Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Novembre - Dreams d'azur (2002) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Novembre - Dreams d'azur (2002)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / December 02, 2024 / 0

The talented Novembre know how to please their longtime listeners. Their 1994 debut Wish I Could Dream It Again suffered from poor production and execution and ended up out of print. One year after their 4th album Novembrine Waltz, the band decided to re-record their debut with a new name, Dreams d'Azur. Now this is a much better take on that album! One that has kept those earlier listeners in joy until the band's next album Materia 4 years later...

So what are the differences between this album and the original debut, apart from the more obvious facts? There's more unique atmosphere to let the different parts really shine, whether it's the extreme heaviness in the drums, guitars, and growls, or the smooth melody from the acoustics, keyboards, and cleans that are greatly improved compared to the debut. The structures greatly set up the bridge between extreme and melancholic. There's great flow with some slight choppiness. Beautiful dreamy lyrics cover all the songs, with one of them written in Italian.

Still reigning as one of my favorites is "The Dream of the Old Boats". Ambient keys and guitars roll into drums and vocals that become more climatic in every minute. Perfect! "Novembre" can be considered the band's theme song, not just in the name but also when it shows you all the band really has. The soft long part heads straight into extreme growling and drumming speed. "Nottetempo" sounds close to mid-90s The Gathering instrumentally. Then we have some black metal rage in "Let Me Hate".

Then we have the filthy yet gothic "Sirens in Filth" that gradually grows just like in some of the earlier tracks. I love "Swim Seagull in the Sky" in both the debut and this re-recording, though the version in the latter has more power. The two-minute ending still rules with all of its f***ing glory. "The Music" continues to shine after being revamped. Calm keyboards make way for upbeat riffing melodies and better-flowing clean singing. Soon the drums and guitars jackhammer through alongside growls in heavier parts. "Marea" is a 3-part 12-minute epic that actually combines two tracks originally in the debut. Calm acoustics aside, it's a vast improvement and another awesome track here!

"Old Lighthouse Tale" is fast and extreme while having slight doom. "The White Eyed" is another solid track to love. "Neanderthal Sands" has some slow sinister melody. And some people thought they could only get sinister vibes from fast deathly thrash bands like Demolition Hammer. "Christal" ends the album with soft gothic ambience, like you have just woken up from a dream.

Dreams d'Azur truly is a stronger revamp of Wish I Could Dream It Again, and you can practically all the different styles in the late 90s eras of Opeth and Katatonia. Any fan of those bands should add this album to their collection. The progressive/gothic/black metal dream is real....

Favorites: "The Dream of the Old Boats", "Novembre", "Swim Seagull in the Sky", "The Music", "Marea", "The White Eyed"

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