rio wrote:
Man... there's really no need to attempt to be this patronising about it. Amazingly, I realise that Wreath is just an example. Perhaps the fact that I have already said a couple of times this thread that I don't like that song, makes it a bad example to use when in an argument with me, seeing as how I'm trying to tell you what I like about Opeth. And yes, I can read that you said they sound like a metal version of PF... It is the fact that very few of their riffs are actually distorted versions of Pink Floyd ones that makes me query what you are saying, not my inability to read. :roll:
Sorry 'bout that.
In any event, I think they are. That's what they sound like to me, and having listened over and over to Animals and Ghost Reveries back-to-back, I can say that with all confidence.
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The fact is, I don't think you have constructed an argument that disproves their originality, and really the only thing you seem to be saying above is that you think other melodeath bands have better riffs. So... first your argument is that Opeth only have metalised Pink Floyd riffs, and now it is that they do have pure melodeath riffs, but Nightrage and early Arch Enemy have better ones. I suppose you can also give a checklist of things which apparently are not progressive, but seem to give very little examples of things which are. This would be useful, seeing as how you're arguing that Opeth are ripping off progressive rock bands. Most of your statements are jumbles of fact and opinion, I think: "Throwing light and shade dynamics and folk influences doesn't make it anything original, it makes it a giant melting pot of this that and this other thing, kind of sewn together poorly". It is fact that they are kind of a styllistic melting pot, and for all intents and purposes, this gives them originality. The fact that you add that it's poorly sewn together does not indicate otherwise, because that is purely your opinion.
Um, the thing about the melodeath bands having better riffs was in response to your saying that they put effort into their riffs, which I don't think they do.
I stated quite a few times that they don't have exclusively Pink Floyd riffs. They also throw in chugga-chugga death metal riffs, most of which are nothing that haven't been done prior to 1994, and some melodeath riffs, which decreased after their first few albums. Nothing we haven't seen before.
Especially considering the Edge of Sanity notation, which you seem to have ignored. I consider it especially apt, after a few listening sessions to Nothing but Death Remains and Unorthodox, which I acquired via Metal-torrents.
What's progressive? Doing something different and new. Opeth isn't doing anything different and new.
Progressive:
Ulver, for instance
The Axis of Perdition
Catch-Thirtythree,
etc.
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Also, I think your analysis of the changes made to their sound on GR is inaccurate. You argue that the only real difference between it and Still Life is the addition of keyboards and "less obvious vocal patterns". I think you need to listen to it more closely, if you can bear to: As someone has already said on this thread (I forget who), the opening to "Baying of the Hounds" actually sounds like Deep Purple in parts... I don't care wether you like this or not, but to claim that no stylistic changes have been made is simply inaccurate.
I said that minimal stylistic changes had been made, which is true.
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Additionally, I can hear Akerfeldt actually singing pure blues scale melodies, which is also something never previously attempted by this band. So actually I would say that the difference between this and Deliverance (assuming we exclude Damnation and class that as the last standard Opeth album), is greater than between any other two of their career. Bear in mind that I only listened to it for the first time today, and examples of this type are likely to increase once I have listened to it more throughly.
I don't really know about the technical intricacies of blues scale melodies as opposed to whatever Akerfeldt usually sings, so I can't answer that.
Really, this is quite a step compared to Still Life-Blackwater Park, but it's nothing like the leaps other supposedly progressive bands have made between albums, and certainly nothing that really changes their sound to an extreme degree, or does anything exciting and fresh with it. It's the same old 'intro-first riff-second riff-acoustic section w/clean vocals-intro riff-some other riff-acoustic section-possible folky breakdown-end' Opeth.