As
it has been and will continue to be made abundantly clear, Haggard is probably
my favourite band. There is something really magical about them and their mix
between metal and actual classical music (not just symphonic influences here
and there). In fact, they were the band that made me get over grunts. I
couldn't stand growling a while ago, but I was so intrigued with Haggard's
music and so fascinated by the non-grunting parts, that I actually forced
myself to go through the growling, then I began to tolerate it and ended up
even liking it sometimes. I guess it really is an acquired taste... Anyway,
Haggard's Eppur si muove is a
masterpiece. Strewn with little classical interludes here and there and
dominated by the four epics, it's a concept album about the life of Galileo
Galilei (if that wasn't already clear from the title and from knowing Haggard's
love for concept albums :P). The lyrics are beautiful, so poetic and they evoke
so well the story and the emotions Galileo must have felt and the album is
every bit amazing conceptually as it is musically.
All'inizio È La Morte
is epic from the first second to the last and I love everything about it. The
instrumental, the opera vocals, Asis speaking in German, the choir chanting
"shehnkt aus den wein", the chaos of the classical instruments on top
of the metal ones that is so typical for Haggard... And the soprano part gives
me the chills, it's the only calm and simple moment in the whole song, but it's
so effective, I can almost see and hear the burning at the stake.
I
love how the main violin theme is present like a red wire all throughout Per aspera ad astra, no matter what
form it takes and how prominent it is. And the rhythm is so steady and the
music builds on it and grows up to the tenor parts and then ultimately to the joyful
medieval instrumentation... Speaking of the tenor parts, I wish they'd use
Fiffy more, every time he sings is a joy and sadly it's such a rare treat.
I
love that oboe intro from Of a might
divine, in fact I love the whole medieval touch from this album (yes I am a
sucker for medieval music). And the piano is so pretty and gentle, the whole
instrumental in the beginning is beautiful, it fills my heart! I find it
fascinating how the rhythm and atmosphere change in a heartbeat and yet the
transition doesn't seem forced in anyway (in fact I love that transition they
do from the classical parts when all electric instruments come in). Normally I
don't like bilingual songs, but for some reason it never bothers me in Haggard.
Maybe it's because of the way the verses in another language are separated from
the rest of the song. Or maybe it's because I'm a fangirl :P
Herr Mannelig is
such a catchy cute medieval song, I like how it doesn't even sound like a
cover, it fits in perfectly in Haggard's catalogue like it's their own. They
even put their trademark transition from classical to metal in it. And yey, there's
Fiffy again. Only I don't get why he's singing the troll's part and then Su
sings Herr Mannelig's part. The other thing I don't like about it is the
position in the album, it's a bit weird to have the story about one of the
greatest scientists of the world interrupted by a song about a troll, it
could've been better placed at the end.
The observer
is such an underrated gem. It gets a bit lost among the other longer and more
symphonic songs of the album, but that intro is one of the best things I've heard
in ages! Never mind the "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same
God who has endowed us with sense, reason and intellect has intended us to
forgo their use" part, which has become some sort of motto of mine in
religious debates with people who think Christianity requires you to leave your
brain at the door, but oh God, those violins with the powerful
bass+drums+guitar punctuations and the piano and that explosion of instruments!
The rest of the song is a little less varied then the rest of the album, there
are no choirs and very little of the clean voices (that soprano vocalisation on
top of the grunts at the end is beautiful, by the way), but the instrumental on
the background more than makes up for the relative monotony of the vocals (I
told you I'm not such a fan of growling, I think it provides little room for
expression when used continuously and is better used as punctuation).
And
then comes the masterpiece song of this already masterpiece album, Eppur si muove. I cannot get enough of
it, it's just grand. The beginning with the violins and the way it becomes
tense and then resolves to that steady instrumental and Su's gentle acapella
vocals, then the oh so beautiful piano solo and then the drums coming in so suddenly
with that crying cello in the background and the growth of the instrumentals up
to Su's high high vocals that are so inspiring both lyrically and musically and
the way she and Asis pass the melody from one another and oh God there's an
acoustic guitar and a flute and I'm in heaven!
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