Thursday, May 9, 2019

Opeth - Morningrise

Opeth Morningrise

Opeth’s Sophomore effort came a short year after the debut and sports the same lineup and a similar production. I believe the fan base is split on this record - feeling it is maybe too similar to its predecessor, but for only 13 months, the band made some huge leaps forward.

Morningrise is instantly “softer” than Orchid, not only slowing the tempos, but being more comfortable with long passages of clean guitar. The album’s closer “To Bid You Farewell,” even has only clean vocals on it - the first time Opeth tried such a thing. So while we are on that subject, Akerfeldt has made some audible improvements in that area, though he still sounds like a growler trying to sing, and not a singer who can also growl (which he would eventually become). His weakest point on this album in that regard is the overly long-winded “Black Rose Immortal” which loses focus once it goes soft around the 4:30 mark.

The drums are still lacking in my opinion, but they are less distracting compared to the debut. There is less of a commitment to the blind double-bass for double-bass-sake. The true focus of the music is still very much on Akerfeldt and Lindgren’s guitar work.

But let’s discuss the true strength of this album: the band has figured out how to compose a 10+ minute song and have it feel like a song and not simply a collection of cool riffs. “The Night and the Silent Water” (written as a tribute to Akerfeldt’s recently departed grandfather) is most demonstrative of this - transitioning from one elegant passage to the next, even mastering a smooth transition to clean tone around the 2:45 mark. “Nectar” is the other favorite track here, and again, for riffing and great transitions. 

A retrospective review like this is tough, because I know the massive change in lineup and overall approach which is about to come, but for some reason - I’ve never been impatient with Morningrise. I’ve always found it slow and methodical, with on-the-money riffs throughout the proceedings. It's never in a hurry, but it is seldom confused on where it is headed. Where Orchid seems to meander at times, only “Black Rose Immortal” is guilty of that here, everything else feels directed and focused. Even the mellow album closer is a delight - hinting at the ground they would explore fully on the Damnation record. 

If the record is overlooked, I believe it’s because it is noticeably less metal than Orchid while still sounding the most like it. After this one, the pregame phase is over, and the true Opeth begin to take form.

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