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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent debut ..., November 15, 2001
Sweden has produced yet another awesome melodic death metal outfit, this time under the name of Ebony Tears. This album was produced by Tomas Skogsberg, which probably explains why the guitar sounds extremely 'scooped', producing the same effect that you hear on most Entombed albums. I have never been a great fan of guitar distortion without the mids, because this produces a very hollow sounding distortion. Anyway, apart from that, the overall of mix of the album is pretty good. The drums are audible, although the snare and kick drum could be improved with more bass added to it. Tortura Insomniae boasts 9 great sounding metal tracks, running at 53:02 minutes. The opening track, 'Moonlight' has a quiet intro which starts off with nice clean guitars and this is followed by a fast and furious death metal riff complemented by a violin ! The opening of 'Nectar of Eden' and 'With Tears in My Eyes' are simply a gem. They have such beautiful sounding melodies played by the violin, followed by brutal riffing and skin bashing. The heaviest song would probably be 'Involuntary Existence', which has such an awesome main riff. The vocals on the chorus are quite catch as well. Next comes the surprising track, 'Opacity', which opens with such grace, and followed by unforgiving death metal brutality - simply awesome ! The vocals on this album are your typical death metal growls. The highlights are the special guest appearance of Carina Olsson who lends a nice, gentle female voice on a few tracks. I hope she (and the other guest vocalist) plays a more active role in their future albums ! Overall, each and every song is well composed. They have plenty of tempo changes filled with plenty of great guitar riffing and melodies. Hats off to Conny Jonsson, the guitarist, for writing all the lyrics and songs on this album. If you are sick of the cheesy In Flames style of melodic death, then Ebony Tears would be your perfect answer. Be warned though, this album is entirely different from their new release, Evil as Hell, which is a total thrash assault ...
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