of them all and I love this band. Excellent mix of gothic, classical, and metal. I would buy it ten times.
Published 6 months ago by daysb4tomorrow
5.0 out of 5 stars Masterpiece
Epica's most epic, speedy and emotionally charged bombastic effort of all their releases to date; possibly ever. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Keith Franklin
5.0 out of 5 stars Get the Digipak version for the Replica bonus track!
I haven't seen anyone mention it yet, but the digipak version of this album includes one of Epica's best songs...Replica (a Fear Factory cover/remake). Read more
Published 16 months ago by UnrealRG
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