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We knew that when Celtic Frost disappeared and turned into a glam rock band, we knew there was a market there for this sort of over-the-top avant-garde band, someone who were doing something a bit weird and unusual. Paradise Lost were doing similar-ish kind of things, but I don't think they had this more romantic edge. We definitely worked for that gothic appeal, and I'm not really sure why. [84]
Their 1995 album The Angel and the Dark River "marked a shift in the band's strategy, for the first time dropping the death growl of Stainthorpe in favour of a 'clean' vocal delivery". [83] The rest of the group "followed suit, setting aside any death metal influences, carefully using violins and keyboards to enhance the group's brooding excursions" into "fauna-wilting gothic doom metal". [85] While the album was more experimental, the music was still dark and atmospheric. [84]
Also forming in 1990, the Liverpool-based band Anathema released a "highly acclaimed" EP, The Crestfallen , in 1992. [86] The "crushing emotional doom/death" of this EP remained on their 1993 debut full-length Serenades , [87] "the most traditional doom-styled album in their catalog". [88] Their juxtaposition of the fragile and ferocious "fostered a keen fan base". [86] Pentecost III was recorded in 1994 as another EP "that nonetheless ended up long enough to have qualified as a full-length". [88] The year 1995 saw the release of this EP as well as the departure of Darren White. Guitarist Vincent Cavanagh took over vocal duties for their subsequent album The Silent Enigma released later in the same year. The album "marked an important turning point in the band's sound" with critics drawing upon comparisons to Pink Floyd, "bringing new appreciation from a more mainstream band of listeners but also causing a withdrawal of support from hardened Doom fanatics". [86] Like My Dying Bride, this transition involved leaving behind their traditional death metal sound. [24] They continued experimenting with their 1996 album Eternity , [86] "stretching its songs into sorrowful, orchestrated epics" that "quickly proved to be their most original work to date". [88] While Anathema's music has "changed a lot", their "main features remained a heart-rending melancholy and intensity". [89]
In North America, Peter Steele had formed Type O Negative in 1990 out of the remnants of his former thrash metal band Carnivore. [90] With their debut album Slow, Deep and Hard in 1991, the New York based outfit pursued a "melodramatic goth rock style" that "encompasses long songs built on simple riffs, theatrical shouting vocals, churchy-sounding organ and vocal-harmony passages, and the odd mechanical noise". [91] The Origin of the Feces followed in 1992, but it was their third album Bloody Kisses in 1993 that became their breakthrough album. [92] AllMusic reviewer Steve Huey noted that the album had a "twistedly affectionate send-up of goth rock conventions" and lyrics that "gleefully wallow in goth clichés — sex, death, Christianity, vampires, more sex, and death". [93] The album has since sold nearly a million copies in the United States, [92] a surprise success that "obliged Goths to take notice" of the group. [94] The trademarks of Type O Negative's music include the use of "downtuned, fuzzy guitars" [95] and a "deep baritone croon" [17] from Peter Steele, an "intimidatingly large, sarcastically self-deprecating original, whose dry, dirty one-liners and morbid machismo challenge those who insist the archetypal Goth is a po-faced androgyne". [96] Type O Negative has since been recognised as a pioneer of the genre. In a review of their 2007 album Dead Again , critic Greg Prato of Allmusic declared that "before Type O Negative, there was really no such thing as goth metal". [97]
Also in North America, the brothers Jeff and Eric Clayton formed Saviour Machine in 1989. Described as a Gothic and symphonic metal band as well as art rock, [98] [99] [100] the group released its first self-titled album in 1993.
The year 1988 saw not only the formation of Paradise Lost but another early gothic metal pioneer, the Swedish band Tiamat. Their debut album Sumerian Cry arrived in 1990 and featured "slightly above average death metal". [101] Their third album Clouds was released in 1993 as the band's first turning-point, "starkly reducing speed and heaviness for melody and atmosphere". [102] The album made an impact on the European metal community for its atmospheric doom metal approach "enhanced with keyboards which are never out of place or over-used". [103] The next album Wildhoney was unveiled in 1994 as an "artistic and commercial breakthrough, fully realizing the sound hinted at on previous releases and eliciting effusive praise in metal circles for its brooding, Gothic atmospherics". [104] The album featured an interplay of contrasts between delicate acoustic guitar, gentle whispering vocals and angelic choruses on the one hand and massive riffs, industrial grind and death metal grunting on the other. [105] On subsequent releases, Tiamat moved further into gothic territory with Johan Edlund "dropping the metal growling in favor of an unearthly croon". [106] The result has seen critics comparing Edlund's vocals to the Sisters of Mercy's Andrew Eldritch, "alongside musical comparisons to Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds". [107] The band has been recognised for producing some of the most "overtly Gothic material" from Scandinavia. [107]
As far back as 1985, Celtic Frost had used female vocals for some songs on their To Mega Therion album. [108] Paradise Lost began making similar use of female vocals from their very first album Lost Paradise in 1990. [74] Inspired by the use of female vocals on Paradise Lost's second album Gothic, the Gathering released their debut album Always... in 1992 with growling vocalist Bart Smits supported by female singer Marike Groot. [109] The music on the album was "firmly rooted in the dark, midtempo style of gothic and doom metal". [110] Their second album Almost a Dance arrived in the following year with new vocalist Niels Duffhues, "a strange choice for the band". [111] Duffhues' "punk-ish" and "alt-rock" style of singing was widely seen as out of place with the music, [110] [111] a perception that was shared by the band themselves, [112] and the album was "largely written off as a result." [111] The Gathering decided to drop the use of male vocals altogether and instead brought in a lead female vocalist Anneke van Giersbergen for their third full length Mandylion , an album that "saw the band adventurously breaking away from the Gothic Doom fare of previous works". [113] The result was considered a "groundbreaking achievement" upon its release in 1995 [114] with critics lavishly describing it as "the perfect pinnacle of gothic metal". [115] The Gathering's "introspective atmosphere owed a creative debt to Dead Can Dance, and established them as a leading band in their native Holland [sic]". [107]
The term "beauty and the beast" refers to an aesthetic contrasting "angelic" female vocals with male growls or aggressive singing. [19] Paradise Lost and the Gathering had already made use of this technique on some songs from their earlier albums, but it was the Norwegian Theatre of Tragedy that first released an entire album devoted to this approach with their self-titled debut in 1995. A second album, Velvet Darkness They Fear , arrived in the following year. [116] Theatre of Tragedy's third album Aégis in 1998 saw the band "venturing into fresh musical territory". [116] The piano was replaced by electronic keyboards while Raymond Rohonyi opted to discard his death growls in favour of a "soft, spoken, sometimes whispering voice". [117] The music was more clean and soft, [117] "stripped of guitar harshness" but with a "near flawless execution" that "prompted many European critics to award Aégis perfect review scores". [116]
Other bands that contrast aggressive male vocals and clean female vocals continued to emerge in the late 1990s. Trail of Tears had formed in 1994 [118] while Tristania formed in 1995 [119] and the Sins of Thy Beloved were formed in 1996. [120] All three Norwegian groups released their debut albums in 1998. Tristania stood apart from the others with their use of three distinct vocal styles in the "operatic soprano Vibeke Stene, clean-singing counter-tenor Østen Bergøy, and harsh, black metal-style shrieker Morten Veland". [16] Their second album Beyond the Veil in 1999 made use of a ten members choir and featured violin passages from Pete Johansen of the Sins of Thy Beloved, [121] earning "rave reviews" across Europe. [16] By then, the band had risen to "the top of the goth metal heap" [122] with their "lush, symphonically enhanced" approach. [16] They were "dealt a potentially crippling blow" when singer, guitarist and principal composer Veland left the group to form Sirenia. [16] Tristania has continued to prosper with subsequent releases [32] and has since been "regarded as one of the world's premiere goth metal bands". [16]
For over a decade, this beauty and the beast aesthetic has flourished with many representatives across the European continent. [19] Cradle of Filth has also been known to make use of this approach through guest female vocalists such as Liv Kristine and Sarah Jezebel Deva. [123] A few critics have since lamented that the approach has been "done to death by countless bands". [124]
Tristania was not the only gothic metal band that brought a symphonic edge to their music. Influenced by the Peaceville trio of Paradise Lost, Anathema and My Dying Bride, the Dutch band Within Temptation was founded in 1996. [125] A debut album Enter was unveiled in the following year, followed shortly by an EP The Dance . [126] Both releases made use of the beauty and beast approach delivered by vocalists Sharon den Adel and Robert Westerholt. Their second full length Mother Earth was released in 2000 and dispensed entirely with the death metal vocals, instead "relying solely on den Adel's majestic vocal ability". [126] The album was a commercial success with their lead single "Ice Queen" topping the charts in Belgium and their native Netherlands. [127] Their third album The Silent Force arrived in 2004 as an "ambitious project featuring a full orchestra and 80-voice choir accompanying the band". [128] The result was another commercial success across Europe [128] and introduced "the world of heavy guitars and female vocals" to "a mainstream audience". [129]
Within Temptation's brand of gothic metal combines "the guitar-driven force of hard rock with the sweep and grandeur of symphonic music". [128] The critic Chad Bowar of About.com describes their style as "the optimum balance" between "the melody and hooks of mainstream rock, the depth and complexity of classical music and the dark edge of gothic metal". [130] The commercial success of Within Temptation has since resulted in the emergence of a large number of other female-fronted gothic metal bands, particularly in the Netherlands. [131]
Another Dutch band in the symphonic gothic metal strain is After Forever. Their debut album Prison of Desire in 2000 was "a courageous, albeit flawed first study into an admittedly daunting undertaking: to wed heavy metal with progressive rock arrangements and classical music orchestration — then top it all off with equal parts gruesome cookie-monster vocals and a fully qualified opera singer". [132] A second album Decipher followed in 2001 with music that was described by guitarist Sander Gommans as being in the style of Within Temptation. [133] Founding member, guitarist and vocalist Mark Jansen departed After Forever only a few months after the release of this album. [134] Jansen would go on to form Epica, another band that performs a blend of gothic and symphonic metal. A debut album The Phantom Agony emerged in 2003 with music that combines Jansen's death grunts with the "angelic tones of a classically trained mezzo-soprano named Simone Simons, over a lush foundation of symphonic power metal". [135] The music of Epica has been described as combination of "a dark, haunting gothic atmosphere with bombastic and symphonic music". [136] Like Within Temptation and After Forever, [137] Epica has been known to make use of an orchestra. [138] Their 2007 album The Divine Conspiracy was a chart success in their home country. [139]
This blend of symphonic and gothic metal has also been arrived at from the opposite direction. The band Nightwish from Finland began as a symphonic power metal act [140] before introducing gothic elements on their 2004 album Once , [141] particularly on the single "Wish I Had an Angel". [142] They continued to mix their style of "bombastic, symphonic and cinematic" metal with a gothic atmosphere on their next albums Dark Passion Play in 2007 and Imaginaerum in 2011. [143] In the book Rough Guide to Heavy Metal, Essi Berelian describes Nightwish as "gothic film score metal". [144] The Swedish group Therion also introduced gothic elements to their brand of symphonic metal on their 2007 album Gothic Kabbalah . [145] [146]
With the release of their sixth album One Second in 1997, Paradise Lost brought a more commercial and pop-oriented direction to the genre they had helped created but the success of Draconian Times has not been overcome. [147] Praised by Eduardo Rivadavia of Allmusic as a "radical but impressive departure", the album drew comparisons to Depeche Mode with nothing remaining "of their early death/doom metal origins". [148] Subsequent albums "progressively experimented with electronics and pop elements, with the guitars gradually getting pushed further into the background". [80] The result was "an accessible sound and a strong emphasis on catchy choruses". [149] Despite attaining "a huge reputation in Europe, where all of their albums have sold strongly", [76] the group's status as "the progenitors of gothic metal" has been "constantly overlooked, both in their homeland and the US, possibly because of their determination to never make the same record twice". [71]
In contrast, Cradle of Filth has become "one of the very biggest names" in their black metal genre with impressive albums sales [123] and mainstream appearances on MTV, [150] a level of success that has attracted accusations of "selling out" by the "black metal faithful". [15]
Moonspell too has "lost a lot of fans who couldn't keep up with the changes" to their music. [151] In the opinion of vocalist Fernando Ribeiro, fans of the early 1990s were "less cynical and more open-minded in their hearts and minds" than they are in 2007. [152] Nonetheless, the band has continued to experience success with their 2006 album Memorial debuting at number 1 on their native Portuguese charts. [153] They were rewarded with the "Best Portuguese Act" award at the 2006 MTV European Music Awards, [154] a feat matched by Within Temptation in the following year with the "Best Dutch & Belgian Act" award. [155] Within Temptation further received recognition as their country's best selling artist at the 2007 World Music Awards. [156]
The Italian band Lacuna Coil has also become a "premiere act" of the gothic metal genre. [157] The group employs both a female vocalist Cristina Scabbia and a male vocalist Andrea Ferro, although the group uses less of a 'beauty and the beast' style, with Ferro primarily using clean vocals. Formed in Milan in 1994, they released a demo tape in 1996 strongly influenced by Paradise Lost and Type O Negative. [158] The band "turned a lot of heads in Italy's ambient/goth scene" with their self-titled EP in 1998. [159] Their debut album In a Reverie was released in 1999 with a style that bore "some similarities to contemporaries like the Gathering and Moonspell". [160] Lacuna Coil's music was also "more accessible than many of their peers". [161] A second album, Unleashed Memories , arrived in 2001, but it was their third full-length, Comalies , that became their breakthrough album, "highly praised by the metal world after its release in October 2002". [159] On the strength of Comalies, Lacuna Coil became the most successful artist in the history of their label Century Media Records as well as the highest selling rock act in their home country Italy. [157] The band has also achieved the distinction of being the first and, as of late 2007, the only European gothic metal band to successfully break into the United States market with radio airplay [19] and impressive album sales. [157] Their highly anticipated [162] fourth album Karmacode was even more successful, debuting at number 28 on the Billboard charts, and also debuting on many European music charts. [157] The Comalies and Karmacode albums "reportedly sold nearly 1 million units combined worldwide, a good chunk of that in the States". [19] The band has also performed on the main stage of the American heavy metal festival Ozzfest. [163] Their next two albums, Shallow Life and Dark Adrenaline , debuted at number 16 [164] and number 15, [165] respectively, on the Billboard charts.
In 2003, the rock group Evanescence from Arkansas, United States also found commercial success with the release of their debut album Fallen , [166] which has been described as a blend of gothic and alternative metal [167] and drawing comparisons to other alternative metal acts like P.O.D. [168] and Linkin Park. [169] In October 2011, Evanescence's self-titled album was released and represented a mix of gothic nu metal and hard rock. [170] Further comparisons have since been drawn between Evanescence and gothic metal groups like Within Temptation and Lacuna Coil. [171] Critic Adrien Begrand of PopMatters wryly notes that while Lacuna Coil "had been tirelessly building a fanbase in Europe since the late 1990s with their listener-friendly brand of goth metal", they had been overshadowed by "a bunch of corn-fed kids from Arkansas with a big publicity machine behind them [taking] the very sound the Italian sextet had helped pioneer, and present it to the American suburban goth kids in a much more pop-oriented, dumbed down variation". [172] Cammila Albertson of Allmusic similarly locates Evanescence as one step further from gothic metal, offering the description of the band as "a pop version of an already diluted brand of metal". [171] While Fernando Ribeiro of Moonspell contends that Evanescence is not a metal band, [173] publications such as the New York Times , Rough Guides , Rolling Stone and Blender have nonetheless identified Evanescence as a gothic metal act. [174] [175] [176] [177] Adrian Jackson, former bassist My Dying Bride feels the American group is doing something similar to My Dying Bride's music, only in a more accessible direction. [178] Gregor Mackintosh of Paradise Lost notes a generation gap between his group and Evanescence, suggesting that Paradise Lost has only influenced Evanescence indirectly through other acts like Lacuna Coil. [179] The success of Evanescence has been recognised for opening "new grounds" for gothic metal bands to "explore and conquer". [180]
Another act that has attracted both commercial success and controversy is the band HIM. The group has "not only dominated the charts in their native Finland but also across Europe and in particular Germany". [182] Their debut album arrived in 1997 as Greatest Lovesongs Vol. 666 with music that "combines metal with '80s rock and some goth influences". [183] HIM began moving towards a more "polished pop" direction on their next album Razorblade Romance in 2000. [184] The band describes their "Sabbath-meets-Depeche Mode sound" as love metal, [185] the title of their fourth album in 2003. Their subsequent release two years later Dark Light was their breakthrough album in the United States with a debut at number 18 on the Billboard charts, [186] a feat exceeded when their next album Venus Doom in 2007 made a debut at number 12. [184] [187] Critic Lance Teegarden of PopMatters notes that HIM is "not the sort of act that conjures up a lukewarm response [as] people either like them or discredit them outright". [188]
In the 21st century, gothic metal has enjoyed a strong mainstream presence in Finland with many representatives enjoying commercial success. In addition to the aforementioned HIM, [189] the bands Charon, [190] Entwine, [191] For My Pain..., [192] Lullacry, [193] Poisonblack, [194] Sentenced, [195] The 69 Eyes [196] and To/Die/For [197] have all found their singles or albums hitting the top ten of the Finnish charts. Of these bands, Sentenced notably formed as far back as 1989 [198] with their early albums in the melodic and blackened death metal vein. For My Pain... was formed as a supergroup with members from other prominent bands in Finland including Nightwish, Embraze, Eternal Tears of Sorrow and Reflexion. [199]