Fifth Element
Pathfinder
- Style
- Symphonic Power Metal
- Label
- Sonic Attack
- Year
- 2012
- Reviewed by
- Olivier
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Fifth Element, Ready To Die Between Stars, Chronokinesis, March to the Darkest Horizon, When the Sunrise Breaks the Darkness.</i>
Polish Power Metal new sensation Pathfinder are back
with a second album entitled Fifth Element. And while this
is a definitely different exercise than their very good debut Beyond
the Space, Beyond the Time, it can just as definitely be
considered to be at least as good.
But let's be a little grouchy and begin with what is wrong in
this album: the lyrics. They are poorly written, overdone,
corny... hell, they really are hypercheesy. The album is
some sort of conceptual album built around a so-called fifth
element (I will not spoil the err.. "surprise" and reveal what
this fifth element is), and features epic battles, dragons, the
human-elves-dwarves triptych, space-time intricacies, and... that
kind of nerd stuff (I am pretty sure they also put unicorns
somewhere). The storyline itself is OK and fitting considering
what the album tries to achieve: telling an epic heroic-fantasy
story in a bombastic way.
Now, how is the music? Simply put: systematically somewhere
between good and awesome. It varies throughout the album, but
these guys are rock-solid musicians there is not even an ounce of
a doubt about it. While the opener is one of the cheesiest intros
I have ever heard, it quickly makes room for two excellent tracks:
Fifth Element and Ready To Die Between Stars.
Musically, think of a symbiosis between old Rhapsody and Dragonforce.
Pathfinder's sound is epic, upbeat, features breathtaking
choirs, frantic solos, insane keyboards, and is more often than
not fast-paced. In sum: that band is FUN. The remaining of the
album is in the same vein of those two tracks though, and you
could have that I-just-heard-that-three-minutes-ago feeling.
Granted, this is a bit of a redundant effort, much more than their
previous one, Beyond the Space, Beyond the Time. But it is
also more consistent, musically more mature, and is all in all an
improvement over their nicely done debut.
Bottom-line: Fifth Element is an album which should
delight all Power Metal fans - especially those missing old Rhapsody
(of Fire) - who can stomach over-the-top lyrics. Think you're
up to it? Don't hesitate, then.
Fifth Element (Official, Youtube)