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The Angel and the Dark River

 
Album Review: The Angel and the Dark River

  • Artist: My Dying Bride
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: February 06, 1996
  • Total Time: 52:14
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Rarely does one individual sound so perfectly exemplify the mood of a record like the groaning, distant foghorn on My Dying Bride's third full-length, Angel and the Dark River. This English five-piece pens such bleak, soul-crushing tunes that its use of a lone foghorn to conclude agonizing opening cut "The Cry of Mankind" is strikingly appropriate (and most likely self-indulgent in the hands of a less convincing outfit). At no other time in its long and creatively prosperous career has My Dying Bride been so suicidally self-absorbed, evident by vocalist Aaron Stainthorpe's use of a clean, despairing, and melodic moan throughout, having ditched the death growl of earlier releases; in fact, the rest of the band followed suit, setting aside any death metal influences, carefully using violins and keyboards to enhance the group's brooding excursions, and managing to not sound gimmicky in the process. Generally, the arrangements stretch out over long, progressive, and swampy plains of powerfully droning, yet still memorable, guitar riffs, patiently rumbling drums, and Stainthorpe's vague and ghastly lyrical drippings, presumably painfully squeezed out of his own slit wrists. Not unexpectedly, songs take their sweet time getting their point across, clocking in between seven and 12 minutes, standouts being "From Darkest Skies," "Black Voyage," and "Your Shameful Heaven," the latter of which actually picks up the tempo beyond a snail's slime-trail-oozing pace, but with the same destination in mind: Pure, utter, unrelenting depression. Most likely, few will appreciate the tortured, pitch-black majesty of My Dying Bride, the band being the withered and shriveled trail's-end of fauna-wilting gothic doom metal, but MDB devotees should agree that Angel and the Dark River is its most effectively poisonous slab of internalized, navel-gazing horror. Other albums in the MDB catalog are more concise (Like Gods of the Sun), experimental (34.788%...Complete), and brutal (Turn Loose the Swans), but Angel and the Dark River stands alone in the center of a misty sea of tears, dolefully bleating its foghorn into the unforgiving wind. (A limited run of the CD includes a bonus EP consisting of a live set recorded in Eindhoven, Holland, at the Dynamo Festival in 1995, boasting four tunes and a questionable mix. Collectors will appreciate the bonus disc, even if it's essentially pointless -- although it's worth a listen to hear Stainthorpe's voice crack despairingly when he initially introduces the band.) ~ John Serba, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Cry of Mankind My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (12:13)
From Darkest Skies My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (7:48)
Black Voyage My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (9:46)
A Sea to Suffer In My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (6:31)
Two Winters Only My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (9:01)
Your Shameful Heaven My Dying Bride My Dying Bride (6:59)

Credits

My Dying Bride (Producer), My Dying Bride (Main Performer), Magne Furuholmen (Producer), Aaron ? (Photography)
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Wikipedia: The Angel and the Dark River
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The Angel and the Dark River
Studio album by My Dying Bride
Released May 22, 1995
Recorded Academy Studios, December 1994 - January 1995
Genre Doom Metal, Gothic Metal
Length 52:14
Label Peaceville Records
Producer Robert 'Mags' Magoolagan, My Dying Bride
Professional reviews
My Dying Bride chronology
The Stories
(1994)
The Angel and the Dark River
(1995)
Trinity
(1995)
Digipak and re-issue

The Angel and the Dark River is the third album by the British doom/death metal band My Dying Bride. The 1996 re-release contains one bonus track "The Sexuality Of Bereavement" and a bonus CD titled Live at the Dynamo. The Live CD was recorded during their appearance at the Dynamo Festival in 1995.

It was arguably the release that saw the band travel furthest from their death metal origins, and provided the fullest expression of the doom metal side of their music. Aaron Stainthorpe dispensed with his death metal vocals entirely, and Martin Powell's violin and keyboard playing now seemed to be the basis around which the rest of the arrangement was built. Apart from the final track of the original release ("Your Shameful Heaven"), the tempo was unremittingly slow, with only the odd fast drum fill from Rick Miah adding some variety.

Aaron Stainthorpe's lyrics continued in the vein of Turn Loose the Swans - focusing on religious symbolism and relationship problems - whilst non-English phrases were omitted once more. Stainthorpe has said in many interviews that "Two Winters Only" is his favourite My Dying Bride song.

Five of the album's six tracks appear on the band's VHS and DVD For Darkest Eyes.

Track listing

  1. "The Cry of Mankind" – 12:13
  2. "From Darkest Skies" – 7:48
  3. "Black Voyage" – 9:46
  4. "A Sea to Suffer In" – 6:31
  5. "Two Winters Only" – 9:01
  6. "Your Shameful Heaven" – 6:59
  7. "The Sexuality of Bereavement" – 8:04 *
  • *Bonus track (digipak ed. CDXVILE 50 only, and re-issue 2CD)

Live at the Dynamo

  1. Your River – 8:13
  2. A Sea to Suffer In – 6:21
  3. Your Shameful Heaven – 6:21
  4. The Forever People – 4:52

Credits



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Angel and the Dark River" Read more