Date: 01/20/2009
Rating: 4.5/5 Stars
URL: http://heavymetal.about.com/od/cdreviews/gr/sighimaginary.htm
Includes previously omitted tracks "Bring Back the Dead" and "Voices."
Guide Review - Sigh - 'Imaginary Sonicscape'
If ever there was an example of a band pushing black metal to its constraints of investigational acceptability, Sigh wins the honor with their 2001 album Imaginary Sonicscape. If you didn’t know Sigh was a black metal act having undergone internal changes over the years, Imaginary Sonicscape would likely leave you perplexed and wonderfully thus.
How can a black metal band come off sounding like Jamiroquai venturing on a space odyssey ala "Nietzchean Conspiracy" and the smooth jazzy syncopation bridges splashed in the middle of the brilliantly-written "A Sunset Song," which shifts more moods than a wife on anniversary week? "A Sunset Song" begins with a happy-go-lucky spritely melody that catches you off guard a few bars before switching to a punchy metallic rhythm, then fusing Hammond tones and funk drives into a constantly swerving mode of development. Keeping up may sound hard, but it flows seamlessly and it’s worth your attention.
Imaginary Sonicscape challenges at every turn be it the piano nocturne of "Impromptu (Allegro Maestoso)," the chaotic death strikes amidst sweltering synths and organs on the expansive "Slaughtergarden Suite" or the symphonic elements scattered all over the album. Sigh drives many of these tunes with ankle-provoking, hollow-clapped beats on "Dreamsphere (Return to the Chaos)," "Corpsecry – Angelfall" and one of the reissue’s previously-missing tracks, "Bring Back the Dead."
Inherently black metal if you listen closely beneath the hammering Moogs and the frequently galactic texture, Sigh’s grossly intelligent Imaginary Sonicscape was a huge advancement for the genre in 2001. Now revamped and expanded, the Imaginary Sonicscape redux is a provocative innovation assured to inspire others as Bigelf will likewise do in the years to come.
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"Takes black metal into places it would never have dared in the past."
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SighSigh is regarded by many as Japan’s leading extreme metal export, having released numerous highly esteemed recordings throughout their twenty year existence. Sigh shocked fans when it was announced that the band had been signed to the United States progressive label, The End Records, which has housed renowned acts Agalloch, Dissection,Green Carnation, Unexpect and Voivod, just to name a few. Fans were also blown away when the announcement that Hangman’s Hymn would be released on The End Records by the end of 2006 (But was delayed many times until a June 2007 date was secured). Latest from Sigh |
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