My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Five

This installment took a lot of time to write. These are albums that are very near and dear to me as all the albums on this list. I found these 10 to be exceptionally emotional to write about and listen to. As the list is not in order, and I make it up as I go back through my music catalog and pick my absolute favorites to fit in 100 albums. So, I hope you like this chapter of the series. Let me know what your favorites are and if you’ve checked any of these out upon reading this list.

31. Winter- Oceans of Slumber (2016)

There have been very few albums to make me speechless.  I try to describe any sound or style with emphatic diction and passion.  I have tried to experience every genre, every style, and all the different cultures of music on the planet.  It’s my passion to learn about music and try to understand why I love it so much.  My understanding of the effects of music on culture, language, mind, body, and soul runs deep.  But Winter by Oceans of Slumber is an album that transcends my passion for languages and music genres.  It is a collection of American sounds bred over a hundred years of Blues, Jazz, Rock and Roll, and Metal.  The depth of Winter is unbelievable.  The weight of it is too much for some.  It dares to be different, chaotic, and heavy-handed.  As a Musician and music blogger, Winter is an untouchable album that never got the credit it deserved.  The lack of coverage on this record stands to me as a clue that there is something deeply wrong with American Music and the media coverage of music.  Winter is as good as American Metal gets.  It honors where American music came from, the roots in the South with Jazz and Blues, and the most downtrodden musicians you’ve ever heard in your life.  It mixes the Doom Italian band Paradise Lost curated with the beauty of Nina Simone, with the Blues of Muddy Waters and Robert Johnson, with the Progressiveness of Evergrey, Moody Blues, Dream Theater, and Meshuggah.  It sounds crazy, maybe even disjointed, when you put all these descriptors together, but it works.  This album is a masterclass in Progressive and Gothic Metal, and offers a completely new take that I’ve never heard in my life.

Winter’s songwriting is a triumph in my mind.  It takes all these influences and adds soul.  It reminds me of so many different albums, and at the same time doesn’t sound like anything at all.  Oceans of Slumber’s aim to “redefine Southern Gothic” is achieved far above and beyond anything else in the genre with Winter, as well as all subsequent releases.  It takes the Gothic depressiveness of Evanescence, The Civil Wars, and Doom band Candlemass and adds Soul to it that I love so much.  Soul is not something I hear a lot of in Modern Music, and Oceans of Slumber gives all the soul to Winter.  It takes me to the South of Texas and Alabama on a rainy old porch in the dead of winter, and it’s a feeling that never leaves, much like the Blues and Gospel singer Cammie Beverly grew up listening to and singing with her father.  The music isn’t just technical sounds enthralling your eardrums, it’s tangible.  It’s a place, time, feeling, and mood that overtakes me for weeks on end.  The title track is an introduction to Ocean Of Slumber’s world.  Winter is a mind-blowingly well-constructed track with 50 different elements.  The range of this band is stuffed into nearly eight minutes of smoothly delivered poetry with heavy music carrying it.  This song and album deserved Grammys.  Instead, it got Indie coverage, much less than it deserved.  This song is a modern Progressive Metal masterpiece, and Winter is full of them.  

Oceans of Slumber’s cover of the Moody Blues’ Nights in White Satin is emotionally proficient and unexpectedly updates the classic.  It is airy, soulful, deep, and has a surprising jam-band feel.  This is one of my favorite songs on Winter, even though it’s a cover.  Suffer the Last Bridge is a more straightforward track with some of the best vocals I have ever heard.  The chorus is sublime with my beloved blast beats and speedy chugging guitars.  This is one of my favorite songs of all time.  This would be a great starter song to get into Oceans Of Slumber.  Not all of their songs are initially accessible, and that’s probably why I love them so much.  Their songs require an attention to detail and an emotional vulnerability to connect with. That depth makes Winter so personally significant to me.  Like the Blues, it captures that longing in the depths of your heart and soul.  Whether the longing is for someone, a place, a time, or fulfillment, Winter captures that with Turpentine and This Road eloquently.  There’s not a song that is like another, and yet they all have the same vibe.  Winter is an album everyone should experience at least once, especially in America.  This album is American Innovation at its finest.

Dobber Beverly, on drums, piano, and songwriting, is a mastermind of Progressive Metal.  His Classical technique, combined with his experience in Death and Extreme Metal, is absolutely genial on Winter.  These influences, combined with wife and singer Cammie Beverly’s impossibly velvety smooth vocals and talent for storytelling, create a depth in music I have never heard before.  This album is love, grief, death, loneliness, anger, shame, and healing in one technical package.  The husband and wife team have created some of the most beautiful music on the planet.  There’s nothing like this album, and there never will be again.  I love their discography, but this is still my favorite album from them.  

Favorite Songs: Winter, Sunlight, Suffer the Last Bridge

32. The Unforgiving- Within Temptation (2011)

Taking a long time to decide on my favorite Within Temptation album, I had to listen to their entire discography again.  Their catalog is so diverse.  Picking a singular album as my favorite was difficult.  I have been a fan of WT since around 2008.  I discovered them on the browser version of the Pandora Radio app.  This app introduced many new bands to my listening repertoire, as I mentioned before.  One of its biggest attractions is Within Temptation.  I heard the song Jillian off of The Silent Force, and my taste in music was forever changed.  While Epica spawned my love for all things European Metal, Within Temptation started the fire four years before  I ever heard Epica.  Within Temptation has released some of the most influential albums.  They evolve with each record in a gigantic way.  They play with Gothic Metal, Symphonic, Arena Rock, Prog Metal, and even Electronic Dance music.  It is difficult to find a band in Metal with more range.  It is even more difficult to find a band as successful whilst being emotionally connective with fans.  Within Temptation is a once-in-a-generation band.  They took a risk with a concept album, The Unforgiven, and it paid off, gaining them millions of fans, album sales, and stream plays.  The band has gone on to sell comic books and limited items based on the concept album and excels with subsequent releases, putting them at the top of Symphonic Metal.

The Unforgiving is a high-energy, fist-pumping, and head-banging worthy album of a hundred different influences.  It blends Arena Rock, Symphonic Metal, and Dance Pop fluidly and eloquently.  This album did genre-bending before it was a widespread term in Metal media.  With this album blending so many different sounds, it’s almost a “choose your own adventure” experience.  The comic series based on the album alludes to the premise, the summary stating, “Inspired by The Unforgiving, the newest album from Within Temptation! A powerful medium, Mother Maiden recruits lost souls to be part of her wraith task force to fight evil in all its forms. They each carry a specific guilt about something they did in their lives. Mother Maiden offers them an opportunity to ‘make right what is wrong’ by giving them missions and assignments to hunt down evil as a penance for their previous sins.”  It’s a deeply interesting concept and reflects a battle between good and evil in us all.  This is a concept I am fond of, and I think the album storyboards it in both a fun and emotional way.  

Within Temptation went more “commercially Rock” with The Unforgiven, and I really enjoyed hearing this side of them.  It’s not the most grand or staggeringly huge range of Within Temptation.  It’s more subtle without so many choirs and layers of orchestra.   I hear them as a band much more on this album than on any other album.  While it’s a concept album, it shows a reinvention of Within Temptation.  While I consider Mother Earth to typically be my favorite album from them, I just keep going back to The Unforgiven.  Maybe it’s a nostalgia aspect, hearing this album in my most formative and influential years in Middle School, but there’s something deeply moving about this album.  Fire and Ice is still one of the most beautiful and bittersweet songs I’ve ever heard.  Stairway to the Skies is also a tear-jerking track that is so underrated.  The theme of a lost love one or a longing for someone gets me every time.  Maybe it’s because I am still searching for “the one,” and it feels so far away sometimes that these songs speak to me.  The songs on this album are also incredibly catchy.  Iron and Sinead are breathers of pure energy from the heavier emotive tracks, and I like the massive energy that these tracks show.  I’m not sure if this album necessarily fits on this list, but all of these aspects make it one of my favorites of all time, and I had to include it.

Overall, I think The Unforgiven is one of the most underrated albums out there.  While it sold well and did some charting, it seems to be a memory of the past.  The magic WT harnessed in that album is lost for me.  I like everything they release to an extent, but the magic of the older records feels long and forgotten by the band and fans.  This album was peak WT for me, even if it was never meant to signify their core sound or writing abilities.  It stands the test of time for me as a sign of Sharon Den Adel’s incredible range, emotive ability, and versatility as one of the greatest vocalists I have ever heard.  She is truly what makes the band special to me.  Along with husband Robert Westerholt’s incredible writing contributions, Sharon and Robert have created some of the best music I have ever heard in my life.  I will always miss Robert’s clean, Rock and Gothic Metal-inspired guitar riffs as well as his incredible growls on early records.  His contribution will never be forgotten by me.

Favorite Songs: Fire and Ice, Where is the Edge, Stairway to the Skies

33. The Offering- Lords of the Trident (2022)

Of course, there’s more Power Metal on this list!  I am a Power Metal nerd, even if my underground knowledge is seriously lacking these days.  This is probably one of the more obscure albums on this list.  The Offering doesn’t get half the love it deserves, even if Power Metal is ramping up for a huge comeback.  I was first exposed to the album when the Mad With Power Festival hosted some of my favorite bands.  I had heard of Lords of the Trident before, but the onslaught of releases buried them on my radar.  This happens to me often.  It can take years for me to rediscover a band.  Luckily, when Mad With Power came to my Twitch feed because of Seven Kingdoms, I was fully exposed to the way of the Lords.  Lords of the Trident combines Classic Power Metal with nerdom, Heavy Metal, a little Meatloaf, and some opera-trained vocals from incomparable vocalist and nice guy Ty Christian.    It’s technically perfect Power Metal with Van Halen flair and Neoclassicism from Yngwie-worthy guitar solos.  Experiencing this band at Mad With Power Fest on Twitch for the first time was a religious, transcendental moment that I will never forget.  They gave me visible chills and made the hair stand up on the back of my neck.  The power in their music is indescribable.  It’s something you just have to experience for yourself.  They’re every bit as epic as the ’80s Heavy Metal we all grew up listening to, but have the heart of Unleash the Archers.  They’re a dark horse of bombastic, emotive, and pulse-raising music.  They’re one of the best Power Metal bands around today, and this album stands as a testament to their contribution to the genre.

Read about Mad With Power and the Power Metal community here: https://wp.me/p4Zsl3-8R

The Offering is a concept album that follows a boy taken from his family to become a hero or a martyr of sorts.   The storytelling on this record is chilling, well thought out, and unbelievably emotive.  This is an Epic if I’ve ever heard one.  The tone of the album is set with one of my absolute favorite songs of all time Legend, which could easily be a Bardcore track.  This song has a cadence I’ve only ever heard in Celtic music or the legendary Power Metal band, Falconer.  This album screams a mix of Falconer, Dream Evil, Hammerfall, Tyr, and UTA all piled in together.  Yet The Offering stands apart from those bands and holds its own with epic tracks.  Acolyte is more Arena Rock with speedy dualing guitars with a Judas Priest vibe. Carry the Weight is a tear-jerker explosion of emotion rarely heard in music.  Its depth mirrors some Devin Townsend tracks like Stormbending.  It’s a beautiful song that evokes a powerful vision of losing someone you know.  Offering to the Void is a more Traditional Metal vibe, but with an epic choir-fueled bridge.  Champion could be straight out of the game Oblivion of the Elder Scrolls Series.  It is perfect with high energy and a very headbanging-worthy cadence.  Guitarist Brian Koenig shows his Neo Classicism on the solo, too, which is Twilight Force blazingly fast.  All of the songs on this record are stand-alone sing-along bangers.  The Yngwie continues on the interval, The Invitation, a hair-raising guitar interlude that blasts you into one of the Lord’s greatest tracks, Dance of Control.  Good god, I love this song.  Ty’s vocals are unbelievably good on this track, reminding me of the power of Sammy Hagar and Michael Bolton, with the expert emotive tone of Michael McDonald.  Those are strong comparisons, but once you hear this song, you’ll find it justified.

These Tower Walls is a balls-to-the-wall Power Metal track with speedy guitar sweeps and lush double-tracked vocals. This song is one of the most technically impressive tracks in Lord of the Trident’s catalog.  But it’s not overbearing.  I also enjoy UTA’s Grant Truesdell’s growls on this song.  The Latin chanting on the bridge by Ty is also bone-chillingly good and well executed.   This song is so damn epic, I cannot recommend it enough.  Grant also lends his signature goblin mode growls on Power of Evil, which is one of their biggest songs to date.   This is one of the strongest albums that modern Power Metal has to offer.  I don’t think there’s a weak track.  It all flows together as a story and a stylistic stronghold.  It keeps your ears and mind fully engaged without being overwhelming. Everything about this record makes it special.  The guitar work is sublime.  It’s written so precisely, but not an overload of production or unnecessary layers.  This is the most accessible Power Metal album ever made to me.  It’s Modern, yet nods to the classic sounds.  It has meaning and personal touches.  The songs are made with purpose, so there’s no filler.  

The Offering is a great album that I think deserves infinitely more credit than it receives.  Whether it’s from being self-released and not pay to play or just the lack of education in Modern Music, The Offering has sadly fallen under the radar.  Their self-funded music and the fan base through Patreon are truly inspiring to me.  Their ability to create a mutual environment with heartfelt releases and events is what every artist should strive for.  While the Lords of the Trident are criminally underrated, the community they’ve created will never be dismissed or forgotten.  The Offering will remain one of my top Metal records for decades to come, as well as a testament to Ty Christian’s utterly explosive talent and heartwarming connection with fans through this incredible music.  I want to personally thank the Lords of the Trident for creating some of the most meaningful music, as well as a supportive, inclusive fanbase.

Favorite songs: Acolyte, Champion, Carry the Weight

34. The Dream- In This Moment (2008)

I’m not entirely sure when I first discovered In This Moment, but I suppose it was around 2010 to 2011 when my delve into more Metal began.  I think In This Moment is yet another Pandora Radio discovery.  Maybe it was on Halestorm radio that I first heard them.  It was love at first listen, however.  Maria Brink’s vocals are one in a million.  Much like Stevie Nicks, nobody on the planet sounds like Maria.  You can pick her out of a hundred singers in one recording.  She has a valley girl vocal fry on the end of her notes and an unbelievable amount of power and control.  She is a vocal nerd’s dream of a singer.  Mix this with incredibly unique, heart-pounding Thrash guitars, a bit of Metalcore, and an acceptable amount of ‘80s Reverb, it’s a dynamic sound that you won’t get anywhere else.  Maria and In This Moment put their entire soul into their early records, and it’s an audible masterpiece to my family and me.  This is undoubtedly one of our most listened to albums in the car for a good five years of listening. These early In This Moment records hit a musical sweet spot between Metal and the quirkiness of Blondie, Pat Benatar, and some New Wave mixes.  

The Dream is exactly how the title and album cover portray.  It’s a dreamy-sounding Rock and Metal down a rabbit hole of addictive sounds and airiness.  The music is fluid, emotional, gritty, and perfectly atmospheric.  I can’t compare this album to any piece of music ever made.  There’s nothing like it.  The closest I can get is Evanescence’s self-titled album, but it’s still miles apart in feeling.  It’s got Nu-metal groove and Moody Blues light Prog, like on Mechanical Love, and then jumps into a Bullet For My Valentine-esque solo.  Forever is a standalone Power Ballad with blazingly fast melodic guitars and impossibly soaring vocals.  This is undoubtedly one of my favorite songs.  Her Kiss is a Middle Eastern Groove Metal track with tasty triplets.  This pitch-shifting vocal ability is rarely heard in Western Music and shows Maria’s explosive talent.  Lost At Sea is another one of my favorite tracks.  It ebbs and flows between Metal and Dark Wave in some respects.  It’s very difficult to explain these tracks and break them down.  There’s simply nothing else like them on the planet, and there never will be again.  The Great Divide is a galloping high high-intensity track, another one of my favorite songs on the album.  The bass solo and tone are unlike anything I’ve ever heard, except maybe on a Periphery or Beyond Creation track.  It’s crazy.  The double-track fry screams are so good, too, as well as the double-tapping solo.  This may be one of the greatest songs In This Moment ever created.  I also love the Paramore-esque feel on Violet Skies, which provides a much-needed cool down from such intense tracks.  Maria’s tone is particularly gorgeous on this song.

Then, there’s the title track, The Dream.  This song is a stroke of musical brilliance that only comes around once in a generation.  This is a masterclass in composition, technique, restraint, and creating a vibe. It’s a track that immediately surrounds you in warm tones, much like stepping into the summer sun after six months of winter.  It is a massive song with a perfect slow-burning build-up that gives me chills.  A slow-building song is my absolute favorite style, and not a lot of artists have pulled this off.  This is a song that deserves an epic music video, but never got a visual playthrough, sadly.  This is still one of the most epic songs I have ever heard in my life.   If a song or album ever had to represent all the emotions and story of Alice In Wonderland, this should one hundred percent be the first choice.  I think it evokes the chaos, the utter desperation, the longing, and the isolation of this epic tale by Lewis Carroll.  In This Moment nailed it and created an utterly untouchable album.  

The more I listen to this album today, the more I realize it might fit more into the Progressive category, because of the chaotic nature of the music changes and the utter technical brilliance.  This album is everywhere on the spectrum, and it’s a little eclectic, so no wonder why I love it so.  I like anything that dares to be different, as I have probably stated many times before in this blog series.  In This Moment created a whole new vibe in American Rock and Metal.  I have never heard anything quite like this band, and never will again.  Sadly, In This Moment’s subsequent albums had very little impact on me.  Star-Crossed Wasteland is a close second and contains some more of my favorite tracks of theirs.  Blood was a very heavy and intensely catchy album with some high points.  I liked some of Ritual’s offerings.  Every other album of theirs has been a miss for me.  The band’s decision to lean into a Shock Rock bigger production show style has turned me off completely.  The emotional diction and connection are just gone for me.  They don’t even play the old songs anymore.  I love when a band can evolve and still be authentic, but this did not happen with In This Moment for me.  My theory stands that Maria Brink blew her voice out and has an undisclosed vocal injury that prevents her from singing the old, highly vocally demanding songs.  Now, her live performances contain more theatrics and costume changes than actual songs.  Nothing makes me sadder than falling out of love with a band that used to mean the world to me.  The Dream will always be one of my favorite Modern Metal albums, but it still stings to listen to.  I will always miss this version of In This Moment.

Favorite Songs: Forever, Lost at Sea, The Dream

35. Colours in the Sun- Voyager (2019)

Voyager is a Progressive Metal band from Perth, Australia, with a plethora of awards and a successful stint on Eurovision.  The band has an interesting history that spans two decades, many member changes, and sound changes over the years.  Voyager has always had a Prog Rock and Space Rock influence that sounds right out of Star Trek: The Next Generation.  When I was writing this entry for the list, I went through the band’s entire discography to get a feel for the band’s evolution to their past two releases that I fell in love with.  There’s this Sci-Fi feeling to all their releases that just hits me at my core.  Their first album, Element V, is a stunning 51-minute journey through time.  It sounds like it’s a Rock Opera companion to The Time Machine by H.G. Wells.  The band mixes Power Metal and Prog Rock or Metal with New Wave style vocals.  It’s inguinal to listen to, and wakes up the neurons and gets them firing at whole new speeds you never thought were possible.  The energy vocalist, writer, and keyboardist Danny Estrin puts into this music is an explosion of electricity.    This guy’s range is truly unbelievable.  He reaches Simon Le Bon highs and Peter Steele lows with such ease.  This band is one of the most unique experiences in music I have ever had, and each album is completely different from the last.  They don’t have a bad album or song, and they show immense versatility.  

However, the current lineup with Simone Dow (Guitar), Scott Kay (Guitar), and Alex Canion (bass and backing vocals) is truly sublime.  The past two records, Colours in the Sun and the recent Fearless In Love, just tick all the boxes for Modern Prog for me.  Colours In The Sun is one of my top ten most listened to albums of all time, according to Last Fm stats.  Voyager’s entire discography is worth listening to, but there’s a magical quality to this record that combines so many of my favorite things.  Colours In the Sun is a mix of nostalgic sounds with modern Progressive Metal.  It mixes a Tears For Fears melancholic, smooth vocal with chugging Tesseract-style guitars and breakdowns. As a Djent fan, I appreciate the mix of dissonant riffs and melodic vocals.  The sound is satisfying, as it circles with a perfect closing chord.  This is brilliant writing.  The build-ups don’t leave you hanging, but still, you want more of the sound on Colours.  The flow is interesting.  No two songs sound the same, but they all go together in tone and structure.  This lets you settle into the album, and it becomes perfect to listen to in any situation.   Colours In the Sun can be part of a focused listening session, road trip, workout session, reading, or painting.  It’s an album that sounds good in any medium.  Colours in the Sun is a heart-pounding and uplifting album that has gotten me through just about everything you can think of.  Voyager captured the feelings of heartbreak, letting go, and triumph so exquisitely.  

Songs like Severomance and Brighstar are akin to their early Power Melodic days, but the instrumentals are still hard-hitting and Modern.  This led to old fans being eased into a new era, and new fans discovering how epically versatile Voyager is.  Entropy is an insane duet with Leprous’ Einar Solberg that is one of the jams of the century. Saccharine Dream is full of absolutely gorgeous guitar tone and perfect synchronicity.  The band’s chemistry shines on this song, and it is one of my favorites in the extensive catalog.  Every bend, every chuggy chord, every melodic fiddly solo perfectly matches Danny’s vocals.  This level of perfect chemistry is not a quality I hear much these days.  This band has a bond through music and personal experiences that come out in the sound of their albums.  It’s so warm tonally, and every note is perfect in its place.  They anticipate each other’s progression.  I love hearing this level of chemistry, also heard in bands I love like Leprous, Tesseract, Periphery, and Novelists.  They understand each other’s sound and music personality on a deeper level than most.  You can hear the love, respect, and camaraderie, which makes it easier to connect to the music on a personal level.

I think Colours in the Sun and all of Voyager’s discography are immensely underrated and underappreciated.  I’m not sure why more people haven’t caught on with this fun, inspiring, technically proficient Metal band with never-ending heart.  This music is the cure for any ailment and a deep level of human understanding.  You can feel the empathetic qualities of the members in the album.  That’s the kind of positivity and understanding the world needs right now.  It doesn’t need hollow breakup songs or risque lyrics generated by AI or fifty producers.  The world in all its chaos and beauty needs music that is real and wholesome, and Voyager provides this in spades.  Music should be technically proficient, not perfected by computers.  It should be emotional, cathartic, and vulnerable.  I think we’re getting away from that in modern music, but bands like Voyager stay planted firmly in their down-to-earth roots.  I cannot recommend this band enough for Prog, Metal, Rock, and Pop fans alike.  They will always remain one of my favorite bands, and this album will always be one of my favorites in Progressive Metal.

Favorite songs: Colours In The Sun, Runaway, Now or Never

36.Hermitage: Daruma’s Eyes PT 2- Temperance (2023)

2023 was a packed year for Metal releases.  It was almost impossible to keep up.  With releases from In Flames, Crypta, Enslaved, Sylosis, Beyond the Black, Xandria, and so many more favorites, I was like a kid in a candy store.  It was an insane year for heavy music, but an unforeseen underdog took over my listening habits for the remainder of the year.  I’d been a fan of Temperance since 2018 with Of Jupiter and Moons.  I was tiring of Amaranthe’s formulaic writing a bit and not completely happy with their latest releases.  So, I was looking for a band that has similarly stratospheric energetic music.  The blend of Electronic, Symphonic, and Power Metal just hit me right in a niche spot.  Temperance was recommended to me on YouTube, and I immediately fell in love with the incredibly emotive and powerful track Pure Life Unfolds, which stands to be one of my favorite songs of all time.  The band parted ways with their female singer in early 2023, and I was brokenhearted.  I thought surely that it was the end for Temperance, and they kind of fell under my radar.  The turnaround was incredibly fast, however, and fans were quickly reassured that the band was in good hands.  Little did I know, they would get one of the greatest vocalists of all time to fill the female vocal void.

Shortly after the departure of beloved vocalist Alessia Scolleti, Temperance found a replacement for the ages.  Accomplished Opera Singer and YouTube star Kristin Starkey was announced as the new female counterpart to the great Marco Pastorino and Michele Guaitoli.  Kristin is a singer who can sing pretty much anything.  She’s not afraid to explore any aspect of the human voice and all the emotions that can come out of it.  She is proclaimed as the only singer who could ever fill in for the likes of Floor Jansen and Brittney Slayes, two of the greatest female vocalists of all time.  She is impossibly talented, hardworking, and wears her heart on her sleeve.  Kristin is a once-in-a-lifetime Contralto with an infinite range.  To say she is an upgrade or perfect for the likes of Temperance and Twilight Force is an understatement.  Hermitage was one of my most highly anticipated albums of all time, and it blew all expectations out of the water.

Hermitage is a musical journey, almost a Rock Opera of sorts, akin to the whimsy of Rocky Horror Picture Show or Meatloaf records.  But Hermitage is also incredibly emotional and deep in its roots.  I didn’t read the accompanying novella for backstory, but gathering the meaning and emotions from the lyrics is still humongously powerful.  It deals with loss, self-doubt, being stuck in an unfortunate situation, and companionship through time.  It is immensely profound and beautiful in its anthemic qualities.  If you need an album to get you through a myriad of life’s obstacles, Hermitage is a mainstay for any metalhead’s collection.  After COVID-19, losing a cat, losing my grandma, grandpa,  uncle, and more losses and troubling situations, this album was a breath of life into me.  This album is a shot of adrenaline and a Rolodex of everything beautiful.  It paints a storyboard of conquering everything and keeping your head up to the sky.  The emotion in it is explosive at every turn in such an incomparable way.  I’ve never heard anything like this album besides maybe Devin Townsend’s Epicloud or Z2 when he turned them into live Rock Operas.  That is probably the highest level of praise I can give any album.

I can’t talk about Hermitage without mentioning the mind-blowing vocal performances on it.  I have loved singing since I was a kid and consider myself a “vocal nerd” of sorts.  I like to find the best singers in the world and exalt them, as many people will never hear these vocalists due to the lack of radio play or media coverage.  Society has changed with exalting true talent, partially due to the lack of education and over-commercialization of music, where having technical ability is much less important than making sales.  When I say that Hermitage has some of the best vocal performances I have ever heard in my life, I am not exaggerating or playing it up from bias.  This album truly has unbelievable vocal performances that blew all my standards out of the water.  Not only are the individual performances from trio Starkey, Pastorino, and Guaitoli genial, but the group vocals and playing off of each other are brilliant.  The chemistry is explosive and is an emotional overload in the best way.  The music sounds like they put everything they had into it.  It’s stacked in guest appearances, layers, and melody.  It’s a stark contrast to AI music, computerized auto-tune voices, and algorithm-laden music on the radio today.  This is the kind of album that should be winning Grammys.  Everyone should listen to Hermitage at least once to understand what music should really sound like and the emotion it should provoke.  

Favorite songs: Darkness is Just a Drawing, Glorious, Where We Belong

37.Isolation Songs- Ghost Brigade (2009)

Ghost Brigade is one of the most unheard bands in Melodeath, and yet they have released some of my favorite music to date.  Although they are now sadly disbanded, they have some of the best Melodeath records I have ever heard.  Ghost Brigade was a Finnish Melodeath band that combined the riffs of In Flames’ Clayman with the decimating Doom sound of Paradise Lost.  They were utterly nihilistic and full of resounding despair, the perfect mix of catharsis for us Death Metal heads.  Their songwriting was masterclass worthy. Every song they created had perfect flow and a genial rhythm.  The clean vocals were full of tone and unique vibrato, sitting perfectly in the center of the music.  You could hear each musician individually, as if they were playing right in front of you with a huge PA system.  It was a wall of sound, but it wasn’t overwhelming.  It was just the right level of heavy, atmospheric, Doom-inspired, and gritty.  Ghost Brigade never got the credit they deserved, but their cult following still reveres their albums as being some of the best of all time.  Their riff-heavy and raw music stands the test of time and rivals any Melodeath being put out today.

Isolation Songs is a genre-defining album for me.  Whenever I think of the best Melodeath albums, this is certainly one of the first.  It’s brooding, heavy, atmospheric, and musically interesting.  This album is so unique, despite having such familiar influences.  It’s not heavy and dark just for the sake of brutality.  The moodiness and song structure are deliberate.  It feels handcrafted, instead of being quickly digitally thrown together and finely produced.  The rawness is on purpose, much like Black Metal’s white noise.  This makes for one of the most immersive experiences in an album I have ever heard.  It has a live-in-studio sound to it that I love.  I love it when albums sound like they’re directly ripped off the mixing board.  Nothing is keeping you from hearing the musicians’ natural tones and the crackle in distortion.  Not everything is always perfectly aligned.  Sometimes the drums are behind in a swing time with chugging guitars, which adds to the “Dirge” feel to the album.  This is highly evident on opener Suffocated, which is one of my favorite GB songs.  My Heart Is a Tomb is a classic Melodeath track.  It opens with clean chorus filtered guitars and downtrodden clean vocals.  It explodes into one of the best pre-chorus and chorus combos I have ever heard.  The single song that makes the whole album for me is Into the Black Light.  This song is an explosion of beauty and overcomes all of your senses.  The bass line is perfectly groovy and sharp, it draws you in.  The vocals are classic to Finland’s Nihilistic influences, yet there’s such a gorgeous, unique tone.  This song is an explosion of emotion, and I wish I could experience hearing it for the first time again.  It was a trip through time at one in the morning that I will never forget.

I don’t think another band reached this level of darkness and the utter pit of despair, except for While Heaven Wept, who will be on the list somewhere.  Ghost Brigade combined Death Metal, Melodeath, Doom, and Post-Rock to utterly destroy emotions, I believe. They so effortlessly captured the “Finnish sounds of sorrow” one may feel during a long Finnish winter with little sunlight. Some people may wonder why others seek out music with such a heavy, soul-crushing feel, but it’s all in the name of catharsis.  I think experiencing music like this, which reflects that feeling Empaths get when they’ve given up on humanity, is an important thing.  I think a lot of people may be feeling this way these days.  Some days, Ghost Brigade and their Nihilism reflect the state of the world, and it’s okay to feel that way sometimes.   If this was their intent with their music, they succeeded in reflecting the sad decay of humans caring for each other in such a beautiful way, and it impacted me forever.  I don’t know if everyone felt this deeply when listening to Ghost Brigade, but I certainly felt it.  It sounds negative on the face of it, but once you come out at the end of this listening experience, it’s like the light at the end of the tunnel.  By experiencing such a despairing auditory piece, I saw that light.  I found peace and solace in it, and it became less despairing and more inspiring.  I saw that if others cared so deeply about the decline in authentic human connection and the collapsing belief in believing in something bigger than yourself, then there are still people who care and aren’t running on autopilot.  That’s the power and meaning of Isolation Songs.

Don’t give up on humanity yet.  It’s just getting started.

Favorite Songs: Into the Black Light, Suffocated, My Heart is A Tomb

38. Eclyptic: Wake of Shadows- Illumishade (2020)

Illumishade made its debut in one of the most incredibly difficult situations.  Illumishade was a concept born out of Fabienne’s time in music school and joining the creative mind of guitarist Jonas Wolf.  I consider this band to be a super-group of sorts, and hearing this album, it might be pretty evident they’re all immensely talented.  Illumishade is a special project and band that is very difficult to describe.  It’s deeply rooted in Symphonic Metal and mirrors the cinematic brilliance of Tuomas Holopainen and Nightwish, but Illumishade is vastly different.  It has a mind-bending quality only heard in Hans Zimmer or Trip Hop or Bjork works.  Illumishade has endless atmospheric qualities, but combines the Symphonic mind of German Music Award Winner Mirjam Skal, who has composed for films all over the world, and then the heavy grooviness of Progressive Metal like Jinjer or Evergrey.  This band is an experience like no other.  It’s a completely immersive experience in a completely otherworld.  They created a whole lore and backstory, and divided people into tribes based on personality, and each member is an archetype of the tribe.  It’s so brilliant, it just blows my mind every time I think about it or listen to Illumishade.  If I could pick any band to create a soundtrack for a Fantasy movie, Illumishade would be the number one choice.

Eclyptic is a musical journey through nature, time, and space.  It genre blends in every way you can imagine.  It has no boundaries.  It dares to be out of the box, atmospheric, creative, and even a bit strange.  There’s no formula.  There’s no basic music construct.  It defies everything I have ever known about music and explodes with technicality, emotion, and inventiveness.  Eclyptic is utterly indescribable to me.  I could write about it all day and never even scratch the surface of it.  It is so diverse, expansive, interesting, and layered.  The fact that any of it is recreated live is a human feat beyond measure to me.  This album is one of the most beautiful things I have ever heard in my entire life, and still so tastefully heavy.  It is perfectly balanced, as the concept of Illumishade suggests.  It combines the words Illumination, to illustrate the heavy energy, and the shade, as the quieter, softer songs.  Music needs balance, as does everything in life, but rarely is it ever this profoundly beautiful.  Eclyptic blazes by you, seeming like it lasts only half an hour. It goes by so fast, and yet its impression on me has lasted five years now.  It’s comforting and hits me at my core every single time I listen to it.

World’s End is one of my most played songs of all time, according to Last FM Stats.  I listened to this song endlessly when it came out, probably much chagrin of my parents during lockdown.  I think it painted the portrait of how we all may have felt during the COVID-19 lockdowns.  The news and our government made us feel as though the world was literally at its end.  This song was the ultimate catharsis at the time, and the rest of the songs were more immersive, comforting, or distracting from what was happening.  I think Illumishade, at the heart of it, are empaths who truly care about people.  This shows in their music and their ability to make it connect deeply on an emotional level.  Much like Devin Townsend, who was an inspiration to Jonas and Fabienne and the band Voyager, Illumishade strives to go as deep as possible.  World’s End will always be one of my favorite songs and a reminder of that hellacious period. 

What impressed me most about this album, above the fantastic instrumental, song structure, and epic technicality, is the vocal composure of Fabienne Erni and how well the other musicians complement her.  Having such a powerhouse of versatility, sometimes the vocals overshadow the music for me, but not in Illumishade.  Their musical chemistry is what makes this band truly special.  I feel like every aspect, the heavy and melodic guitars, the Prog Bass lines, the piano and huge orchestrals, and the melodic, almost Broadway style vocals interlace together so effortlessly.  I think when you have a vocalist so versed in multiple styles, they fit into the sweet spot or pocket of music, rather than egotistically overblowing it.  Fabienne is a superb vocalist who never gets the credit or praise that she deserves.

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39. Periphery- Hail Stan (2019)

Progressive Metalcore is one of my favorite subgenres.  Whether you think Metalcore is actually Metal or not is just based on preference.  There are no absolutes when it comes to such a subjective arena as music.  I believe that Prog Metalcore has the best guitarists and the best writing in music in a decade, and that it is a fantastic example of everything Metal has to offer. Music is always based on personal taste.  So, if you hate Periphery for whatever reason that the internet tells you to hate them, just skip this one.  Periphery is either a band people love or hate.  Much like Tool or Rush or even Nickelback, this band is highly debated.  I don’t know whether it’s the fact that Reddit promotes a “hive-like” mentality, or if people just don’t like the music, I see a lot of hate for Periphery.  Their unserious album titles, song titles, and overall attitude might come off as cocky or stupid, but I don’t see this at all.  I often see people use the Reddit term “bro-Metal” to describe Periphery.  This suggests the band lacks emotional and musical sophistication.  I think this term is unjustified and infantile.  Periphery is a band with immense talent, emotional diction, and incredibly intelligent music.  I love this band at its core, even with the goofiness and the meme-like titles.  They are unpretentious.  They truly care about their core fans.  They write incredibly complex music and are very transparent with meanings.  I think they show a lot more heart than people realize.  Songs like It’s Only Smiles, Lune, and epic Sattelites are incredibly emotional and cerebral.  I think more people should dig into the band and not take everything at face value.  

Their starting point should be the electrifying album Hail Stan.  This album defies all constructs within the genre of Metal, hence the title’s playful take on “hail Satan”.  The album is full of addictive riffs.  The build-up to the breakdowns reminds me of early Tesseract albums, but blends more texturally interesting qualities to the “Djent” style of Progressive Metal.  Hail Stan is as heavy as Meshuggah, but breaks up the heaviness with Spencer Sotelo’s cleans vocals and atmospheric instrumentals.  It also has some catchy pop-based choruses that are right for singing along to at shows.  This album is impossibly technical.   The three guitarists of Periphery all have individual styles.  They play fluidly within each other’s spaces, rather than playing on top of each other.  Normally, I’d think three guitarists are too much, especially within such a chaotic theme as Prog Metal.  But Periphery knows how to construct songs that are both intense and have breathing space in the music.  Many Prog bands I’ve listened to over fifteen years lack the ability to use Rests, which are not uncommon in Classical and Jazz music.  Periphery pulls song structure and writing improvisation solos from Jazz.  This keeps the music from becoming predictable or too entropic, as experimental Jazz and Prog Metal can be.  This album shows a lot of maturity and dynamism.  

Hail Stan is a journey of human existence.  It goes from a Reptile man acting as God to control people and a stoner attempting to save the planet, to the brutal battles of Vikings and the English, to personal struggles with suicide, to a song from the point of view of Earth.  It is thematically all over the place, and so is the music.  This album is jam-packed with many elements that don’t normally go together.  Periphery takes so many ideas from each of their musicians, who like drastically different music, and combines them with intricacy.  There’s glue that holds this all-expansive puzzle piece together, and I think that is Matt Halpern on drums.  He holds this insane amount of energy and keeps a calm throughout the music that ties the three guitarists, the chuggy bass lines, and the intense vocals together.  The attack and nuances he puts into the drum parts for Hail Stan is unlike anything I’ve ever heard.  I love the way he plays with groove and swing in such a rhythmically heavy band as Periphery.  Instead of just using blast beats and playing straight, he plays on the backbeat and a bit behind.  It creates tension for the breakdown, but also creates a smoothness the music desperately needs.  This is evident in songs like Follow Your Ghost and Sentient Glow, where he creates each section of music with different parts of his kit.  It’s technically perfect and passionately doneI think Matt Halpern deserves much more credit than he receives for being one of the most emotive and technically sound drummers in Metal.  Every hit he performs fits each section of the music.  It feels just right, but also adds unpredictably.  I think he is an utterly brilliant drummer who makes this band great.

I cannot talk about Periphery without mentioning Satellites.  This is one of the most incredible songs I have ever heard.  Every song on Hail Stan has value and is musically interesting or thought provoking, but Satellites is Periphery’s magnum opus for me.  This song shows maturity, emotional diction, empathy, and incredible composition.  It’s about the Earth looking at man and seeing humanity unbiasedly for what it is.  The lyrics are the Earth asking people to take care of it and also each other.  It’s incredibly poignant from a seemingly silly band.  This is one of my favorite songs of all time.  The buildup of it is so satisfying and electrifying.  It gives me chills and butterflies every time I hear it.  It slowly builds up into this rhythmic thrashing explosiveness on the bridge and outro, and features more of Spencer’s tonally great clean vocals.  There’s something epic about this song, like it should have a cinematic movie to it of the Earth changing and eventually destroying the human race to “reset” things.  This is a special song.  I can tell Periphery put everything they had into it, and I will always appreciate the massiveness and message of this song.

Hail Stan is a record people slept on and discarded for whatever ridiculous reason.  I think it’s an utterly brilliant album.  If people would open their minds and not let the hive mind mentality of the internet dictate their tastes, they’d find this album to be a hell of a huge offering to Metal and music in general.

Favorite songs: Satellites, Reptile, It’s Only Smiles

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40. Shoganai (Mini album)- Ankor (2024)

I originally wasn’t going to include this on the list, because it’s more of an EP or a first installment of an album.  But to leave out one of my absolute favorite pieces of music would be inconclusive.  This list would feel unfinished without this album.  I could’ve included their full albums, White Dragon or Beyond the Silence of These Years.  I love those first albums with Jessie Williams at the helm vehemently.  White Dragon is such a fantastic album with something for everyone to sink their teeth into.  Ankor echoes the intensity of early Linkin Park and Enter Shikari records, mixing multiple genres like Rap, Metalcore, and Electronica to create a sound that is so unique.   This band is almost impossible to pin down.  Not two songs in their entire catalog sound alike.  The amount of different sounds this band packs into one song, let alone a whole album, is utterly staggering.  They have Pop Punk, Paramore-like songs that are so endearing and addictively energetic. They have Progressive Metalcore songs echoing the proficiency and intensity of Periphery or Spiritbox, or Falling In Reverse.  They are endlessly inspired by Japanese music and culture.  No matter what the influences are, Ankor has its sound that is emotive and musically mindblowing.  The talent of this band blew me away just this year in March, and now they are one of my favorite bands of all time.

2024’s Shoganai is one of my favorite pieces of music ever released.  It came to me in March when Sirius XM Octane played the single Prisoner.  I was sitting with my mom in the grocery store parking lot, waiting for my dad to come back.  It was a dreary day for many reasons, and I was in a mentally difficult place with my anxiety. I felt hard times were on the horizon.  I was dreading having to have two more wisdom teeth removed, and my family and I were worried about my grandfather’s state of health.  Prisoner came on, and it utterly overwrote the dark narrative in my mind.  The anxiety just melted away.  The pain went away.  There was something idyllic about this song in that moment.  I believe it came on when I needed it the most.  Ankor came into my life at the singularly perfect time.  I don’t believe in coincidence.  Ankor came on the radio at the perfect time for a reason.  I truly don’t know what the past couple of months would have been like without them.  Their music, especially Shoganai, is like a painkiller or Xanax, but without any side effects or toxicity.  This album is one of the most impactful records in my entire life.   Upon listening to them more, they became an integral part of my life and a muse of passion.  

Ankor and their release, Shoganai, are a catalyst for healing and/or overcoming everything.  Shoganai in Japanese lore translates to “it cannot be helped”, to signify the horrible and beautiful events in one’s life that cannot be stopped or changed.  This can relate to death, love, health problems, your dreams coming true, or just anything that inevitably happens.  Ankor perfectly captured all of these things with this mini album in such a raw and cathartic way.  Every song on it is an explosion of emotion.  It is intense.  It is hair-raising, heart-pounding, and a complete rush to listen to.  Ankor put everything they had into Shoganai and used it for their catharsis to get through their struggles.  What makes this band is the heart they put into every single note, every song, and every second of their performance.  Their energy reminds me of Paramore, but their sound is truly like nothing else in this world, and the heaviness of Shoganai more suits Architects or Periphery.  Their chemistry with new drummer Eleni Nota on this album is spectacular.  She took Ankor and helped raise it to its full potential.  Her drumming is like a stopwatch or a countdown to self-destruction.  She is cataclysmic in her attack and unbelievably fast and technical.  Venom is one of the most impressive drum tracks I have ever heard.  I show the live performance of it at Wacken to everyone I know.  She is the reason Shoganai was able to go to the height the band wanted.  Ankor now feels like a complete band that complements each other.  It takes a hell of a good band to stand with such a dynamic vocalist as Jessie Williams.  I love the guitars, the bass tone, the chaotic structure, and the passion that each member exudes on this album. 

Jessie Williams is one of my favorite female vocalists to ever exist.  When I think about her, it’s impossible to just classify her as a “Metal vocalist” because she is so much more than that.  She can sing in literally any genre and blend into any genre.  Her voice is multi-faceted and multi-ranged.  Her voice and delivery are what make Ankor a GREAT band and what makes Shoganai one of the best releases of the 2020s and of all time.  Her delivery is aggressive, and then gentle and soft, and then explosive.  She defies everything I knew about vocals in Metal and what can work.  She ranges from a J-Metal approach, to Celine Dion level belting to perfectly delivered and intense fry screams.  It blows my mind every single time I hear her sing Darkbeat.  It is unbelievable to me that Darkbeat is sung by one individual.  I’m no stranger to dual-style vocals with Devin Townsend, Corey Taylor, Tatiana Shmayluk, and Floor Jansen, but Jessie’s just seem so drastically far apart in tone and range.  And Jessie makes the switch look completely effortless.  Her vocals are shocking, intense, and then soft and soothing within one second.  Songs like Oblivion, which is one of the most beautiful songs I have ever heard, show this duality eloquently.  This is a singer with both perfect language diction and emotional diction.  Oblivion is an overlooked gem of a song in Modern Metal, and so is Jessie Williams as one of the greatest singers of my generation.  Venom also shows her intensity and quickness with words and ability to stay in the pocket. Her performance on Shoganai is one for the ages.

Shoganai is a special (mini) album.  Each track is a part of a storyboard and an actual mini-series on YouTube.  This is such a brilliant, emotive, and smart creative venture.  It completely immerses you in these characters that all signify love, loss, healing, and most importantly, hope.  I think this album stands to be a beacon of hope.  “The World is A Cruel Place, and it is also Very Beautiful” is the opening track and the overall arc of the album.  It sends the message that pain is inevitable, but so is love and happiness.  This message resonates with me emphatically.  It is something I believe at my very core.  I believe that pain is utterly part of life, and we all have to learn how to overcome it.  Drowning in pain is not an option.  It is giving up and going backwards in human evolution.  This album sends the message that there’s always something on the horizon.  “I’ll be okay” is a phrase said throughout the album as a reminder that no matter what happens, we’ll be okay.  That message is so simple, and yet so incredibly powerful.  This has impacted fans endlessly.  Many have gotten the phrase tattooed on their bodies permanently.  The crowd even holds up signs at Ankor shows that say “We’ll All be Okay”.  That sentiment is truly beautiful and beyond heartwarming.  It stands as a testament to Ankor’s impact as a band and wonderfully empathetic human beings who wear their hearts on their sleeves.  There are a million reasons why I love this band and Shoganai, but there just aren’t enough words to convey that.  Please, go listen to Shoganai with an open heart.


Favorite songs: Darkbeat, Oblivion, Embers

Discover My Favorite Heavy Metal Albums of All Time: Devin Townsend

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time:

I began the impossible task of cataloging my favorite Metal albums of all time at the beginning of February.  It’s so arduous because I could easily list 100 albums.  It started with about 47 albums. For the readers’ sake, I narrowed it down to 20.  I love Metal as if that isn’t obvious with this decade-old blog. I’ve been listening to Rock and Heavy Metal my entire life. I have loved many bands and albums over the last 18 years of exclusively listening to Heavy music.    The goal of this was to critically think about why I love these albums so much.  The other goal of writing this article was to create a more personal approach to lists and share my slightly unconventional taste in Metal records. 

When I asked the internet about their favorite Metal albums, I found a lot of the usual suspects on there; Black Sabbath, Metallica, Slayer, Dream Theater, and Opeth.  It made me wonder why none of these ended up on my list.  The impact these bands and their releases had on the Metal genre is undeniable and I enjoy many of their songs.  I can’t sit and listen to a whole album by any of those artists.  None of the “conventional Metal” albums hold my interest for long.  I went to Rate Your Music and scoured their Metal chart to see if I had forgotten any of my favorite Metal albums, and I found my taste to be once again drastically different from the majority.  Going back through other’s lists and listening to these albums, I realize how weird my taste is. My tastes remain heavily in Progressive and Power Metal. 

You won’t find a lot of “classics” on this list.   I think it’s because I was raised with so many different kinds of music to where I seek out a lot more variation.  Sticking to a theme isn’t always my thing.  I like unconventional artists who push technicality and emotions to the ultimate limits.  I seek out singers with multi-octave ranges and unique tones.  I like heavy, fast drums, dueling guitars, and extremely punchy basslines.  I like Metal which makes me think, tells a story, and evokes profound soul-deep emotion.  I love albums that toe the line between Opera and Metal, and that don’t play by any genre rules. I like it Heavy as fuck, but well balanced with beautiful melodies.  None of these albums on the list will be a surprise to those who know me and will be hopefully interesting to those who don’t.

As with all my posts, music is subjective.  This list doesn’t aim to categorize “the best albums of Metal”, because such a feat is just not feasible to me.  This is based on just my personal taste.  They’re not even in order by most favorites, because what is considered my favorite is highly based on my mood.  I just made a master list and narrowed it down to the 20 that are the most important to highlight my taste.  It should give readers a better sense of what I listen to regularly and just personal taste.  Let me know about your favorite Metal albums below in the comments, I would love to see if any of these albums resonated with anyone else the same way they did with me.

Devin Townsend

I decided to do Part One entirely of my favorite albums by Devin Townsend.  Being my favorite artist of all time his music accounts for most of my listening habits.  He is so influential to me and such an integral part of my life.  I couldn’t choose only one album from his discography to list.  Devin has created some of the most special music over the years.  My entire music taste has been a long search for artists who wish to achieve the same heights of emotional and technical ability.  Maybe it sounds elitist, but he’s my absolute favorite musician and writer.  I said I wouldn’t let an artist become my entire personality.  After hearing Z2 by Devin Townsend Project in 2014, his music took over my listening rotation.  His music is mostly what I listened to for eight months straight or more. It was so transcendental and became so important to uplifting me and inspiring my music and dreams.  That powerful connection with music is what I always strive to find, and I hope other people can find such a connection.  Nothing compares to that connection.  I don’t think I’ll ever find anything like it again.  I find everything he releases to be personally impactful and spiritual.  Spirituality and Music have been intertwined since the dawn of when man would sing and beat bones on skins for entertainment.  This relationship between the two didn’t occur to me until I discovered Devin Townsend, and that’s the main reason why I am such a fan of his music. I’ve been wanting to write this article for years, but never thought it was a good idea until this year. I focused exclusively on Devin’s heaviest albums or what I think are his heaviest albums, and chose my absolute favorites. Honestly, I love all of his material. Everything he puts out is valuable to me, emotionally or just musically.

Going back through Devin’s catalog for this article was such an incredible journey this time.  Experiencing his music again and thinking about why I love these albums and songs so much just fueled me to keep going with my creative projects.  Every time I consider taking a step back from music or writing and think about going back to school, Devin reminds me of where my heart and talent truly lie.  His music inspires me to take my dreams to the absolute pinnacle of where they can go.  If he never gave up despite everyone telling him his ideas were crazy or he was clinically insane for thinking of them, then nobody should ever give up on anything they want to achieve in life.  His musical career has survived the worst possible things someone can go through.  If he can do it through pain and darkness, then so can I.  I truly believe he is the most underrated artist of all time and should be listed among the absolute greats, not just in Metal, but in all music.  Considering the power of his message, his virtuoso guitar playing, and his immense possibly four-octave vocal range, I have no idea why this guy isn’t as big as Eric Clapton and Paul McCartney.  His music may be crazy and extreme at times, but it is always beautiful and profound.  His contribution to music should never be forgotten and deserves a lot more credit.  The albums below are essential to that thought.

I think of Devin and I like kindred spirits, because I relate to his music and his journey on such a deeply personal level.

  1. City- Strapping Young Lad (1997)

City, listed as one of the greatest Metal albums of all time as coined by Kerrang and Revolver, is a bombastic assault on the senses and psyche.  It is the most extreme album I have ever heard in my life.  City is Los Angeles personified; An overwhelming chaotic darkness that you have no choice but to dive into.  This album is beyond all reason, all genres, and everything we knew about Metal.  Extreme music wasn’t new in 1997, but it had never gone to this cracked-out level as City did.  This is an audible documentation of someone in complete turmoil in one of the hardest times of their life.  Devin had moved to Los Angeles from Canada and was sleeping on friends’ couches whilst trying to figure out life after Steve Vai and a copious amount of drugs.  It is the most raw level of dealing with one’s emotions audibly.  It is pain from the depths of a soul coming out in the most angry and anxiety-fueled ways you can ever experience.  It is an audible account of someone’s mental health breaking down due to their environment.  It is a rawness artists aspire to, but will never reach.  Nobody expresses the pain of human existence like Devin Townsend.  While Strapping Young Lad started as a farce to make fun of the Heavy Metal scene, they ended up creating the most iconic Extreme Metal records.

I discovered this album for the first time in 2018.  Finally, I decided to go through Devin’s entire catalog and do a deep dive.  This was one of the best decisions I have ever made.  Listening to Strapping Young Lad is a religious experience, in a sense.  It is a spiritual cleanse, a purge of all the darkness and rage I think most people hold inside.  First time I heard this record, my jaw dropped to the floor and tears flooded to my eyes. It was just so overwhelming. Devin has this ability to take the idea of catharsis and take it to the soul-crushing extremes.  City, and most SYL albums, are painful to listen to.  It’s chaotic, abrasive, cloying, and overwhelming beyond anxiety.  It’s like El Paso traffic on a weekday with Metallica in town.  It’s like the height of COVID where everything is telling us the world is ending, we’re all going to die, and humanity is a shit show.  Despite all these negative descriptors, City makes me genuinely happy to be alive and able to experience this album. I still get happy tears listening to the utter brilliance of Gene Hoglan and Devin Townsend together. Gene’s drumming on this record makes all the hair stand up all over my entire body.  His drumming with the riffs on this album is just genial to me.  “All Hail The New Flesh” has to be one of the greatest Metal songs I’ve ever heard in my life.  It’s just so damn relentlessly fast, and still so groove-oriented.  City cements why Gene Hoglan is one of my favorite drummers of all time.  He is the only drummer that could’ve drummed on these SYL albums. I wish I was half as good as he is at drums.

City, it’s insane how great this album still sounds today.  It’s too short, but somehow just right as intense as it is for thirty-nine minutes.  It is all so extreme, but ends one of the most philosophical mind-bending tracks.  I think this is one of the highlights of Devin’s career as a Progressive Metal musician.  There’s just something about the way the chaos ends with such a deep, dark, and interesting track.  The transition is a stroke of brilliance.  I just love Devin’s ability to mix so many different styles in one album.  “Spirituality” is kind of the soul predecessor to the next album on this list, Ocean Machine: Biomech.  Listening to it and Ocean Machine back to back is an eerie experience that can never be replicated.  Experiencing all the sides of Devin is a revelation, but City will always be the apex of the journey for me.  This is where music became limitless for me. I began to understand how extremism and Prog can work together.  It was an eye-opening first experience that I will cherish forever.  “City” is an album that will forever be on the timelines of Metal.  I wish Devin’s other albums received as much press and acclaim as this one.  Maybe he’d be as big as Opeth and Dream Theater, and rightfully so.   

Favorite Songs; All Hail the New Flesh, Spirituality, Detox

 2.Ocean Machine: Biomech- Devin Townsend (1997)

When I am asked what my favorite album of all time is, Ocean Machine is my immediate response.  Choosing an absolute favorite is difficult and contrived in a way.  There have been so many iconic, influential, and important Metal albums since the 1960s.  Choosing one out of a million albums just seems elitist in a way.  Though, I can’t help but let one album define my ultimate personal taste.  Ocean Machine best highlights my favorite sounds in Metal and also highlights some of my personality traits.  Ocean Machine was written at a critically important time in Devin’s life when he had to choose his Mental well-being over the success of Strapping Young Lad.  He began to notice a cognitive discourse between the anger of SYL, and the solo music he was writing while at home.  The two extremes lead to Devin being diagnosed with Bipolar disorder.  Somehow his mental health issues became audibly documented, which is such an interesting experience to hear the separation of two personalities.  It’s an incredible feat, even if it was entirely unintentional.  Through Ocean Machine and his other solo works, Devin began to heal and move on from the most tumultuous years of his life.  You can experience this journey with him through his music.  Unintentionally, Devin became an outlet for so many people struggling and he built a unique cult following that found immense positivity through his music.  This is one of the most profoundly beautiful things I’ve ever seen in music and is why Ocean Machine is so vital to me.  It’s the ultimate catalyst to healing, and god knows, humanity has a lot to heal from.

Ocean Machine is where Devin’s “Power of Positivity” through music began.  Songs like “Life” began this new voice for Devin and allowed a connection to form with new lifelong friends and fans.  Everyone should experience this album at least once in their life.  It is a Progressive and atmospheric triumph with exquisite guitar chord progression and fantastic vocals.  It is a love child of 90’s Alternative, Pink Floyd, Rush, and Genesis…  Yet, the album stands on its own entirely.  I’ve never heard anything quite like it in my entire life.  I feel like describing it is such an arduous task.  Ocean Machine is complex; Still one of the most complex records I have ever heard.  The atmosphere in it captures sitting by the ocean in the dark alone so vividly.  It paints such a unique picture in my head with such profound feelings.  It’s loss, it’s freedom, it’s rejoicing, and so many complex human emotions.  Devin is the most proficient at capturing these sentiments I have ever heard.  Thus, the most epic quad of songs I have ever heard is what makes Ocean Machine an everlasting one-in-a-million experience.  I strive for this level of emotional depth and positivity every day of my life, but still have a lot of work to portray this message. Devin is on another level of self expression. That quality comes out on Ocean Machine so poetically. That’s why it’s my favorite album. It’s not held back by commercialism. It’s not refined. It’s not heavily edited. It’s raw and real tangible emotion. It is a musical of the Human Condition of sorts, and I just can’t get enough of it.

Most call it a trio, but I consider the last track to be an integral part of the journey.  This quad begins with the heartbreaking “Funeral”, where Devin continues to hash out the death of a childhood friend.  It continues with the painful, epic, and droning “Bastard”, one of the darkest songs I have ever heard in my life.  The guitar on that song is absolutely sensational and so unique to anything I’ve ever heard.  “The Death of Music” is a long epic; a dark Peter Gabriel-esque tribal track that perfectly sums up the theme of the album “It’s like a death becomes Musical”.  Devin’s crooning on the bridge “Don’t die on me. Don’t go away. When I need you here. In my need” is one of the most spine-chilling things I have ever heard.  This song is a milestone.  It’s a once-in-a-lifetime underrated masterpiece, and I love it irrevocably.  Ocean Machine closes with one of the most depression-inducing songs I’ve heard. While it’s a bonus track, it was added to the album later on.  “Thing Beyond Things” is everything about unexplainable heartache sonified.  It was originally a demo and featured in his collection “NoiseScapes” as one of the oldest recordings of Devin.  It features an unbelievable 10-second fry vocal scream featuring harmonics that only Devin can seemingly reach.  It is the most epic scream I have ever heard.  Devin puts his body on the line for music again and again, and his ability to perform these songs even today is a superhuman feat.  This album is what made Devin Townsend my favorite artist of all time and it will remain my favorite probably for life. I’m considering doing a bass playthrough of the entire album on Twitch or Youtube this year!

Favorite Songs; Voices In The Fan, Seventh Wave, Funeral, Regulator

3. The New Black- Strapping Young Lad (2006)

This is one of the first albums I put down while compiling this list.  When I think of my favorite Metal albums, The New Black is one I never talk about but it lives in my mind and heart forever.  This is Strapping Young Lad’s last record. I think it’s a perfect representation of SYL’s immensely unique sound.  This album may not have received the acclaim of “City” and “Alien”.  I still find it to be one of my favorite albums Devin has ever released.  It is highly influential to the music I want to write.  The guitar and drum sounds on it are unlike anything I’ve ever heard.   “The New Black” is still as extreme and heavy as ever, but this is where Devin’s awakening in refinement and self-editing began.  His extreme approach to music would continue with “Ziltoid; The Omniscient” and “Deconstruction” which are the “last breaths of SYL”, but this album marked the end of an era.  This album would separate the fans forever.  Many have not moved on from SYL and still refuse to accept Devin as a solo artist.  That is how impactful SYL was on the Metal community.  While it brought Extreme Metal and Prog together for me, it seemingly separated the SYL fanbase  I understand why people have not moved on from SYL, but they’re missing out on the transformation of Devin and everything he’s created since.

“The New Black” is an eclectic mix of Prog Metal, Extreme Metal, and Industrial rhythms that keeps you guessing with every listen.  I find this album to be the turning point of Devin’s vocals, where his refined operatic style began to come out.  It appeared on other tracks before this album a bit, but not as forefront or epic as on The New Black  This is probably one of the greatest transformations in Music.  His grasp on clean vocals and fry vocals is unparalleled in music to me.  Nobody does this transition quite like Devin, with such range, technicality, and pure unedited emotion.  It is quite a sound to behold on any record of his from “The New Black” and on.  This album is where my favorite music of all time began to take its shape.  I also think this album has some of the best riffs in SYL history.  The Title Track, “Far Beyond Metal”, and my absolute favorite song “Almost Again” are filled with groovy and pummeling riffs with the unique Devin Townsend tone.  I hear these riffs ghosted on anything from Gojira to Periphery to Orbit Culture.  SYL and “The New Black’ impacted Metal a lot more than I originally thought.  I had no idea what a big deal SYL was to Metal. I don’t participate in forums or fan-groups, so it wasn’t until other artists started talking about SYL did I realize how influential they were.

Now, listening to this album back to back, I hear so many bands that borrowed from this album. But, I have yet to hear anyone recreate the magic and utter devastation of “Almost Again”.  This song is my favorite SYL song, right above “Love?”, “Spirituality”, and “Skeksis”.  This song has one of the fastest and most incredible drum parts I have ever heard.  It feels like a million volts of electricity pummeling your heart and neurons.   Gene Hoglan really defied the parameters of speed drumming on this song, to the point where few drummers can even play this song today and it has only been played live a couple times.  The technicality blows me away on “Almost Again”, but SYL doesn’t have a slouched song.  They’re pioneers of Extreme and Progressive Metal.  Every song on this album is a triumph to me. “The New Black” forever altered my music taste, and I’ve sought out that balance of heavy and Prog ever since. Devin always achieves a unique blend of styles, but The New Black is definitely one of my favorites. I love that it doesn’t sound like anything else in that era of music. Yet, I find it nostalgic to that time where Industrial Metal was popular. This era of Metal had a unique atmosphere to me that hasn’t been recreated since. It’s a desolate feeling to listen to. It’s eerie, but in a good way. It has a dystopian futuristic feel that would fit in a Bladerunner or Dune film. It’s such a cool experience I’ve only had when listening to Industrial Metal. I think SYL is one of the best at capturing this vibe.

Favorite Songs; Almost Again, The New Black, Wrong Side

4. Accelerated Evolution- The Devin Townsend Band (2003)

The Devin Townsend band, while it shares members with the DTP, was only created to make two keystone albums for Devin Townsend.  This album was a huge departure from his other works.  It was more personal, less about being heavy or extreme.  The band was put together in under a year with local musicians to create a whole fresh experience.  It is the polar opposite of the self-titled SYL album that was recorded at the exact same time.  The Devin Townsend Band began touring with SYL after the albums came out, and they were both really well critically received.  When I discovered Devin in 2014, I had never heard of another musician being so prolific.  Two bands at once and multiple albums in one year under different projects was inhuman to me. His explosive creativity always astounds me.  I think this band was created as a buffer for the chaos that SYL brought.  This was a group of people that Devin could just jam his ideas with and create whatever came out of his head without the need for a theme or time constraints.  Music is not a job or a hobby for Devin, it is a necessity to express emotion and work through it all.  This necessity birthed what I think is one of the greatest songs ever written: Deadhead.

Accelerated Evolution is full of quirky, Hard Rock, and Progressive Metal tracks that rise up quick and soar above anything I have ever heard before.  There is an intangible vibe to this album that reminds me of Superunknown by Soundgarden, Ten by Pearl Jam, and Rush.  It was the most concise, most hook-heavy, and most well-thought-out album Devin had put out in that era.  It was less frantic, more groove-driven, and Industrial at the right point in Music.  It was catchy without going too commercialistic.  It had the potential to be as popular as Fear Factory at the time, but of course, it didn’t receive the promotion it deserved.  I think Accelerated Evolution has some of Devin’s absolute best guitar work, especially the solo on “Suicide” and the complete guitar solo track “Away” which still mesmerizes me to this day. “Away” is such an underrated guitar track.  I like every song on this album and think each one is very distinct from anything ever released as usual. I believe this is one of the strongest albums in his extensive catalog and will always be one of my favorites.  Most of my current music material emulates this album to some degree because the guitar tone and drums are just of the utmost quality.  I like big sounds and big “Rock” mixes, and this album is mixed so well for 2002.  Devin uses so much reverb in his mixes and his guitar effects, it’s become an inside joke among him and the fans. I love it. I love how all encompassing his mixes are. Accelerated Evolution was the first album I noticed this “wall of sound” production, and I fell in love with it.

I just have to talk about “Deadhead’.  This song is one of Devin’s most popular songs and has become unanimous with how people identify him.  It’s an ambiguous song that has never been revealed to what it exactly means to Devin.  But, he always describes it as a “song about love” and a song “written for his wife”, which fits the relationship theme of the album.  It is one of the first songs Devin ever wrote on his very first electric guitar.  He was very inspired by the industrial Metal band Godflesh at the time of writing most of the album.  I think that influence helped create the unique and devastating atmosphere of “Deadhead”, but also a lot of SYL’s atmosphere.  I had never heard a more emotionally painful song in my life.  It’s the drone, the slow tension of the guitar, the backbeat of the drums, and the harmonic fry scream that emulates pain.  I had heard a handful of singers’ harmonic screams before, but none to the frequency or sheer audible pain of Devin.  This song healed things in me that I didn’t even know still pained me.  That’s how powerful this song is.  It can be interpreted as a difficult relationship, a first love, or a really dark break-up song.  I think all of these interpretations of painful situations hit me like a freight train at once. So, I listened to the song until the pain went away.  This course of time was about three months. While some people may think it’s unhealthy to listen to the same song on repeat for that long. I find whatever helps you heal to be absolutely necessary. I fear to think where I’d be in my mental health journey without this song, or any of Devin’s music. I truly think there’s a song in Devin’s discography that can heal anyone.  I don’t know if that’s what he was shooting for with Accelerated Evolution. But, it impacted me as gigantic as the mix is and I think it’s impacting even more people over a decade later. It still hits me like it did when I first heard it, especially the live versions where he even exceeds the original power. His music is forever, and Deadhead is the flagship of that infinite contribution.

My favorite Songs; Deadhead. Traveller, Away

5. Transcendence- Devin Townsend Project (2016)

I featured the very last SYL album, so it’s no surprise I’d feature the last album ever released by DTP, the power group we all loved for a decade.  At the point the DTP was working on Transcendence, I saw a big change in Devin.  He started to relinquish some control of his musical projects and delegate to the other guys, Ryan, Mike, Dave, and Beav in the DTP.  Transcendence was a true band collaboration, which is something we hadn’t seen with Devin’s solo work.  It was a promising turning point to solidify the project as a band, and maybe grow it further for future releases and add more personality to it rather than just being one of Devin’s solos.  And boy, did I love this idea emphatically.  I had become very attached to Ryan Van Poederooyen, the drummer, who is still one of my favorite drummers of all time.  That powerhouse of a drummer and a very inspirational self-sufficient guy inspired me to pick up the drums again, and I’ve had so much fun with the instrument and learning his interesting patterns.  DTP had become kind of a buffer to Devin’s eccentric “madman” style of music.  Ryan and co kept Devin grounded and definitely helped hone in his ideas for one of the best Prog Metal albums ever, Transcendence.  

Transcendence is an anthemic Progressive Metal album that’s a full-circle journey with incredibly complex guitar riffs and one of the best drum performances since Dream Theater’s Images and Words.  It is a huge-sounding record that makes the hair on my arms stand straight up every single time I listen to it. I think this is the “magnum opus” of the DTP.  It’s perfectly constructed with each track just flowing together in perfect timing and harmony.  The Wall-of-sound production from Devin and Periphery’s Nolly Getgood is utterly exquisite.  I will never get over how good this record sounds.  Is it mixed to sound good on every possible form of media?  God, no.  This is an album you have to listen to in FLAC with spatial audio either 2.1 with a sub or 5.1, and that’s perfectly acceptable.  I don’t want to listen to Devin’s music on my “airbuds” while I’m cleaning.  I want to sit down and listen to this album, and have a completely immersive audio experience.  I listen to DTP’s music to be uplifted, emotionally conquered, and unironically “transcended” to a different state of mind.  That’s exactly the intent of this album and it achieves it so loudly.  It’s the loudest mix on a DTP album, so you can hear each member with perfect clarity.  The result is actually mind-boggling. I have no idea how such a perfect mix was achieved.  There are so many layers to this album. 

The choirs, immense synths, many guitar tracks, and the biggest sounding drums ever recorded.  Yet, it sounds so damn good.  On songs like “Failure” and the instant classic “Stormbending” you can pick out each musician, and everyone gets a “solo” of sorts.  The heaviness, and yet the airiness and spine-tingling sounds this album achieves are unlike anything I’ve ever heard before.  My favorite song of the album tops it all off for me, though.  “Stars” is a bombastic track with incredible vocals, syncopated guitar and bass, and epic imagery.  I was lucky enough to watch this song come to life on stream in only a couple hours.  It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience to watch Devin speed-craft such a beautiful song.  His talent knows no limits and really came to shine on this song in particular.

It’s a mind-blowing emotional and thought-provoking album that makes you feel like you can rise above absolutely anything.  Whether it be self-doubt, social anxiety, the negativity of social media, the depressing news media, or isolation, this album works through all those aspects in a very logical sense.  The connection I made with this record is just so affable, one article where I’m keeping it as short as possible is not enough to go through each song.  It’s just so monumental to me.  How do you possibly articulate an album that encapsulates everything you stand for and believes in?  I can say just go listen to arguably the most epic and perfect track on this album “Higher”.  That song alone may make you understand just how significant this album is and get the message loud and clear, “Don’t let the bastards grind you down.”  Transcendence and its message have never been more relevant than in 2025 with a world full of hatred and divisiveness.  “Higher” is about rising above negativity and making your own life without the influence of others. It’s taken from the concept of Buddhism and Transcendental Meditation, which are teachings I have brought into my own life. I will always associate this song with Ryan, too, as it’s my favorite work from him on drums and part of his teachings.

In 2016, I was lucky enough to partially experience this album live in person.  Seeing DTP on one of their last tours was phenomenal.  I still can’t believe I got to see them headline at a one-off show in Denver.  It was an experience I am forever grateful for.  I thought the DTP would go on and last for their entire careers as musicians, but sadly, the project was disbanded in 2018 after the release of Ocean Machine Live at Plovdiv.

Favorite songs; Stars, Failure, Stormbending

6.  Empath- Devin Townsend (2019)

While I’m grateful for the DTP and I still love the guys, I found out that I was so wrong about Devin needing people to reign him in and tame him.  This idea is good for some albums, but when it comes to Devin’s unhinged visions, some of the best music has been created without constraints.  Empath was a collection of ideas Devin had long before deciding to disband DTP, but he never had the time to sit down and expand on these ideas.  Talking with Frank Zappa guitarist Mike Keneally over the phone, he would let these ideas flow out.  The two compiled an album together in this manner and went into the studio to record what I think is one of the best Prog Metal albums ever created.   This album is all of Devin’s ideas, personality, and deepest thoughts without limit.  It is infinite in reverberation, full orchestra, full choir, and about thirty very different musicians.  It’s a weird personification of Devin going on an island vacation with his family, but it’s also the journey of life in a chaotic and profound Metal Opera.  There are so many layers and sounds on this record, that it returns him to that “musical madman” viewpoint.  Empath was Devin’s huge launch into solo work 12 years after his last solo release, and I believe it is one of his best works but also one of the best works of music ever created. 

Empath is a fantastical Prog Metal album with all of Devin’s past and present influences combined with infinite layers and the genial guitar work and mixing of Mike Keneally. It is “The most Devin album that Devin has ever recorded” as said by the Angry Metal Guy.  This album is insane and watching him create it over two years was insane in the best way possible. Witnessing this album, as well as all of Devin’s albums, is one of the biggest reasons I am thankful to be alive, to be honest.

Empath is an explosive Prog Metal album with Opera, Symphonic, Extreme, and Ambient influences created by some of the best musicians I’ve heard in my entire life.  It is Devin Townsend to the one-millionth power, and it took so many people to make the sounds of this man’s Synthesia-laden mind come to life.  Mike Keneally took these colors, patterns, and shapes and helped Devin translate them to a team of musicians, essentially learning a new language and creating one of the best relationships in music.  Somehow all of this chaos, passion, multitude of emotions, and influences came together in a Prog Metal epic.  It took three drummers, eight vocalists, four guitarists, three producers, a choir, a pedal steel guitar player, a whistle player, and immense work from Mike, Devin, and Nolly Getgood to create this epic.  It is Devin without limits or constraints, and my god, it is incredibly beautiful.  While it is the least accessible and commercial album he has ever created, it is a piece of pure art that will be forever irreplicable.  It may not be the best example of his vocals or guitar solos, but it is a purge of all the sounds that have ever existed in a brilliant musician’s head, and I think it’s incredible. 

It’s a soundtrack to Devin Townsend by Devin Townsend, and predictably, I love it.  The other musicians also really shine on this album, exposing me to the brilliance of Mike Keneally, Morgan Agren, and Nathan Navarro.  Nathan’s bass lines on this album are absolutely sensational.  It’s one of the things I love most on this album.  You can hear him decimate the bass on “Evermore” and “Genesis” with his unique thumb-picking that just fits so well with Devin’s guitar playing and tone.  These collaborations are just so perfect, it seems as though it was all meant to happen this way.  It made the shock and pain of disbanding the DTP worth it to me because Devin finally had musicians who understood him and could meet the expectations of brilliant musicality.  

I want to talk about some of the songs.  I think “Why?” is one of the most special songs in Devin’s entire catalog and highlights his perfect operatic vocal ability so beautifully.  Metal and opera are no strangers to each other, but rarely do I hear male vocals so well done in this mix. It’s so beautiful.  It really speaks to the message of Empath and how relationships with Empaths work in a group setting.  I really relate to this song, but also most of the songs on the album  I also think “Borderlands” gets stuck in my head more than any Devin Townsend song.  It’s just so catchy and rhythmically interesting.  While it’s kind of ambiguous and seemingly simplistic, it’s such a deep Jungian concept.  It attaches music to a “Muse” and describes upholding a balance to sate the “Muse” and a nuclear family, giving Devin a literal sign to make this album.  The way his mind works is incredible and it comes out so profoundly on this album, but no more profoundly than on “Requiem” and the epic “Singularity”.  “Requiem” is a closer to the era of DTP and a look ahead to the future of Devin’s music.  A choir echoes the beautiful chorus to “Stormbending” which is probably the biggest song DTP ever released and gives you a feeling of closure.  Devin’s full circle approach to his music where he reuses older lyrics is a personal touch that always captivates me. I love how he “rips his own material off”.

“Singularity” is the final to this epic transformation of Devin as a solo artist.  I think it’s a goodbye to his previous works, but also an insight into the “Moth” project coming out in 2025 where he moves to Symphonic work.  This is one of the most epic and gorgeous songs I’ve ever heard in my life.  It’s split up into multiple movements that all encompass every style of music he’s ever done.  It’s got industrial Meshuggah parts reminiscent of SYL,  a little bit of Transcendence and Epicloud, Infinity, and Addicted.  It is one of my favorite songs he’s ever written.  I listen to the “Here Comes the Sun” section of repeat, because Anneke’s vocals are just so uniquely beautiful on “Through the Storm, may you become a Rainbow.:”  This song mirrors the epics of Dream Theater, Porcupine Tree, and While Heaven Wept in such an ornately Devin Townsend way. I truly believe this is Devin’s magnum opus. I love this song so hugely, I think everyone NEEDS to hear it in full at least once in their life. It’s like listening to a film soundtrack. I envision a short film: A man goes through unbearably dark valleys of loneliness and despair to rise and transcend into the beautiful nebulas with love and light. It’s a sublime piece of music, one of my absolute favorite songs ever written.  I will be listening to it and Empath for the rest of my life and honestly trying to recreate this brilliance in my own music, although I don’t think it’s possible for anyone to ever replicate it.

I await to see if “The Moth” is as visionary as “Singularity”.

Favorite Songs: Singularity, Genesis, Why?

To sum it all up, I love Devin’s music irrevocably. Anything he puts out is significant to me in multiple ways. His music always seems to find me when I need it the most. Whether it be a death in the family, a break up, an injury, or living in an isolated place, his music is always what lifts me up. That’s what his music means to me; It’s about rising about any obstacle and any darkness while accepting everything life has to offer. On “Genesis” Devin screams on the chorus “Let there be light let there be moon! Let there be stars and let there be you! Let there be monsters, let there be pain! Let us begin to live again
From the top to the bottom genesis!” I repeat this message in my head every day. It’s become my mantra. It seems to get me through absolutely anything. Through Devin, I’ve learned to accept pain and find the strength to rise out of it. That’s what his music means to me. Throughout his music career, I find his message of “transcendence” to be loud and clear. Whatever happens in life, you can transcend it and come out of it stronger than you were before. Bad shit is always going to happen, and you can’t fight it. Pure acceptance of the journey has helped me more than any pharmaceutical I have ever tried. His music is literally better than drugs for me. His music is essential to every aspect of my life. I know a lot of people find his music this way. Some people even wonder if he’s a demigod walking and screaming about cheeseburgers among us. I think he’s just an incredible human being with a feast of knowledge and experience to share. Whatever goes on in life, I will always have his large discography to be my soundtrack. I remember who I was before his music. I know who I am after discovering his music. I know it forever changed me for the better, and I hope more people discover him this way.

I could go on and on about Devin’s music for more articles, and I will! Let me know what your favorite albums of Devin’s are. Maybe I will run a poll just for fun.

Check out his work here: https://hevydevy.com

My Favorite Devin Song Live

My top 20 Songs by Devin Townsend (in no particular order)

  1. Deadhead
  2. Ubelia
  3. Jainism
  4. Singularity
  5. Kingdom
  6. Voices In The Fan
  7. True North
  8. Almost Again
  9. Love?
  10. Ih Ah
  11. Genesis
  12. Supercrush
  13. Om
  14. Stars
  15. Failure
  16. Stormbending
  17. Fallout
  18. The Greys
  19. Awake
  20. Funeral

REVIEW: Earthside Let The Truth Speak 2023

Earthside Let the Truth Speak 2023 Album Art

Releases November 17th via Music Theories / Mascot Label Group

Experimental Progressive Metal thinkers, Earthside defied every boundary you could imagine within music with breakout release “A Dream In Static” in 2015 and highly acclaimed singles like “All We Ever Knew and Loved”. It is a record that fused philosophy, metaphysics, Prog, Ambient, and instrumentals into a long sonic journey and was highly well received by the Metal community. Anything new and profound, whether it be emotionally or mentally significant seems to hit the Metal community’s ears just right. “Let the Truth Speak” is another genre breaking mind bending record that I know will be another critically acclaimed hit. Was this record worth nearly breaking up the original base lineup? Earthside answered that question upon completing this hugely ambitious undertaking and finding themselves as inspired as 16 year olds finding their path for the first time.

Anytime an album is rooted in deep thinking, self reflection, or claims to be a mirror to the existential self, I am eager to delve into it. This is an album I didn’t expect to like, as I really didn’t know many of the guest musicians and I expected something quite self-important and pretentious. I thought it might be overtly composed and too chaotic, and it proved me wrong immediately. This album is a lot to take in, yes. It is as complex as you may expect, but not overwhelming. It is supremely balanced with ambience and detailed with melodic guitar parts and passionate rhythms and weird time signatures. It gives you breaks and room to sit in the feelings their trying to convey, before it mesmerizes you with technicality. You can tell it took a ton of mind power to craft this album, because there are so many bits and pieces that almost don’t fit together, but it works. “Who We Lament (featuring Keturah)” reminds me of Devin Townsend’s album Ki that featured Chee Aimee Dorval in the best way possible. It starts atmospheric and then absolutely explodes and the vocals reflect this inner heaviness of self loathing with a bit of a surprise fry vocal. “Tyranny (featuring Pritam Adhikary of Aarlon)” is a huge standout for me and is one of the heavier songs on the album with pounding technical rhythms and chesty voicing reminding me of the band Klone. “Pattern of Rebirth (featuring AJ Channer of Fire From the Gods)” is a great single track that brings a familiar more Metalcore sound, with some nicely melodic spoken word and long sung choruses.

This album seems darker and moodier than previous releases. There’s melancholy and even anger in instrumentals “Watching the Earth Sink” and “Vespers (feat. Gennady Tkachenko-Papizh & VikKe)”. This emotional arc seems to be fitting and reminds me of the heaviness of Russian Circles at times. The drums stand out instrumentally to me and really carry this album to be something special, besides all the unique guest vocalists. Ben Shabrom is a brilliant drummer, but there are parts on this album that exceed even his usual flair and heavy hitting. The addition of Baard Kolstad on “All We Ever Knew and Loved” is a smart decision as he is incomparable and the hardest hitting Prog drummer I have ever seen. Kolstad was possibly an influence throughout the album, because many parts mirror his bombastic crazy rhythms and airy cymbals. Overall, the diverse instrumentation is great and interesting throughout, but I find myself complaining what everyone complains about in Modern Music: It needs more bass. For the most part, Ryan Griffin is inaudible and under utilized. Without bass, the tone of the music is completely lost and always lacks dynamic range. The only song he shines on is the Jazzy-Djent breakdown “The Lesser Evil (feat. Larry Braggs & Sam Gendel)”, and while it is a brilliant Seal and Skinny Puppy crossover, it’s sad that’s the only time we get chunky and crazy bass lines.

This album is a lot and is certainly not accessible to the average listener, but Prog nearly never aims for accessibility, but emotional diction in technicality. Earthside have created something very complex, once again rising to their self proclaimed crazy ambitions. I like this album and a lot of tracks on it. It flows extremely well without getting repetitive or stale. It’s unlike anything I have ever heard, but definitely has familiar aspects the more diverse listener can appreciate it. I don’t know if I’ll ever listen to the album in full again, however. It seems to be one to appreciate a couple times, but doesn’t have anything that sticks with me. It’s a great album technically and has profound meaning, but it lacks a recurring theme or something to keep me engaged.

Lyrically, I found it boring and without distinctive messages to pull from so it stays in your head. It just leaves you once you’re done listening. Maybe, that’s the point. Maybe it’s about enjoying the moments while you have them and then moving on from the past. Either way, it is worth a listen and maybe true Earthside fans will consider it a classic. I don’t necessarily love it, but I understand and appreciate what they were trying to do with “Let the Truth Speak”. I like it, but I expect way more content with the next release and an arcing theme that resonates longer than a play through.

Rating: 6/10

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