From The Brink Of Infinity
Whyzdom
- Style
- Symphonic Metal
- Label
- Ascendance Records
- Year
- 2009
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: The Witness, Freedom, Atlantis & Daughter Of The Night Parts I and II
Hailing from France, Whyzdom has seemingly accumulated a good
amount of exposure in its short existence. “Best French Band”-titles
and festival appearances from around France to the 2009 Metal Female Voices Festival
have culminated in the release of their debut album, From The Brink Of Infinity.
For those expecting grandiose sympho-metal with gothic and classical influences
will not be surprised but quite possibly pleased. The choirs are impressive,
the orchestrations not too cheesy and the band inside the maelstrom of bombastic
sounds plays tightly with the quality production backing everything up. Main
vocalist Telya Melane pulls off the higher-tone operatic style very well (I’m
not well-versed in these Italian terms but I’m guessing she’s a
mezzosoprano) and can pull off the more “down-to-earth” voices too.
Whenever she goes for a tougher “rock”-type voice there’s
some force missing but it isn’t too bad, especially when compared to the
occasional male growls, which really aren’t good. Let’s call them
hoarse whispers/snarls instead of growls.
The song material, as some may expect, is going all over the place. The
Witness opens the album very nicely with an epic metal swinger, but the
momentum is lost somewhat with the more straight-forward The Train.
At this admittedly early point there’s a vibe that scaling down the symphonics
aren’t doing the album favours. Everlasting Child throws in middle-eastern
melodies and ups the grandiose layers again. The Power And The Glory
starts off with some awkward chugging riffage that really doesn’t sit
well on this album, but the song is saved in the end by some great vocal melodies.
For once a short “interlude song” impresses me, as the instrumental-with-choirs
-slice that is Freedom pleases the ear very much.
Escaping The Ghosts Of Reality brings back the groove element but
is promptly squashed by Atlantis, probably my favourite on this album.
The fast guitar riffs and double bass-runs make this the best cut for some head-spinning,
unless the slight tempo-change-jabs throw you off your game. The Old Man
In The Park does quite well as a ballad driven by piano and very subtle
orchestrations. The two-part Daughter Of The Night-suite reaches into
metallic movie score-territory very nicely but then the subpar male vocals bring
it down a notch. The record closes with On The Wings Of Time, a melancholic
mid-tempo chugger that mainly showcases Melane’s voice. The bagpipes at
the end of the song made me hope for more of such Celtic flavours.
Overall, From The Brink Of Infinity is a highly ambitious offering
that is in need of a more unified musical vision. Although the performers do
a good technical job throughout, the different elements don’t always gel
seamlessly. For those looking into the abundant crowd of similar bombastic bands
for comparisons, I guess Whyzdom is a lot like Epica,
just with a slightly less skilled female vocalist, a considerably less skilled
male grunter. Time should reveal interesting things because this band has definite
potential and more devoted fans of this style of metal should find plenty to
enjoy on this album already.