Technorati Profile female-fronted metal « Minor League Rocker Minor League Rocker
Sunday, May 20, 2012 07:43

Viagra
Auto insurance
Cialis online

Archive for the ‘female-fronted metal’ Category

Nightwish “Imaginaerum”: 5 Quick Thoughts

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Nightwish-Melbourne-2008

Nightwish after a show in Australia.

Even if you’re not a Nightwish fan, their new album, Imaginaerum, might catch your attention at your local music store. This post is for people who don’t know about this Nordic symphonic metal band. Well, here’s what you need to know about Nightwish and Imaginaerum. If you’re already a fan, this post might get you talking and thinking even more about this album.

Bird’s Eye View of the Band

Nightwish is from Finland. You could argue that their symphonic metal paved the way for Evanescence – for better or worse – by pioneering the “big guitar plus clear-voiced female singer” sound. They use a lot of orchestration, with tons of changes in volume and a few meter and tempo switches. The moods also shift quite a bit from song to song.

Singer Situation

Current singer Anette Olzon isn’t the original Nightwish singer. She succeeds Tarja Turunen, who had a classical singing style and a really powerful set of lungs. Turunen is pretty much a symphonic metal archetype. Her ouster from the band in 2005 caused a lot of angst for gothy types, especially when band leader/keyboardist/composer Tuomas Holopainen gave Olzon the gig. Turunen is a physical force that Olzon can’t match – but Olzon is more versatile and emotive. She also appeals to a wider audience (yet another reason some longtime fans are deepening their frown lines). Imaginaerum is the first Nightwish album that Holopainen wrote specifically for Olzon’s range and style.

Surprise, Surprise

Imaginaerum peaked at 27 on the U.S. Billboard chart, eliciting a huge “how the hell did that happen?” from me. I love this band in both incarnations … but symphonic metal is not exactly a sound popular in America. Holopainen calls the album “Hollywood landscape metal.” Some might call it cheesy because of its crazy orchestration and poetic lyrics. To me, though, “cheesy” is often code for “I couldn’t play or compose anything like this in a million years, and I’m jealous.”

How ‘bout Them Guitars?

Nightwish isn’t a riff-oriented band. One of the main criticisms I’ve heard about the album centers on guitarist Emppu Vuorinen … I hear stuff like “generic modern metal riffs.” Here’s the thing: The guitars on Imaginaerum (and indeed on the two albums before it, Once and Dark Passion Play) are more for texture and percussion rather than for main melodies. This is true of many symphonic metal bands. And listen to the extraordinarily tight interplay between Vuorinen and drummer Jukka Nevalainan: There is no room for error, and these guys don’t make any errors. Tight, tight, tight. Yngwie Malmsteen-style scrambling isn’t what Nightwish needs.

In and Out of Genres

Imaginaerum is not just a metal album. Sure, “Ghost River” rocks as hard as a lot of stuff out there. But “Slow, Love, Slow” is a slow, jazzy number that will make longtime Nightwish scratch their heads in consternation … at first. They’ll come to love the awesome melody and note choice – and listening to Jukka gently stroke a snare with jazz brushes. “Turn Loose the Mermaids” sound like something Blackmore’s Night would write, with a Druidic vibe that’ll make you feel like visiting Stonehenge. Oh, and it has a section that sounds like a spaghetti Western. Somehow, it all works. Then there’s “Scaretale”, which sounds like a carnival ride gone wrong. It’s probably also the wildest, most enthusiastic, most intense performance OIzon’s ever concocted. The versatility and changes are unusual, even from a symphonic metal originator.

So, what about you? Any observations I missed? Questions about the band? Let’s hear it!

Optimized with InboundWriter

Ex-Helloween Drummer Goes Back to the Well for Latest Band

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Magali Luyten of A Beautiful Sin.

Magali Luyten of A Beautiful Sin.

So if you’ve read this blog for awhile, you’ve gotten the idea that I dig female-fronted metal bands. So I was pretty excited when I heard that ex-Helloween drummer Uli Kusch so agreed with me that he scooped a Belgian woman with a huge voice for a project called A Beautiful Sin.

I picked it up about a year ago, and I remember what I thought from the first spin … “Hey, this sounds cool. And more than just a little familiar!” The riffs and melody from “Lost,” the first track from A Beautiful Sin’s album The Unexpected, sent me scuttling to my stack of Helloween albums. Sure enough, I found exactly what I was looking for on the German speed metal band’s The Dark Ride album – a track called The Departed.

Same riffs. Same vocal melody. Same just about everything. And guess who wrote the tune for Helloween? If you guessed Uli, you are correct. He ripped himself off for the title track. I wonder how much this pisses Helloween off. Think I’m exaggerating? Take a listen and see for yourself:

The bottom line is this – Uli is not much of a composer. The keyboards sound flat-out goofy, and he could’ve taken them a better direction as the unquestioned band leader. I also have to blame him for overproducing the hell out of the vocals. The singer for A Beautiful Sin, Magali Luyten, is excellent. More Doro Pesch than Tarja Turunen, and I like it. In fact, if Andi Deris ever gets tired of being in Helloween, I’d vote her in as his replacement in a second. I’d love to hear her rock “Eagle Fly Free!”

I’m not actually sure A Beautiful Sin still exists. I can find more evidence of Magali working with a band called Virus IV.

Luminatus First Gig a Solid Success

Monday, January 4th, 2010
Holly and me at the first-eve Luminatus gig. Photo by Teri!

Holly and me at the first-eve Luminatus gig. Photo by Teri!

So I got through my first gig with Luminatus unscathed – mentally and physically. We played some Nightwish covers, along with one from The Gathering. I had a few spots where I just got caught in the groove and wound up being a touch slow in the chord changes. Everyone stayed together, even when there were the inevitable little rough spots.

Plow through – that’s always the main thing. Keep the train on the tracks and just get through the rough patch. When it doubt, lock onto the drummer. That’s really who’s in charge of every rock band.

It was actually the first-ever live show for Nicolas, the bassist. There’s nothing quite like that. I think that deserves a post of its own.

But I’m lazy from Hung Dynasty practice, and from putting together the outlines for a lesson in soloing using the pentatonic scale. More on what it’s like to play your first gig later!

Female-fronted Metal Bands #3 – The Gathering

Monday, November 23rd, 2009
Anneke van Gierspergen, former singer of The Gathering.

Anneke van Giersbergen, former singer of The Gathering. (I have no idea who took this photo. If YOU did, let me know!)

It never ceases to amaze me how much cool stuff never manages to wash ashore in America. I’ve lamented the shaft female-fronted metal has gotten in previous posts. Today’s entry is particularly galling.

Check out the video below by the outstanding Dutch band, The Gathering. Mind you, this was done in 1997! In America, hard music had the joy hoovered right out of it. The heavy music landscape was so dour here in America. Everything was depression and gloom. Yet listen to this sludgy, distorted goodness – and check out singer Anneke van Giersbergen. She is absolutely loving every minute of this. There’s a genuine joy in her, and you can tell how happy she is to see a pasture full of bouncing idiots sharing the rock love with her.

Now I can barely even classify The Gathering as metal. They’re often far too mellow, despite having a heavy guitar sound. The drummer is very un-metal, in my opinion. But still, it’s excellent listening music. It hits a part of my brain that makes me smile, even the slower and more gloomy tunes. The album Nighttime Birds, in particular, mellows me out.

Anneke has a terrific voice and a very engaging stage presence. She left The Gathering a few years ago to pursue a different musical direction, but the band soldiers on with an outstanding new singer. Enough of my blather! Check out the video.

Female-Fronted Metal: Post #2

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
Floor Jansen at 2007 Master of Rock. Photo by KaJaNa.

Floor Jansen at 2007 Master of Rock. Photo by KaJaNa.

It’s time for another installment in my Female-Fronted Metal series. Last time it was Nightwish. Now it’s the now-defunct After Forever. Below, you’ll find the band’s wonderful cover of Iron Maiden’s “The Evil that Men Do.”

Now, I have to say – this band is not as good as the sum of its parts. They should be way better than they are. Floor Jansen has a monster set of pipes and possibly the best stage presence of any singer drawing breath (a brief aside: People “ooh” and “ahh” over that chick from the YeahYeahYeahs. I know it’s a different genre, but Floor absolutely destroys her on every level.).

The rest of the band can play just great. What they can’t do is consistently write awesome songs. That might be why there are no longer. That and, in my opinion, a keytar is a kiss of death! The band has a lot of skill and enthusiasm and they bring it full-force for this classic tune. Great chemistry among them. Just not, to me, the best songwriters.

Floor says she has something new in the works – I’m looking forward to it. She is a grade-A metal singer.

As for the video – I love it. It shows real musicians, and you can tell that they’re fighting hard like real musicians do. The guitarist is having a devil of a time with his Floyd Rose tremolo system, having to adjust and lock the collar down. Floor herself seems to be making adjustments to her in-ear monitor system. Overcoming challenges and still delivering. Love it!

Digging Into Female-Fronted Metal Bands

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

About six or so years ago, I was driving around in my battered, air-conditioning-less GMC Sonoma. I had the radio tuned to the local rock radio station. A fairly moody piano riff came out of the speakers, followed by a forlorn female voice. Then came big crunchy guitars.

I remember thinking that was pretty cool – a female voice over heavy guitars. There just wasn’t a lot of that going on. What little there was sounded more like Lita Ford. Nothing wrong with that, but I wanted heartier fare than “Kiss Me Deadly.”

That tune turned out to be “Bring Me To Life”, the soon-to-be Evanescence mega-hit. Frankly, the band disappointed me with the rather dull guitar riffs. Amy Lee has a nice voice, but she wasn’t the metal dragon lady I hoped for – more of the moody, put-upon Goth girl who is okay playing the victim. Very one-dimensional, to my ear.

Tuomas & Tarja in better days. (Maija Koivisto)

Tuomas & Tarja in better days. (Maija Koivisto)

I forget who pointed out Nightwish to me. Don’t know ‘em? That’s ’cause they’re from Finland, and American rock radio is awfully parochial. Britain, okay. But I can go a long time without hearing any German (save the Scorpions), Finnish or even Swedish bands. One with a female vocalist? I shouldn’t hold my breath.

Anyway, Nightwish kind of blew me away with its fusion of a classically trained female singer and really dense arrangement, along with a rhythm section that absolutely pounds. Then-singer Tarja Turunen’s voice was a bit too widdly for me, but I liked the willingness to take a chance on something different. And holy cow, widdly style or not, Tarja has a powerhouse of a voice. I appreciated it enough to buy their albums. Shortly after I started listening, a row within the band led to Tarja’s ouster via open letter on the band’s Web site; I won’t get into that.

Minor League Rocker, meet Major League Rocker.

Minor League Rocker, meet Major League Rocker. Photo by Minolta Monet.

Her replacement, a more conventional rock singer named Anette Olzon, really inflamed a lot of the fan base. “Popwish,” many sniffed (despite the sound of Empu Vuorinen’s cranked Mesa amp and Jukka Nevalainen’s  double-bass drumming – yeah, that’s totally Britney Spears). Meanwhile, she was in the studio  recording Dark Passion Play, which would be the best-selling Nightwish album to date. She struggled live with some of the earlier songs on tour, but started to come into her own with many of them – though not all. (My own pet theory? Tarja’s classical stylings gave the early fans intellectual ammo and made them feel special and elite. Shorn of that, they bawled their eyes out into their corsets and lace, taking their anger out on the Anette.)

The music? It’s still pretty awesome. Tuomas Holopainen, the band’s keyboardist and composer, has a cinematic sweep to his writing. I prefer some of the earlier stuff because it relied more on the guitar and less on string arrangements. But the quality and invention is still there. Anette doesn’t have the monster set of pipes, but she’s super-expressive and a bit more creative with her melodies.

Marco and Emppu - two of the cheeriest metal cats ever. (James Van Nguyen)

Marco and Emppu - two of the cheeriest metal cats ever. (James Van Nguyen)

Nu-metal types and those who like modern American metal often call Nightwish “cheesy.” That’s code for “creativity,” “good chops” and “no faux-macho posturing.” I love the combination of beauty and fury – it’s refreshing next to the dour, glum, sour vibe of most American metal.

Speaking of the lack of faux-macho metal posturing, Nightwish has the distinct Euro-metal persona of seeming grateful to be playing every time their onstage. Every time I see a Euro-metal band, each member seems thrilled that I was willing to lay out my money -and my time- to come see them. They all  just have a really warm, friendly live vibe. Nightwish excels at this, largely because of Anette and bassist Marco Hietala. It’s hard to find two more likeable people in metal.

I’m glad this band is around – it makes my CD collection a much better place. They also pointed me toward more European female-fronted metal bands. More on them in a future post!

One awesome band. (not sure who shot this - if it's yours, let me know and I'll credit you!)

One awesome band. (not sure who shot this - if it's yours, let me know and I'll credit you!)

TopOfBlogs Musicians, Singers & Bands Blog Directory Rock Music Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
canakkale canakkale canakkale balik tutma search canakkale vergi mevzuati