Review by Rexorcist for Evergrey - In Search of Truth (2001) Review by Rexorcist for Evergrey - In Search of Truth (2001)

Rexorcist Rexorcist / July 18, 2024 / 0

To help with the list and to further prepare myself for the eventual spin of their 2024 album, I'm tackling Evergrey's In Search of Truth next.  This will mark the 20th album I've heard and reviewed for the 2nd Decade prog metal list challenge.  I'm not that big on Evergrey, as I've only heard two of their albums before: Solitude Dominance Tragedy and The Atlantic.  I liked 'em, didn't love em, and just got off the back of listening to all four Disillusion albums.  I started this album hoping it would astound me, but I didn't expect it.

The Masterplan goes right into the prog power metal you'd expect from classic bands like Manticora.  But this has a bit more authentic heaviness to it.  It immediately sets a standard that I want to keep following, but then Rulers of the Mind takes a mystical chime approach with a haunting production sound that's as magical as some dark fantasy story.  I'd know.  I've written one.  The switch from power metal to goth metal is perfectly natural due to the band's love of solos and epic delivery, as they know when to pace these things.  Even when a song has a guitar solo a literal third into it like Rulers of the Mind does, it just adds to the mystique and intrigue that this album set up with The Masterplan.  On top of this, there is NO WAY that I can deny relating to these lyrics.  They perfectly describe what it's like to try and find out who you are in a world where everyone wants to control you, despite the fact that they brag about freedom.  Again, I write about this stuff.  Rulers of the Mind covers a wide range of prog metal vibes and atmospheres in six minutes much like Bohemian Rhapsody did.

So the five-star rating was starting to look likely two tracks in, but I was still careful.  Next is Watching the Skies, which uses dramatic violins in a similar fashion to Disillusions Back to Times of Splendor.  The real clincher of the song's intro, however, is that perfectly-produced breakdown.  It's much more simple and produces a clever drama backed up by the heaviness.  In a way, it takes 180's while staying true to the album's previously established presence.  It DOES get a little more complex by the end, but again, it doesn't lose its grip.  Next is a two-minute piano segue, State of Paralysis.  It's very nice and it fits, but I've heard so many piano segues at this point that it's a bit difficult to build a strong attachment to those.  The Encounter is a more fast-paced power metal track that builds itself on heavy activity.  It was at the point to where the album was merely rearranging elements of past songs for new purposes, so the originality was harmed despite the fact that the song was good.  This told me that the five-star might not happen.  All I had to do was compare like songs to like songs and see if enough of them amazed me.  Considering the half-and-half behavior, likely not.

Mark of the Triangle started slow, but it built itself on neoclassical piano and a perfect presence that relied on being drawn out, like I was being lead through a tunnel where some great treasure everyone wanted was waiting at the end.  This is another kind of song that switches things around every 20-30 seconds and remains consistent.  It showcases the band's love of instrumentation.  Even though none of them are the best metal musicians on Earth, their harmony is incredible.  Next thing you know, low-key pianos bring me to the freakin' House of Usher.  This is Dark Waters, a slightly creepier and slower song that cranks up the gothica.  With this one, the band's more focused on maintaining the song's presence as a song rather than the instrumentation.  The melodies here are some of the best on the whole album.  Different Worlds starts of with serenity, which was needed at this point considering how much of the album was focused on energy.  This didn't stop the pianos from caving into the love of glitter and melody.  The album ends with Misled, which starts off even more quietly... and punks you with heavy guitars stomping all over you at mid-pace. The slower, slightly classical approach is a good one to end such a dramatic album with, and the band is doing everything the can to make this an epic, operatic ending without overdoing it.

This is way beyond what I generally know Evergrey for.  This album might share many similar elements between most of the songs, but it's always trying to do some fancy things with the atmosphere and the instrumentation at the same time.  There's gothic glitter, high-energy power and some deep mystique.  This is enough to make me go back to Solitude Dominance Tragedy and re-evaluate it.  I was hoping it would make at least the bare minimum for five stars, but instead I'm gonna give it almost the bare maximum for four-and-a-half stars.

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