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Chapters From a Vale Forlorn
Falconer
Chapters From a Vale Forlorn
Genres: Pop, Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1


     
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All Artists: Falconer
Title: Chapters From a Vale Forlorn
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Metal Blade
Release Date: 3/12/2002
Genres: Pop, Rock, Metal
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 039841439724

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CD Reviews

Fall to Your Knees and Yield for the Sky
Thomas K. Emanuel | Deadwood, SD USA | 09/11/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Scandinavian origins, a medieval name, and songs born of too many Dungeons & Dragons sessions could easily - and often do - add up to one mediocre metal band. But Swedish power metal outfit Falconer have enough tricks up their sleeve to set them apart.



Firstly, there's bandleader/guitarist Stefan Weinerhall. Weinerhall is blessed with a tremendous ear for melody and a passion for traditional European, and especially Celtic, folk music, imbuing Falconer's music with an appropriately epic medieval quality and giving them a tuneful edge over their contemporaries. But perhaps just as important to the delivery of the music itself is vocalist Mathias Blad. Going in for neither the incomprehensible grunting nor the shrill yowling of many heavy metal vocalists, Blad opts instead for a powerful, dramatic baritone that wouldn't sound out of place in a Broadway production, a circumstance born of his career as a professional actor in Swedish musical theatre.



The title of the band's second album, CHAPTERS FROM A VALE FORLORN, offers an apt description of the music within. With titles like "Decadence of Dignity" and "Enter the Glade", each song reads like a chapter in some grand medieval saga. Some of the highlights include the recorder-tinged "Lament of a Minstrel", the Tolkienesquely verbose "Stand in Veneration", and "The Clarion Call", a triumphant epic that makes you want to take up arms and answer the titular summons, all graced with gorgeous melodies and soaring leads. And emotions run highest on the heavenly (literally) ballad "Portals of Light", which portrays the plight of a lover whose loved one has passed on. As elsewhere on this record, the lyrics are overwrought and more than a little ham-fisted, but the majestic music and passionate vocals speak louder.



To call CHAPTERS FROM A VALE FORLORN silly or overdramatic is rather to miss the point. For while the album and Falconer themselves are all of these things, they do not simply indulge the conventions and stereotypes of power metal; they wholeheartedly embrace them and, in doing so, transcend them. And they make some great noise while they're at it."
Best Vocalist in Power Metal
Erin | Wisconsin | 04/02/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I am new to the genre of power metal. I'm more of a Cannibal Corpse kind of gal. However, when I heard that voice, I couldn't get enough of it. This guy can really sing! A lot of bands try too hard to sound like opera stars, but Falconer has serious vocal talent. I don't have the know-how to break down the music and really give you a detailed review of this album. But I can tell you that the album has standard renaissance rhythms that I found very enjoyable and even infectious. I just wanted to inform everybody out there that no matter what your metal taste, if you have an ear for quality vocals, you need to listen to this album."
A Falconer came to save us all, again
Steven R. Springsteel, Jr. | Parma Hts., OH United States | 06/01/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This band was everything I could look for in a metal band. Great guitar skills, excellent drummer, and a magnificent singer. I completely lost it when I heard their debut album from a friend. I HAD to get that album! As time went on, eagerly waiting for the sophmore attempt, I saw the news it was coming out. I immediately ordered it, and because I'm so obsessed with their music, I put in 10 bucks extra just so I can get one-day shipping!After hearing this album for the past few months, I can confidentally say it was very well worth it. I will admit, however, that it suprised me compared to their debut. The best comparison I can give is it's what Metallica's "Ride the Lightning" was to "Kill 'em All". Debut being very edgy and in your face. The 2nd being very intense, but with a little more of a progressive sound.Don't let this fool you in disappointment. The first song is what I expected of a Falconer intro. One song that really caught me offguard was "Portals of Light". The intro is just piano and soon Mathias' vocals come in with complete sorrow. IT tells the story of losing the love of one's life. What makes it better is that it's dramatically emotional, not Staind or the like whiny emotional. True musician passion. It gave me goosebumps when I first heard it.If you don't feel too comfortable about Falconer's somewhat change, but desire their sound, I'm sure you'll learn to love it. It's an awesome transition, proving their musicianship and how they can easily rule over any American metal band today."