Album Review

Score 8.3
Written by Jeremy Morse
Published on 7/6/2008
Symphonic metal. Under normal circumstances, just seeing this phrase would send me scurrying for the comfort of my Slayer albums. Thus, it was a rather unpleasant surprise to discover that the album I had signed up to review, Hollenthon’s Opus Magnum, was in fact metal of the dreaded symphonic variety. That will teach me to pick albums by the cover. You see, I like my metal unadulterated; guitar, bass, drums and someone screaming bloody murder is all I really want. I find that the addition of synths, strings and other exotic instrumentation in any great quantity tends to soften the blow of what should be, predominantly, harsh, powerful, aggressive music. Shockingly, after listening to Opus Magnum, I discovered, against all odds, that I kind of enjoy it.

Symphonic metal is somewhat of a generic term, but Hollenthon’s sound is comprised of enough different styles of metal, that a more specific designation would fail to capture its scope. The music draws heavily from melodic death metal, but also contains elements of black metal, thrash, power metal, etc. Basically, Hollenthon uses the whole metal play book and combines it with orchestral instrumentation, chanting, choirs, operatic vocals, and probably a dozen other elements. The result is one massive epic of an album.

With so many tricks up Hollenthon’s sleeve, Opus Magnum could have easily ended up a chaotic mess, but Hollenthon manage to combine all the elements at their disposal in a concise and cohesive manner. This is not a bunch of metal tunes with some synthesized strings and horns thrown haphazardly over the top. The standard metal instrumentation and the symphonic elements work in concert. While the drums and bass do the lion’s share of the rhythm work, the melody is shared equally between the guitars and synthesizers. Another key to the album’s success is that the band does not throw everything at you all the time; the compositions have room to breathe. The band varies the instrumentation, tempos and groove, so that no one element overstays its welcome. However, the band is not afraid to let the symphonics take a back seat to the metal on occasion, when true head-banging fury is required. The band also manages to keep the songs from sprawling out into epic redundancy. With eight songs with an average length of around five and a half minutes, Opus Magnum does not overstay its welcome.

Opus Magnum is not without some flaws, of course. While the production on the whole is sharp and balanced, the synths, in their more bombastic moments, can overwhelm the guitars. The guitar riffs themselves tend to lapse into generic metal chugging, on occasion, but with so many other instruments (or synth patches as the case may be) on hand to carry the song, this is forgivable. The drumming is often rigid and mechanical sounding, but that seems to be a flaw endemic to modern metal as a whole, not just Opus Magnum.

Given my general distaste for all things keyboard related, my experience with symphonic metal is necessarily limited. Consequently, how Hollenthon stacks up against other acts of their ilk is difficult for me to say, but if they can win over a listener as narrow minded as I am, they must be doing something right. I would advise anyone with even a passing interest in symphonic metal to give Opus Magnum a listen.



Ian DB's Avatar
Ian DB | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
wish they hadn't broken up pungent stench to do this...
chud's Avatar
chud | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I don't always like this genre but this one's pretty good. Its in same vein as the Project Hate, or "Damnation" era Cradle (but without the sillier vox).
Psychotic Walt's Avatar
Psychotic Walt | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
That's interesting. Of all the fine fine music on Pictures At An Exhibition they choose "The Hut on Chicken Legs"? That's the least 'metal' sounding song in the whole piece. I will never, for the life of me, understand why, with all the black metal coming out of Russia, no one has yet done a metal rendition of "Gnomus".
Zaibach's Avatar
Zaibach | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I was surprised to see something new from them, been a long while since their last record. Haven't heard this one entirely but so far it's pretty good.
mastoman's Avatar
mastoman | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
It's pretty significant to note that the symphonic aspect is heavily based on real classical pieces. Right off the bat the theme of On the Wings of A Dove is the same as Mussorgsky's Baba Yaga (The Hut on Chicken Legs) of his Pictures at an Exhibition. Take the classical aspect for what you will; the interpretation is interesting, but I find it aggravating to listen to the actual classical music and then listen to the keyboard symphony...