Review by Rexorcist for Nevermore - Dead Heart in a Dead World (2000)
This is the point of Nevermore's career where they were mostly focused on the art of their new identity. Now that they had cemented their sound with the previous album, Dreaming Neon Black, it was time to expand on that. Dead Heart in a Dead World is exactly that. This might be a continuation of the darker tone they took with their third album, but this is also the album where Nevermore go back on what made them so good in their early days. They started out as a band with various types of songs, likely trying to discover who they were. They found that with the less innovative DNB, and it was time to combine that with the variety of their previous two albums. As such, this album is much less thrash oriented than the last three. The album basically goes prog, prog thrash, groove, heavy, prog, power ballad, thrash, proggy groove-thrash (this is the Sound of Silence cover), ballad, heavy semi-ballad, prog-speed.
There's a balance between identity and variety here. They've never been a favorite of mine, but I always admired their willingness to get creative. I mean, they covered Sound of Silence in an incredible way that I wouldn't have thought of in a million years, one that works perfectly in the groove and thrash departments, with some of that shifting technical behavior of Metallica's fourth album, And Justice for All. In fact, I gotta say that the cover is now my favorite Nevermore song out of respect for how well they handled one of the best songs by one of music's greatest geniuses.
As for the delivery, once again we have an album full of impressive melodies, powerful tones and moods, clever shifts and a consistent persona. It's impossible to skip a song for me this time. In all respects, this is the strongest of their albums up to that point. Happy to have finally checked this album out.