Wednesday, June 28, 2006

OK, #3!

We will hold an official press conference later.

No 3: Evanescence - Fallen

Serious, since the top 5 hit, these albums have gotten astronomically awesome! I can listen to these things for two weeks without feeling the desire to move on...hmm.

These guys are classified as Goth-rock, and I have never really known what that actually means. I'm starting to think it might mean hard rock with strings and classical choirs...plus some painful, introspective lyrics. That's pretty easy to understand, isn't it?

First off, the sound of Evanescence blows apart anything ever done in Christian music (where it was originially marketed) and still is a sound all its own in mainstream music. The power and crispness of the guitar is unparalleled. Lyrically, wow, there are some painful, introspective lyrics. (In fact, after lead singer Amy Lee's mother heard the music she asked if Amy wanted to see a therapist!) Many, however, hold a very spiritual base.

Do you remember me / lost for so long / will you be on the other side / or will you forget me / I'm dying, praying, bleeding and screaming / am I too lost to be saved / am I too lost? / My God My Tourniquet / return to me salvation.

I seriously can't pick out favorite tracks...maybe Going Under, My Immortal (rock version), My Last Breath, and Hello. That last song holds my favorite lyric on the album, which can only be felt by swimming in the depths of Lee's painful yet beautiful vocals interlaced with a lonely piano and cello. "Don't try to fix me I'm not broken."

I believe the magic in the album lies in the combination of Amy Lee, co-founder and guitarist Ben Moody, and keyboardist David Hodges. Both Moody and Hodges are Christians. Lee was six when her three-year-old sister died from an illness. Moody has struggled with depression. The two bonded through their music and their pain.

Evanescence is releasing a new album later this year, but I seriously wonder if the group can recapture the magic. Hodges left the group when Lee and Moody wanted to steer the group more into mainstream music. And Moody excused himself from the group while they were in Sweden on tour, although both he and Lee were glad to have him out of the group. So Lee is guiding the ship now, on her own.

What I like about "Fallen" is not that Evanescence had a neatly packaged set of uplifting lyrics, or even that the members effectively worked through whatever issues they have, but that they put out 11 tracks straight out of their insides. These songs are "blood and guts" and insides. They are painful. They are powerful. Some have hope and some don't. And product of what came out is so unique that I really don't think it can ever be duplicated again.

Hopefully you don't think *I* need to see a therapist for liking this album...

2 Comments:

At 8:03 PM, June 29, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The list has been great so far, but including this one puts it over the top for me. Very impressed you have it on the list and at #3.

Go Cubs!

 
At 9:12 PM, July 06, 2006, Blogger James said...

BTW, this is beyond incredible. I had a hard time leaving it at #3...

 

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