Categorias:
Carrinho de compras 0

Serviço indisponível no momento.

Agalloch|Pale Folklore  (Remastered)

Pale Folklore (Remastered)

Agalloch

Disponível em
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escute agora este álbum em alta qualidade nos nossos aplicativos

Iniciar meu período de teste e começar a escutar este álbum

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Assinar

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Idioma disponível: inglês

Not only was Agalloch's Pale Folklore an astoundingly ambitious and accomplished debut, it made for a stark geographical anomaly, since its eclectic, avant-garde folk-metal was the sort of thing one would expect to emerge from Scandinavia -- not Portland, OR. Epic, atmospheric, deeply melancholy, yet extremely heavy, its songs showed the same level of daring cross-pollination as those of Norway's Ulver or Sweden's Opeth, as well as off-the-beaten-path experiments with folk music forms pioneered by Finland's Amorphis, among others -- yet unquestionably treaded its own, unique path. The album's fascinating journey begins with the three-song suite titled "The Painted Fire Across the Skyline," featuring forceful, driving power chords, elegiac melodies on acoustic guitar and piano, and half-whispered, half-screamed vocals backed by mood-enhancing icy winds. Next (and get a load of these titles!) comes the astonishingly beautiful "The Misshapen Steed," alternating painfully sparse keyboard tinkling with lush mock-string orchestrations; followed by a return to more energetic dark metal intercut with melancholy quiet passages on stunning achievements like "Hallways of Enchanted Ebony," "Dead Winter Days," and "The Embers Dress the Sky." Finally, colossal closer "The Melancholy Spirit" brings all of these elements around for one final, inventively varied go-round, while also introducing an odd, choppy guitar figure reminiscent of the Police! All in all, and with or without its folk subgenre connotations, Pale Folklore was as important a black metal album as any American band ever produced; and arguably one of a handful that helped launch the country to worldwide respect in this arena for the new millennium, whereas before Agalloch, most bands had been mere apprentices to the Scandinavian masters.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

Mais informações

Pale Folklore (Remastered)

Agalloch

launch qobuz app Já baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Ainda não baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Baixar o aplicativo Qobuz

Você está escutando amostras.

Escute mais de 100 milhões de músicas com um plano de streaming ilimitado.

Escute esta playlist e mais de 100 milhões de músicas com os nossos planos de streaming ilimitado.

A partir de 8,99€/mês

1
She Painted Fire Across The Skyline
00:08:35

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

2
She Painted Fire Across The Skyline (Part 2)
00:03:10

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

3
She Painted Fire Across The Skyline (Part 3)
00:07:09

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

4
The Misshapen Steed
00:04:54

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

5
Hallways Of Enchanted Ebony
00:10:00

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

6
Dead Winter Days
00:07:52

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

7
As Embers Dress The Sky
00:08:07

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

8
The Melancholy Spirit
00:12:24

Agalloch, MainArtist

© 2016 The Beginning Media ℗ 2016 The End Records

Resenha do Álbum

Not only was Agalloch's Pale Folklore an astoundingly ambitious and accomplished debut, it made for a stark geographical anomaly, since its eclectic, avant-garde folk-metal was the sort of thing one would expect to emerge from Scandinavia -- not Portland, OR. Epic, atmospheric, deeply melancholy, yet extremely heavy, its songs showed the same level of daring cross-pollination as those of Norway's Ulver or Sweden's Opeth, as well as off-the-beaten-path experiments with folk music forms pioneered by Finland's Amorphis, among others -- yet unquestionably treaded its own, unique path. The album's fascinating journey begins with the three-song suite titled "The Painted Fire Across the Skyline," featuring forceful, driving power chords, elegiac melodies on acoustic guitar and piano, and half-whispered, half-screamed vocals backed by mood-enhancing icy winds. Next (and get a load of these titles!) comes the astonishingly beautiful "The Misshapen Steed," alternating painfully sparse keyboard tinkling with lush mock-string orchestrations; followed by a return to more energetic dark metal intercut with melancholy quiet passages on stunning achievements like "Hallways of Enchanted Ebony," "Dead Winter Days," and "The Embers Dress the Sky." Finally, colossal closer "The Melancholy Spirit" brings all of these elements around for one final, inventively varied go-round, while also introducing an odd, choppy guitar figure reminiscent of the Police! All in all, and with or without its folk subgenre connotations, Pale Folklore was as important a black metal album as any American band ever produced; and arguably one of a handful that helped launch the country to worldwide respect in this arena for the new millennium, whereas before Agalloch, most bands had been mere apprentices to the Scandinavian masters.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

Sobre o álbum

Melhorar as informações do álbum
Mais sobre o Qobuz
Por Agalloch

The Mantle

Agalloch

The Mantle Agalloch

The Mantle

Agalloch

The Mantle Agalloch

Ashes Against The Grain

Agalloch

Ashes Against The Grain

Agalloch

Of Stone, Wind, & Pillor

Agalloch

Playlists

Você também pode gostar...

Take Me Back To Eden

Sleep Token

Take Me Back To Eden Sleep Token

Back In Black

AC/DC

Toxicity

System Of A Down

Toxicity System Of A Down

Invincible Shield

Judas Priest

Invincible Shield Judas Priest

72 Seasons

Metallica

72 Seasons Metallica