Review by Rexorcist for Draconian - Where Lovers Mourn (2003)
This is a pretty special day for me. I have officially marked my 13,000th music album heard. And for that position I chose Kanye's live album, Late Orchestration. I'm really happy with the outcome of recent musical ventures, but there's more to it. Apparently, as this is smackdab in the middle of my goth metal phase, today just so happens to be the 20th anniversary of the debut album by one of the goth metal bands I was considering exploring: Draconian. Since I was struggling with which band to check out next, the revelation made my decision. Thanks a bunch to Shadowdoom9 for discovering this!
So Draconian are pretty much what you want from a gothic doom metal act: this slow droning and gothic sound have a strong potency, and this sound of theirs is so well done and good that it pretty much has a lot of staying power. Even though this means the album's pretty samey, the sound really doesn't get tiring thanks to perfect production and a good balance between timing and melody, whether slow or fast. These are all aspects that musicians can easily screw up, and so far Draconian don't seem to be doing that. The fact that they were able to accomplish that much at least on the debut seems to be what makes this album a well-received classic among fans of the niche appeal. However, as far as creating an album goes, I feel that I should only give the album extra points for its monotony while still acknowledging that they could've done more if they got the general idea right on their first try. They could've even only taken one extra step forward in the creative department and improved this album quickly. Despite this, I loved the inclusion of that very short folk song near the end. It really brought some Celtic vibes to the album, which were out of place stylistically but perfectly suitable emotionally.
So while it's perfectly clear that Draconian had a strong grip on their style and identity with this album, a couple other things are very obvious: they were a less creative My Dying Bride with all of Tristania's vocal tricks, and featuring less potency on both sides of this delivery. I mean, I like JUST finished the Tristania catalog a couple days ago, and I love The Dreadful Hours so the comparisons are pretty easy. So unfortunately, I'd have to say that despite the clear strengths and staying power, this is a generic debut by technicality. Still, it fit the vibe I was looking for, gives a fan what a fan wants, is good for fans of My Dying Bride, Type O Negative and Tristania and personally really helped me with the vibe of a novel I'm working on. So I'll recommend this easy but well-produced album if not just to check out another gothic doom act.