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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing epic power metal - remastered,
By
This review is from: Somewhere Far Beyond (Reis) (Audio CD)
Blind Guardian may have completed their shift from thrash metal to power metal with their 1990 album Tales from the Twilight World, but it was 1992's Somewhere Far Beyond that established them as one of power metal's finest bands.
Somewhere Far Beyond seems, to me, like Blind Guardian's "aha!" moment. This is where their power metal direction, epic fantasy themes, and almost orchestral song arrangements were finally brought together to work in complete harmony. This is what a power metal album is supposed to sound like! The whole album is strong, but there are a few standout tracks, like "Time What Is Time", "Theatre of Pain", "the Bard's Song - In the Forest" and of course the epic title track, which was inspired by Stephen King's Dark Tower series. Gamma Ray's Kai Hansen once again makes a guest appearance, though only on guitar this time. His appearances served to give Blind Guardian some extra credibility, but I think this may be the album where the pupils outpaced the master. It still blows my mind to think that this album was released in 1992. Epic power metal bands are a dime a dozen today, but at the time it was pretty much Blind Guardian and Gamma Ray (and perhaps Stratovarius, depending on how you classify them). I'd like to think that if I had known about Blind Guardian back then, I might not have jumped directly from Dokken and the Scorpions to Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains. So many wasted years... It took several years for Somewhere Far Beyond to be released domestically, but there are a few nice additions to make it worth the wait, including a song called "Trial by Fire" and an alternate version of "Theatre of Pain." The band's powerful cover of Queen's "Spread Your Wings" is the best addition though, and serves as a precursor to the direction the band would ultimately take on their A Night at the Opera album a decade later. This may not be Blind Guardian's best album overall, but it was definitely their best album at that point, and is still as good, if not better than just about any power metal album released lately. Call it a must-have for Blind Guardian fans, and a good introductory album for anyone unfamiliar with the band. NOTE: The 2007 reissue of Somewhere Far Beyond features a much needed digital remastering as well as a pair of bonus tracks (Ashes to Ashes and Time What Is Time). The bonus tracks are demos, and don't really add much, but the remastered sound makes this a must-have for all serious Blind Guardian fans.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Blind Guardian's Flirtation With "Traditional" Power Metal Still Manages To Stand Out,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Somewhere Far Beyond (Reis) (Audio CD)
Let's face it: like any genre of music, power metal is filled with mediocre pretenders to the throne and uninspired, formulaic imitators who seem to be more concerned with hitting all the necessary, established bullet points, than with trying to be truly inspired. Bands like Nocturnal Rites or Hammerfall may have the requisite clean, melodic vocals, galloping rhythms, and harmonized guitar leads that, by all rights, _should_ sound awesome, but there's just something amiss. This is not the case with Blind Guardian, one of an elite group of bands classified as power metal/symphonic power metal (see also Rage, Angra, the founding fathers Helloween, Virgin Steele, Symphony X) which somehow have managed to bring something important and distinctive to an ever more overcrowded table.
Perhaps it was Blind Guardian's roots in both American thrash/speed (Metallica, most notably), and the more traditional pan-English Channel sounds of classic metal/proto-metal such as Iron Maiden, Rainbow and Judas Priest (with more than a little touch of 1970s Scorpions in the mix) which has kept them sounding relatively grounded while still reaching for the high peaks of Middle Earth with their fantasy-laden, orchestrated ambitions. After 2 albums of slightly progressive, somewhat epic, and definitely rough around the edges thrash/speed metal in the late 1980s, 1990's "Tales From the Twilight World" saw the band add a significant enough amount of harmony and melody to the mix to be considered part of the then-nascent power metal movement. That being said, the drumming, rhythms, and song structures were fairly linear, and still more in tune with speed metal. With "Somewhere Far Beyond", however, the band took another step forward in songwriting, and perfected their brand of power metal that they had began forging on the prior album. The opening track, "Time What Is Time", signifies this, with dramatic shifts constantly occurring, from the quiet acoustic intro, to mid-tempo sections, to full-on speed riffing. Both vocal and guitar harmonies are liberally applied throughout, while the grinding rhythm guitars are given space to apply a heavier, more grinding edge, and the drumming is allowed to move around the shifting song structure. Things are much less chaotic here than, say, "Lost In The Twilight Hall" from "Tales". This sets the pace for a nicely varied set list, including the frantic, dark "Ashes to Ashes", the sweeping and symphonic mid-tempo song "Theater of Pain", and the speedy "Journey Through The Dark". "The Bard's Tale: In the Forest" deserves special note as perhaps the essential defining moment for Blind Guardian's acoustic, medieval balladry, with a guaranteed audience participation moment for all their shows from that point on. And with the epic title track, with subject matter drawn from Stephen King's Dark Tower novels, the band somehow manages to bring an energetic, street-level honesty in their approach that allows the listener to give them the benefit of the doubt when Hansi earnestly declares, "I am the narrator, and now I'll tell you where I've been, and what I saw, and how it ends!"- something that I was not quite able to do when Savage Circus tried to tread the same exact ground with their song "Of Doom and Death". The only real misstep here is the pointless bagpipe filler track, "The Piper's Calling". There are also a few pseudo-bonus tracks, such as a cover of Satan's "Trial By Fire", as well as the "official" bonus tracks for this release, demos of "Time What Is Time" and "Ashes to Ashes" (the latter of which includes a fairly different instrumental break in the midst of the song). As far as audio quality, there's more kick to the low end overall, and the guitars seem to have more heft and aggression, in addition to the requisite increase in volume. There's no doubt in my mind that this is a classic of the genre (even if I prefer Imaginations From The Other Side myself), and the remastered version gives it the audio boost to really hammer its power home. While bands like Edguy would later make a career out of imitating Helloween, and Rhapsody (aka Rhapsody of Fire) would clumsily manhandle fantasy subject matter by bludgeoning the listener with blatant Dungeons and Dragons exposition masquerading as "lyrics", Blind Guardian quietly (or not so quietly) staked out their own territory early on, and this is as good an example of that as any. And hey, even if you disagree with me, you have to admit that at least it's better than Dragonforce........
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