| | Symphony X Paradise Lost CD Symphony X Discography of CDs
(37 Customer Reviews)
First Edition North America Pressings Will Be Sold As A Special Digipak Design. Once These Are Sold Out, They Will Be Replaced With The Standard European Jewel Box Version. Symphony X: Michael Romeo (guitars); Mike LePond (bass guitar); Jason Rullo, Russell Allen, Michael Pinnella. Personnel: Russell Allen (vocals); Michael Romeo (guitar); Michael Pinnella (keyboards); Jason Rullo (drums). Audio Mixer: Jens Bogren. Illustrator: Warren Flanagan. New Jersey prog-metal stalwarts Symphony X return with PARADISE LOST, their first outing since 2002's THE ODYSSEY. Their literary aspirations remain intact--the album is inspired by the John Milton epic poem of the same name--and per usual, Michael Romeo's Byzantine tablature and Russell Allen's vocals are the main attractions. Throughout PARADISE LOST the band fantasizes that all '80s thrash and '90s doom metal did not happen, and that they are picking up right where Randy Rhodes and Yngwie Malmsteem left off in the early 1980s. In their vision, technical dexterity and neo-classicism--note the inclusion of a string section and piano balladry--trump mathy angst, satanic sludge, and stoner riffage. Five years after the release of their critically acclaimed Odyssey, New Jersey prog metal quintet Symphony X have taken as their inspiration John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost as a follow-up. The poem, about the fall from grace of Adam and Eve and the rise of Satan's presence as prince of the world, seems like a fitting theme for a heavy metal album, but it's an ambitious one and for a lesser act, would prove to be impossibly daunting. The most immediately apparent thing about the sound of this album is just how Symphony X rethought their musical universe in order to accommodate it by going against natural process and punter's expectations. While the band's sound has been populated with outrageous time signature changes, extrapolated harmonics, and extra textural production elementals -- like large choirs, keyboard sounds as large as the guitar sonics, and utterly orchestral and nearly operatic pretensions -- from the beginning, this recording, whose theme suggests it ripe for such excesses, moves in a sideways if not opposite direction. That's not to say that those elements are entirely missing -- choirs and orchestrals abound on the intro "Oculus Ex Inferni" and "The Walls of Babylon" and elsewhere, but there is a more direct approach at work here. While changes in meter and harmonic key shifts are ever present, they are secondary to the most primal of metal constructs: the riff. Guitarist Michael Romeo has concentrated on a more accessible approach because of the potentially difficult nature of the material and not only does it work, it offers another look at Symphony X as a power metal unit as daunting and bone crunchingly effective as any. The songs here have a direct appeal, pulling no punches despite their amazing compositional frameworks. Add to this Michael Pinnella's empathic keyboard runs and Russell Allen's vocals -- second in both expressiveness and power only to Ronnie James Dio's -- as well as the abundant blastbeat rhythms of Jason Rullo and Thomas Miller's propulsive yet guiding basslines and the equation goes beyond what we normally consider in the realm of prog metal. The ironic thing is that Paradise Lost is simultaneously more in-your-face aggro and musically nuanced as well as conceptually ambitious (check the gorgeous power balled "The Sacrifice"). A few instances include the melodic fist pumping chorus in "Set the World on Fire (The Lie of Lies)," the over the top knotty guitar and bass mania in "Serpent's Kiss," the moody piano chromatics in the title track with Allen's vocal unhurried and unforced, carrying a melody both melancholy and prophetic and you have something quite special. The layers of Romeo's guitar work on "Seven" for their sheer dexterity, speed, and elocution are worthy of celebrating, but when they are woven into a lightning fas Paradise Lost Music Review Average Rating: (4.7 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Outstanding! These guys are really hitting there stride now. Many good albums over the years but this masterpiece takes he cake. Dream who? These guys totally own. Submitted by flyingsauserfreak (KC Mo, USA'')) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
THE KING IS DEAD.... LONG LIVE THE KINGS of prog metal that is. SYNOPSIS: I purchased systematic chaos and PARADISE LOST the same day and s.x. just blows d.t. away .I think d.t. was going for a more s.x. sound this time but d.t. and james more specifically just cannot compeat, not to take any thing away from d.t. musically, but everythig that s.x. has done with Russell Allan has been better than everything from d.t. since train of thought! ROMEO IS A GOD Submitted by NICK AUTONOMYY (LONG ISLAND NY USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
The bar has been raised... Wow!!!
Epic. Powerful. Progressive. Metal. There are not enough superlatives to describe how great this album is. Best of 2007 easily. Overall much more cohesive, heavier and just simply better than Systematic Chaos - sorry DT, but SX have outdone you on this one!
Buy it with your eyes closed. Submitted by Andrew (Auckland, NZ)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
metal paradise If somebody told me that heavy metal would be far better and mature when I would be 20 years older than I first heard my first ac/dc album I would think he was a loony...
Well there are so many excellent bands nowdays from all over the world. I must be living a dream.
This album is one of those few albums that stand out from the crowd as best of the best.
A masterpiece!in any sense! Submitted by lefteris.tsolakis (Athens, Greece)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
I'm speechless... I am perhaps the biggest DT fan out there, but I gotta say, Parasise Lost is a sight better than Systematic Chaos. This is the pinnacle of their career in my opinion, and one of the finest prog metal albums I have ever heard; certainly the best out there right now. Just incredible. Submitted by dcampbell (Somewhere in PA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Paradise Lost CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Symphony X V CD (2000)
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| | Cars Complete Greatest Hits CD (2002)
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The Cars: Ric Ocasek (vocals); Elliot Easton (guitar); Greg Hawkes (keyboards); Ben Orr (bass); David Robinson (drums). Producers: Roy Thomas Baker, Robert John "Mutt" Lange, Mike Shipley, Ric Ocasek, The Cars. Compilation producer: The Cars, David McLees. Recorded between 1977 & 1987. Includes liner notes by Brett Milano. Digitally remastered by Dan Hersch (Digiprep). Personnel: Benjamin Orr (vocals, bass guitar); Ric Ocasek (vocals); Elliot Easton (guitar, background vocals); Greg Hawkes (saxophone, keyboards, percussion, background vocals); David Robinson (drums, percussion, background vocals). Audio Remasterer: Dan Hersch. Liner Note Author: Brett Milano. Photographers: Ebet Roberts; B.C. Kagan; David Robinson ; Brian McLaughlin. When the Cars released their first greatest-hits album in 1985, it was capping a golden run that culminated in 1984's Heartbeat City, their biggest hit yet. They lasted one more album, 1987's abysmal Door to Door. So, technically, there isn't that much new territory covered by Complete Greatest Hits, especially since there's only one song -- the only good one, "You Are the Girl" -- from Door to Door, but it's nevertheless a substantial improvement over that initial hits collection, while being easier to digest for most listeners than the exhaustive 1995 anthology Just What I Needed. Essentially, the title explains it all, since it has all of the hits, which also means many are AOR staples. This approach means that nearly all of their debut and half of Heartbeat City is on this disc, but it also means that there's essentially nothing missing (apart from perhaps "Candy-O") that casual fans would want. Also, this approach confirms that the Cars were a sexy, stylish new wave singles band on the order of Blondie -- sure, they had one classic album in their canon (the debut), along with some very good follow-ups, but they made the most sense song by song on the radio, even years after their prime. To hear why, this is the disc to get. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Although it has different artwork, this 20-track set of the Cars' biggest hits is exactly the same, right down to the same running order, as Rhino's Complete Greatest Hits package from 2002, which means it has everything the casual fan might want, including the perfect radio singles "Just What I Needed," "My Best Friend's Girl," "You're ...
| | Blakey, Art & The Jazz Messengers Indestructible CD (1965) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan; Mini LP Sleeve
Paradise Lost
$38.59 & The Jazz Messengers. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers: Art Blakey (drums); Wayne Shorter (tenor saxophone); Lee Morgan (trumpet); Curtis Fuller (trombone); Cedar Walton (piano); Reggie Workman (bass). Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on April 15 & 24 and May 15, 1964. Originally released on Blue Note (4193). Includes liner notes by Leonard Feather and Bob Blumenthal. This ...
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| | Accra Trane Station Meditations For John Coltrane CD (2007)
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$15.19 ACCRA TRANE STATIONMEDIATATIONS FOR JOHN COLTRANECOMPOSED AND PERFORMED IN COLLECTIVE IMPROVISATION BYNII NOI NORTEY, NII OTOO ANNAN, & STEVEN FELDA TRIBUTE TO THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY OF JOHN COLTRANE'S CLASSIC RECORDING, MEDITATIONS.NOTE BY NII NOI NORTEYNii Otoo Annan and I first met Steven Feld, whom we call “Prof,” in 2004 during his first visit to Ghana. He came to my home in Accra to listen to us play and gave us some of his recordings. That afternoon we discovered that John Coltrane held a similar place in our hearts. Coltrane’s music moved us both as young men and has stayed with us throughout our lives as musicians and researchers into the powers of sound. I told Prof how happy I was to welcome a man from Philadelphia, John Coltrane’s city. Prof recorded some of our music that afternoon. When the CD with his editing arrived back in Accra (later published on The Time of Bells, 3: Musical Bells of Accra, VoxLox 2005) I knew we would start to work together seriously. From there it didn’t take long to come up with the plan to pay African respects to John Coltrane on the 40th anniversaries of A Love Supreme and Meditations. Prof returned to Accra in 2005 and together with Agazi, a local engineer, we helped him fashion a home studio where we gathered regularly. By the last session we even managed to get Prof unhooked from his headphones to join us ...
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