Review by Rexorcist for Green Carnation - Light of Day, Day of Darkness (2001)
The debut album of Green Carnation, Journey to the End of Night, was a conceptual beauty but a rhythmic near-disaster, recycling simple riffs and surreal concepts between overdrawn epics while maintaining a strong sense of atmosphere and mystique. So these guys had their work cut out for them on the second album, especially considering that it's entirely composes of a single hour-long song. This was either going to be a monolith or a botched work. It ended up being the former. We finally have that total harmony between the instruments that allows them to flow from one genre to the other seamlessly, matching the intrigue and mystique of the debut with much better production, just as clear as before but balanced in volume and impact between each player. Its grandiose behavior isn't quite so overtly melodic and epic in the way that a Mozart piece would be. It's a slow walk in the woods during a blood orange sunset, covering all your emotions on the journey, much like the cover appears as. Now rhythmically, it's easily an improvement over the first. Throughout, good rhythms evolve into each other, once again, seamlessly. However, I would still go as far as the say that melody is the worst aspect about the album, as it rarely ever reaches out to astound. Otherwise, the album does everything it can to maintain this Autumn evening atmos, even when the technical Pt. II takes over right into a dive of new age vocals, acoustic guitar and smoot sax. Because you need to know: this isn't a "metal" album... this is an ALBUM.