Icon
Paradise Lost
- Style
- Gothic Doom Metal
- Label
- Music For Nations
- Year
- 1993
- Reviewed by
- Jack
Killing songs: <i>Embers Fire, Remembrance, Joys Of The Emptiness, Colossal Rains, True Belief, Shallow Seasons, Forging Sympathy, Dying Freedom, Widow, Weeping Words, Poison </i>
I was wondering which one was my favorite Paradise Lost album.
Although I worship Gothic, I admit this one didn’t grow old very
well if you listen to it today. In fact, the choice rapidly reduced to Icon
and Draconian Times. Since I couldn’t make up my mind, I
decided to review them both. So here’s part one of the Paradise
Lost mid-nineties classic chronicles.
For the little story, I was in Santa Barbara in the fall of 1993 when I bought
this album. The guy I used to buy records from might probably remember the day
he sold me this album as I got freaked out when I found this record on the
shelves of his metal store. I was at the time a Gothic fanatic and
Shades Of God had somewhat disappointed me. But based on what I had
read in the magazines before leaving Switzerland in early September, it had convinced
me this album would be as great as Shades Of God had disappointed me.
Icon is the second collaboration between Paradise Lost and
Simon Efemey with Pete “Pee Wee” Coleman after Shades Of God
recorded at Jacobs Studios, but this time the production is warmer and
more colorful as Shades Of God has a production that I still don’t
like as of today. Songs on Shades Of God were quite long and sometimes
too long, whereas all the songs on Icon clock at 4 minutes and
are therefore much better and less boring.
Myself, I would not have chosen Ember Fires as an opening song to this
album since I find it little below the average Paradise Lost
song. In fact, the band has always showed two different personalities,
a bit like the ying and the yang. The ying is what I would call the “mellow”
side as the band clearly shows its Black Sabbath or 70es influences
as they get heavy and loud, while the yang is the “catchy” side
of the band that sees Paradise Lost come up with faster and
catchier songs in the veins of Eternal, The Painless or As I Die.
On Icon the songs are clearly divided into those two categories. Songs
such as Embers Fire, Remembrance, Joys Of The Emptiness
and Colossal Rains, True Belief and Shallow Seasons
are typical Paradise Lost songs, mellow, heavy, loud and
slow for the most parts. On the other hand, Forging Sympathy, Dying
Freedom, Widow (a terrific song with it’s “don’t
look back” chorus), Weeping Words and Poison are some
of those unimitable typical Paradise Lost catchy songs, while
Christendom is the only song on Icon that features the traditional
female vocals, this time those of Denise Bernard. Female vocals in death metal
are a Paradise Lost trademark as they were introduced more
or less for the first time ever by the band on the album Gothic in
1991 to a wide open-minded audience, although on the follow up albums Shades
Of God, Icon and One Second they are not as predominant
as they were on Gothic.
Unfortunately, the best song of the Icon era is the song Sweetness
taken from the EP Seals The Sense. Had this song been added to
Icon, as this song is definitely my all-time favorite Paradise
Lost song ever, a fast and catchy song they unfortunately don’t
play live anymore, then Icon would be the ultimate Paradise Lost album
ever.
I have always stated in my previous reviews that I don’t care about lyrics
since I am not a native English speaker. Well, this is nowadays more or less
true, but at the time I was learning English and constantly trying to improve
it, I used to spend hours translating lyrics of bands such as Metallica
and later such bands as Paradise Lost or Desultory.
I have always had a hard time translating Paradise Lost as
Nick Holmes' lyrics always gave me headaches. Of course even French is sometimes
hard to understand when writers use metaphors, but Nick Holmes is probably
the king among them. Can someone tell me what the hell does “I see a summer
of winters merging gracefully” mean ? I know... its just poesy.
Finally I had the chance to interview Gregor McIntosh last year (maybe I might
finish the transcription of the interview someday if I can remember what he says…
damn “bloody” English accent), and I always thought this guys was
an awesome guitarist, giving some of the best lead guitar work I ever heard,
but he is also a nice person, very patient (believe me).