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Timo Tolkki's Avalon - The Land Of New Hope review



Reviewer:
7.0

108 users:
7.76
Band: Timo Tolkki's Avalon
Album: The Land Of New Hope
Style: Power metal, Symphonic metal
Release date: May 17, 2013
A review by: R Lewis


01. Avalanche Anthem
02. A World Without Us
03. Enshrined In My Memory
04. In The Name Of The Rose
05. We Will Find A Way
06. Shine
07. The Magic Of The Night
08. To The Edge Of The Earth
09. I'll Sing You Home
10. The Land Of New Hope

Since his departure from Stratovarius back in 2008, Timo Tolkki became a restless soul, and tried to vent the venom against his ex-fellows working frantically, but his 2008-2011 projects, Revolution Renaissance and Symfonia, mainly attracted detractors: the once brilliant composer seemed lost, his arrows blunt, his creativity sacrificed on the altar of some Stratovarius hollow imitations.

His true renaissance, paradoxically, starts now with a lack of originality: many metal operas were born following the success of Avantasia or Ayreon, but the idea behind Avalon is simply too similar to Tobias Sammet's child not to get faulted even before composing a note. The only way that remained Timo not to be completely bashed by Avantasians was to make of this album a masterpiece. This didn't happen, but The Land Of New Hope shows encouraging signs of recovery in Tolkki's music quality.

This is an unequivocally archetypal power metal album, being characterized by huge amounts of orchestrations, properly simple song textures, the anticipated accessibility and unfailing cheesiness: features able to catch the attention of every devotee of the genre. But this release has chiefly an indefensible flaw, noticeable already at the first listen: Timo seems no longer able to write his distinctive double bass anthems - a la "Eagleheart", just for instance. The faster tunes, here, simply don't have that quid that turns a chain of notes into a sing-along hymn, and fall short, again, as Stratovarius b-sides.

But 'the headwaiter called the bridegroom and said to him: "Everyone serves good wine first, and then when people have drunk freely, an inferior one; but you have kept the good wine until now"' (John 2:9-10). And this is exactly what happens here, being the last track, entitled as the album, a gem that uplifts the morale of every detractor, not thanks to the song itself, but to the one who brings it to life: the ageless Michael Kiske, that offers once again his crystalline voice to enrich this album of a remarkable and majestic ending.

This brings to a topic that should be treated separately: the one of the guests. After putting the musicianship on safe ground - Alex Holzwarth on drums and three masters as Derek Sherinian, Jens Johansson and Mikko Härkin (were they really needed?) on keyboards - Timo seems to have focused more on the singers' reputation than on their being apt to the album's sound. In fact, despite being all well-known names, in contrast with the aforementioned Kiske, an appreciable Rob Rock and the charming performance of Amaranthe rising queen Elize Ryd there are an intangible Tony Kakko, a Russel Allen that, though being a master on his own field, clearly doesn't fit this kind of music and a Sharon den Adel that gets outclassed by her Swedish colleague.

The concept under The Land Of New Hope can be easily read as Timo's recent biography: the escaping from a ruined heaven (Stratovarius), to reach, after many struggling (Symfonia, Revolution Renaissance) a renewed place for living (Avalon). Let's just hope this is true, and definitive.





Written on 18.08.2013 by Hopefully you won't agree with me, diversity of opinions is what makes metal so beautiful and varied.

So... critics and advices absolutely welcome.


Comments

Comments: 7   Visited by: 291 users
19.08.2013 - 10:33
Rating: 10
DarkWingedSoul
Great album: 9
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19.08.2013 - 21:52
Ellrohir
Heaven Knight
Wow...it must be a strange coincidence there are two different albums with the same title, because "The Land Of New Hope" I have heard is one of the crappiest power metal bad jokes I have ever listened to...
----
My rest seems now calm and deep
Finally I got my dead man sleep


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22.08.2013 - 10:50
Rating: 8
M C Vice
ex-polydactyl
Written by Ellrohir on 19.08.2013 at 21:52

Wow...it must be a strange coincidence there are two different albums with the same title, because "The Land Of New Hope" I have heard is one of the crappiest power metal bad jokes I have ever listened to...

There must be two. The one I heard was pretty good, although I couldn't spot Sharon Den Adel.
----
"Another day, another Doug."
"I'll fight you on one condition. That you lower your nipples."
" 'Tis a lie! Thy backside is whole and ungobbled, thou ungrateful whelp!"
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10.10.2013 - 17:26
fade
Son of Sweden
Staff
It's also safe to say that his old band has suffered equally. Seems they all are terrible apart from one another.
----
The troubles of avoiding horseshit.
My Music database: http://www.racksandtags.com/northernsky/
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10.10.2013 - 17:28
Daniell
_爱情_
Elite
Written by fade on 10.10.2013 at 17:26

It's also safe to say that his old band has suffered equally. Seems they all are terrible apart from one another.

They were terrible together too
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10.10.2013 - 17:31
fade
Son of Sweden
Staff
I beg to differ, but i know you are far from alone with that opinion.
----
The troubles of avoiding horseshit.
My Music database: http://www.racksandtags.com/northernsky/
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10.10.2013 - 17:39
Rating: 7
R Lewis
Written by fade on 10.10.2013 at 17:26

It's also safe to say that his old band has suffered equally. Seems they all are terrible apart from one another.

I honestly love Nemesis, the last Strato work...
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We could be so much more than we are. Stop.
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