White Darkness
Nightingale
- Style
- Progressive Hard Rock
- Label
- Black Mark
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: The Fields Of Life, Trial And Error, Reasons, Hideaway, To My Inspiration, White Darkness, Belief & Trust
Up until this summer my only connections with the various projects of Swedish
metal virtuoso Dan Swanö was the death metal-based bunch of Edge
of Sanity and Bloodbath. But just a while ago a friend
of my told me to absolutely check out Nightingale, a much more
melodic and even AOR-tinged project. Sure enough, I got their latest release,
White Darkness, and this is pretty magnificent stuff, I must say. Not
what I expected to say the least when associating it with the name Swanö,
but this is an album that goes to show you the guy’s huge diversity.
The music definitely has AOR-qualities in the lush melodies and huge, sugary
harmony vocals. Some of these layers remind me of the kings of the craft, Queen
and Def Leppard. There are humongous choruses like on the opener,
The Fields of Life and the awesome-in-its-mellowness title track. Although
they both are eclipsed by Trial And Error, which is probably the single
most catchy track I’ve heard all year. Just fist-bangingly tremendous!
Pianos and keyboards fatten the sound to rich and bloated heights that are
only appropriate for material as ambitiously melodic as this album is. Hideaway
is near-symphonic with the gargantuan arrangements, while To My Inspiration
slightly brings flavours of Blind Guardian with the acoustic
passages. Just slightly. There are no real low points on the record, only songs
that rise above the rest. No filler, but not quite only killer either.
The progressive aspects of the music are brought out in the occasional tempo
twists and mood changes that keep the stuff very much alive and away from any
bland, average rock format. The hooks that are more or less obvious depending
on the song, are so numerous that one finds new melodies and quirks by each
listening. I was very pleasantly surprised that someone out there still made
music so unashamedly “soft” in a way, but with such skill that it
is everything but boring. The band plays tightly and Swanö’s vocals
shine throughout the whole album. His voice is deeper than one would expect
from this kind of music, but this only works to the albums advantage.
All in all, I would definitely recommend White Darkness to all fans
of melodic rock and metal, especially the ones that want a bit of challenge
and longevity along with the awesome choruses and massive melodies. I will definitely
search for more Nightingale myself after hearing this one.