Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Cathedral. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Cathedral. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 16 de septiembre de 2025

Cathedral "The Ethereal Mirror (1996 Reissue, USA, Earache Records, mosh77CD)"

The Ethereal Mirror is the second studio album by British doom metal band Cathedral. It was first released on 24 May 1993 through Earache Records, and in the United States on 6 July 1993 through Columbia Records. Earache re-issued the album in 2009 with the Statik Majik EP as bonus tracks and the DVD Ethereal Reflections as DualDisc.

The album's front cover artwork unfolds and expands into something "much larger and weirder," according to Kenny Schticky of MetalSucks.

The Ethereal Mirror received critical acclaim. Peter Atkinson of the Record-Journal stated that "By tempering the oppressive gloom of its debut for a more spirited thunder, Britain's Cathedral has crafted the heaviest and most brutally satisfying album of the year." Kerrang!'s Xavier Russell considered it a stronger album than Forest of Equilibrium, praising Lee Dorrian's discernable vocals and the interplay between guitarists Adam Lehan and Garry Jennings. In their retrospective review, Metal.de called the album "a work of transition that seems almost formless in a positive sense, which draws its charm from the close proximity of styles and moods: dark doom here, right next to loosely rocking brain drills". Martin Popoff, writing in The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal Volume 3: The Nineties (2007), called the album "Fantastically powerful throughout" and singled out "Ride" as the best track in Cathedral's discography up to that point.

In 2000, Terrorizer listed the album as one of the "100 Most Important Albums of the Nineties". In 2005, Kerrang! ranked the album at number 83 on their list of the "100 Best British Rock Albums Ever", stating that it "confirmed [Cathedral's] status as the real Brit metal warlords." In 2014, Decibel ranked the album at number 56 on their list of the "Top 100 Doom Metal Albums of All Time". On Loudwire's 2017 list of the "Top 25 Doom Metal Albums of All Time", it was ranked ninth.

In 2022, Kenny Schticky of MetalSucks included the album in his list of "10 CD Booklets That Should Be Remembered as Fine Art."

Tracklist:
  1. Violet Vortex (Intro) 01:54  
  2. Ride 04:47   
  3. Enter the Worms 06:07   
  4. Midnight Mountain 04:55   
  5. Fountain of Innocence 07:12   
  6. Grim Luxuria 04:47   
  7. Jaded Entity 07:53
  8. Ashes You Leave 06:21   
  9. Phantasmagoria 08:42  
  10. Imprisoned in Flesh 01:44  
  11. Sky Lifter 03:27  
  12. A Funeral Request (new version 1993) 07:35  
Time:  01:05:24

Purple disk.

Tracks 7 and 9 were originally recorded in late 1989 or early '90 by guitarist Gaz Jennings's project Morbid Doom, and were part of a demo that contained approximately 9 songs. In those versions, "Sorrows End" was the original title of "Jaded Entity" (track 7), and "Suffocation of Mankind" was the original title of "Phantasmagoria" (track 9).

Tracks 11, 12 previously released on the Grim Luxuria single.

A widely shared release date of February 1st, 1993 was corrected by the band in 2023 after they received a lot of congratulatory messages on social media from people believing the 30th anniversary of the album had been reached. The band posted a correction, stating that they were in fact still in studio in February 1993 and the album was not released until May 24th, ahead of an European tour with Penance and Sleep.

Official music video:
- Ride

Credits:
Track 1 by Jennings
Tracks 2, 4, 5 & 10 by Dorrian & Jennings
Tracks 3 & 7 by Dorrian, Lehan & Bianco
Track 6 by Dorrian & Lehan
Track 8 by Dorrian, Lehan & Jennings
Track 9 by Dorrian, Lehan, Jennings & Bianco

Recording information:
Recorded at Manor Studios, Shipton-on-Cherwell, Oxfordshire, England, UK.
David Bianco – recording, production, mixing
Shaun DeFo – engineering
Dave Patchett – cover painting
Summer Lacy – inside layout












Cathedral "The Ethereal Mirror (2009 Reissue, Remastered, CD+Dual Disc, UK Earache Records, MOSH077CD)"

The Ethereal Mirror is the second studio album by British doom metal band Cathedral. It was first released on 24 May 1993 through Earache Records, and in the United States on 6 July 1993 through Columbia Records. Earache re-issued the album in 2009 with the Statik Majik EP as bonus tracks and the DVD Ethereal Reflections as DualDisc.

The album's front cover artwork unfolds and expands into something "much larger and weirder," according to Kenny Schticky of MetalSucks.

The Ethereal Mirror received critical acclaim. Peter Atkinson of the Record-Journal stated that "By tempering the oppressive gloom of its debut for a more spirited thunder, Britain's Cathedral has crafted the heaviest and most brutally satisfying album of the year." Kerrang!'s Xavier Russell considered it a stronger album than Forest of Equilibrium, praising Lee Dorrian's discernable vocals and the interplay between guitarists Adam Lehan and Garry Jennings. In their retrospective review, Metal.de called the album "a work of transition that seems almost formless in a positive sense, which draws its charm from the close proximity of styles and moods: dark doom here, right next to loosely rocking brain drills". Martin Popoff, writing in The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal Volume 3: The Nineties (2007), called the album "Fantastically powerful throughout" and singled out "Ride" as the best track in Cathedral's discography up to that point.

In 2000, Terrorizer listed the album as one of the "100 Most Important Albums of the Nineties". In 2005, Kerrang! ranked the album at number 83 on their list of the "100 Best British Rock Albums Ever", stating that it "confirmed [Cathedral's] status as the real Brit metal warlords." In 2014, Decibel ranked the album at number 56 on their list of the "Top 100 Doom Metal Albums of All Time". On Loudwire's 2017 list of the "Top 25 Doom Metal Albums of All Time", it was ranked ninth.

In 2022, Kenny Schticky of MetalSucks included the album in his list of "10 CD Booklets That Should Be Remembered as Fine Art."

Tracklist:

Component 1 (Other) - CD side
  1. Violet Vortex (Intro) 01:54   
  2. Ride 04:47
  3. Enter the Worms 06:07   
  4. Midnight Mountain 04:55   
  5. Fountain of Innocence 07:12  
  6. Grim Luxuria 04:47   
  7. Jaded Entity 07:53  
  8. Ashes You Leave 06:21   
  9. Phantasmagoria 08:42  
  10. Imprisoned in Flesh 01:44   
Time:  54:22  

Component 2 (Other) - DVD side
  1. Musical Progression  
  2. A Major Deal  
  3. Manor Studio  
  4. The Artwork  
  5. Tension Rising  
  6. Fashion Sense  
  7. Disco Doom  
  8. Exit Adam  
  9. Where Are You Now?  
  10. Reflections  
Disc
  1. Hypnos 164 05:43
  2. Cosmic Funeral 07:00   
  3. The Voyage of the Homeless Sapien 22:44  
Time:  35:27  

CD side features the cover artwork.
DVD side features the Statik Majik EP artwork with lyrics at the bottom.

The DVD side of the Dualdisc contains a 40 min brand new documentary with key original band members, filmed in Coventry in 2009. Also featuring interviews with infamous cover artist Dave Patchett, an in depth exploration of the formation of Cathedral, the recording of The Ethereal Mirror and the growth of the band from humble beginnings to a major label deal.

Tracks 7 and 9 were originally recorded in late 1989 or early '90 by guitarist Gaz Jennings's project Morbid Doom, and were part of a demo that contained approximately 9 songs. In those versions, "Sorrows End" was the original title of "Jaded Entity" (track 7), and "Suffocation of Mankind" was the original title of "Phantasmagoria" (track 9).

A widely shared release date of February 1st, 1993 was corrected by the band in 2023 after they received a lot of congratulatory messages on social media from people believing the 30th anniversary of the album had been reached. The band posted a correction, stating that they were in fact still in studio in February 1993 and the album was not released until May 24th, ahead of an European tour with Penance and Sleep.

Official music video:
- Ride

Credits:
Track 1 by Jennings
Tracks 2, 4, 5 & 10 by Dorrian & Jennings
Tracks 3 & 7 by Dorrian, Lehan & Bianco
Track 6 by Dorrian & Lehan
Track 8 by Dorrian, Lehan & Jennings
Track 9 by Dorrian, Lehan, Jennings & Bianco

Recording information:
Recorded at Manor Studios, Oxford.
Remastered at Optimum Mastering, March 2009.



















Cathedral "Hopkins (The Witchfinder General) (EP, USA, Earache Records, MOSH152CD)"

Hopkins (The Witchfinder General) is an EP by the British Doom Metal band Cathedral. It was released in 1996 on Earache Records. 

Tracklist:
  1. Spoken Intro / Hopkins (The Witchfinder General) 05:37
  2. Fire (The Crazy World of Arthur Brown cover) 03:30
  3. Copper Sunset 03:05
  4. Purple Wonderland 04:45   
  5. The Devils Summit 09:25   
Time:  26:22  

A music video was made for the title track. It is included on some DVD versions of the 1968 Vincent Price film "Witchfinder General".

Copper Sunset is actually an arranged version by Garry Jennings of Sandrose's song "To Take Him Away".

There may also exist a promotional edition (MOSH 152 CD Pro) which features Cathedral's two contributions to the 'Masters of Misery - Black Sabbath: The Earache Tribute' compilation:
6. Shock Wave
7. Solitude

Recording information:
Recorded at Rhythm Studios (Bidford upon Avon).
Produced by Cathedral.









Cathedral "Statik Majik (EP, Japan, Toy's Factory, TFCK-88682)"

Statik Majik is an EP by British doom metal band Cathedral, released in March 1994 through Earache. "Midnight Mountain" originally appeared on the band's second full-length album, The Ethereal Mirror. Tracks 2, 3 and 4 were also released the same year on the Cosmic Requiem EP. In 2009, Statik Majik was re-released together with 1992's Soul Sacrifice EP.

Tracklist:
  1. "Midnight Mountain" 4:55
  2. "Hypnos 164" 5:43
  3. "Cosmic Funeral" 7:00
  4. "The Voyage of the Homeless Sapien" 22:40
  5. "Autumn Twilight" Mark Griffiths Jennings, Griffiths 5:49
  6. "Frozen Rapture" Dorrian Adam Lehan 6:07
  7. "Golden Blood (Flooding)" Dorrian Jennings 8:11
  8. "Grim Luxuria (Live in Japan)" Lehan, Dorrian Lehan, Dorrian 4:50
  9. "Sweet Leaf (Live in Japan)" (Black Sabbath cover) Geezer Butler Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Butler, Bill Ward 5:41
Time:  01:11:09

Comes with an obi.

Tracks 5-7 are taken from the 1992 Soul Sacrifice EP.

Track 4 consists of the following movements:
I. Velvet Forest Of Enchantment.
II. Doomed Man.
III. Along The Tranquil Riverbanks.
IV. Drifting Through Neptunes Veins.
V. Rocket Launch Wizard.
VI. The Drifters Theme
VII. Lands End.
VIII. Stone Man Finale;
a) Moonlight & Manor Reprise - "Chant Of The Nocturndoz".
b) Lavatory Logic.

Recording information:
Track 1: Recorded and mixed at Manor Studios, Oxford, England.
Tracks 2-4: recorded at Rhythm Studios, August 16-23, 1993, mixed at Rhythm Studios, January 10-14, 1994.
Tracks 5-7: recorded at Rhythm Studios, January 14-17, 1992.
Tracks 8-9: recorded live at Club Citta (Tokyo, Japan), August 3, 1993.













jueves, 14 de noviembre de 2024

Various Artists "Nativity in Black: A Tribute to Black Sabbath (Japan, Sony Records, SRCS 7488)"

Nativity in Black: A Tribute to Black Sabbath is a series of two Black Sabbath tribute albums, released in 1994 and 2000 respectively. The albums feature various heavy metal groups performing cover versions of Black Sabbath songs in tribute to the band.

All of the tracks featured on the Nativity in Black albums cover material strictly from the band's 1970s heyday with vocalist Ozzy Osbourne. The title is derived from a widespread yet incorrect assumption surrounding the title of the Black Sabbath song "N.I.B.".

The band Bullring Brummies featured Black Sabbath founding members Geezer Butler and Bill Ward, along with vocalist Rob Halford, Obsessed/Saint Vitus guitarist Scott "Wino" Weinrich, and Fight guitarist Brian Tilse. Their cover of "The Wizard" on the first album is their only official recording, with the musicians coming together specifically for this recording.

The live recording of "War Pigs" by Faith No More was previously included on the band's live album, Live at the Brixton Academy.

1000 Homo DJs' version of "Supernaut" was originally released as a 12" single in 1990.

Pantera was originally supposed to appear on the first album with their recording of Planet Caravan but was left off. Instead, that song appeared on their 1994 release Far Beyond Driven

Biohazard was featured in a music video for the song After Forever which was directed by Parris Mayhew of Cro-Mags and produced by Drew Stone

The album was certified Gold by the RIAA on 4 December 2000. Bob Chiappardi of Concrete Marketing was executive producer for the album. Megadeth's cover of "Paranoid" received a Grammy nomination in 1995 for 'Best Metal Performance'.

All tracks are written by Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward

Nativity in Black track listing
  1. "After Forever" (originally released on Master of Reality) Biohazard 5:46
  2. "Children of the Grave" (originally released on Master of Reality) White Zombie 5:50
  3. "Paranoid" (originally released on Paranoid) Megadeth 2:32
  4. "Supernaut" (originally released on Black Sabbath, Vol. 4) 1000 Homo DJs with Al Jourgensen 6:39
  5. "Iron Man" (originally released on Paranoid) Ozzy Osbourne with Therapy? 5:26
  6. "Lord of This World" (originally released on Master of Reality) Corrosion of Conformity 6:25
  7. "Symptom of the Universe" (originally released on Sabotage) Sepultura 4:15
  8. "The Wizard" (originally released on Black Sabbath) Bullring Brummies with Geezer Butler and Rob Halford 5:01
  9. "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" (originally released on Sabbath Bloody Sabbath) Bruce Dickinson with Godspeed 5:36
  10. "N.I.B." (originally released on Black Sabbath) Ugly Kid Joe 5:28
  11. "War Pigs (Live)" (originally released on Paranoid) Faith No More 7:02
  12. "Black Sabbath" (originally released on Black Sabbath) Type O Negative 7:45
Total length: 67:42

Japanese version bonus tracks
  1. "St.Vitus Dance" (originally released on Black Sabbath, Vol. 4) Cathedral 4:52
  2. "Wheels of Confusion" (originally released on Black Sabbath, Vol. 4) Cathedral 5:31
Subsequent standard clear jewel case version.
Comes with revised obi strip(without red bubble on top indicating "special case") and has tray liner/backing sheet.
Has 2 Japan only bonus tracks (13 & 14).