Dominia - Theophania
Band
Dominia
Style
Melodic death metal, Symphonic death metal, Gothic metal
Release date
9 September 2014
Owners
43
have it
20 want it
Tracklist
01. Everyone Else02. Death Only
03. The Shadow Of The Lost Prophet
04. Mother Plague
05. Unseen Artist Realm
06. Your Senseless Hope
07. The Final Trip
08. A Murderer
09. In Solitude
Line-up
Anton "Tony" Rosa - vocals, guitars
Dmitry Rishko - violin, keyboards, acoustic guitars
Denis "Daniel" Sukharev - guitars
Denis "Den Dev" Devichensky - guitars
Ilya Kononov - bass
Pavel "Jim" Lokhnin - drums
Guest musicians
Gaby Koss - vocals
Daniel Neagoe - vocals
Anton "Tony" Rosa - vocals, guitars
Dmitry Rishko - violin, keyboards, acoustic guitars
Denis "Daniel" Sukharev - guitars
Denis "Den Dev" Devichensky - guitars
Ilya Kononov - bass
Pavel "Jim" Lokhnin - drums
Guest musicians
Gaby Koss - vocals
Daniel Neagoe - vocals
Additional info
Composed by Anton Rosa and Casper, except "Mother Plague" written by Ivan "Viking" Gluschenko and "Death Only" written by Anton Rosa, Casper and Andrey "Undersun" Surygin.Lyrics by Anton Rosa (1, 6, 7, 9), Oleg Rozhev (2, 3, 8) and Denis "Daniel" Sukharev (4, 5).
Arrangements by Casper, Anton Rosa and Dominia.
Recorded by Denis Devichensky.
Produced by Anton Rosa and Casper.
Co-produced, mixed and mastered by Hiili Hiilesmaa at Yellow House Studio.
Artwork by Yury "Merlin" Voronov (M.A.P.).
Engravings by Anton Rosa.
Rating:
7.2
7.2
|
Rating:
7.2 |
Whilst melodic death gets a bad reputation for a lack of diversity or ambition, there are bands that manage to add a unique take on the sound. Evading the simplistic, energized catchiness of the Gothenburg bands or the melancholy of the Finnish melodeath style, Russian band Dominia's 2006 debut, Divine Revolution maintained melodeath's hookiness, but offered lengthy and well-structured songs, plenty of tonal variance, and, most notably of all, a dominant violin; often a recipe for cheese but excellently utilised in this instance. Rounded off with tasteful piano interludes, powerful vocals and a distinctive production job with both roughness and imperfections but also clarity, it was a fine effort that promised much from a potential new name on the melodeath scene. However, after a sophomore release in 2009, the band went quiet for a few years, and Theophania's release this year came and went without so much as a whisper in the metal scene, myself discovering its existence merely by chance. So what does the band have to offer this time round? Read more ›› |
Top lists
| musclassia | 2014 Cont. | #186 |
| buber | MY TOP 20 ALBUMS OF 2014 | #12 |
| The Melting Snow | My Top Albums Of 2014 | #5 |
| DoomSayer | 2014 Go Go! | #10 |
Comments
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Album Release day (September 09, 2014)
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You cannot say anything after first listening of this stuff, this album is not for listening once! Whatever, you do what you do