Album Review

Score 10
Written by Thomas Creager
Published on 7/19/2008
It should be a well established fact to anyone remotely familiar with the critical appraisal of the arts that the volume of content produced by the world at large is very great, to say the least. Even only regarding a specific type of music, the amount of recorded product that passes through critical ears in any given year is no trifling quantity, to be sure. And much of it is enjoyable. One could probably never find the end of music one could moderately, or even very much, enjoy. There's always something out there that is a highly respectable "pretty good". Little of it, though, is something that will be remembered years after release. For me, the rise of folk and pagan metal has been more than generous in that area, as I will always remember when I first heard the first two Ensiferum albums, Moonsorrow's Voimasta Ja Kunniasta and Verisäkeet, Amon Amarth's Once Sent From The Golden Hall, Falkenbach's ...Magni Blandinn Ok Megintiri..., and… well, basically, all of the time-honored forerunners of the young subgenre. Bands whose thrones of prominence have been firmly planted in the halls of metal history. Bands among whom Equilibrium now sits, atop as ornate a throne as any of the others.

It would not be unreasonable to say that Sagas is in an entirely separate league from their debut, Turis Fratyr, which was no less than excellent. That isn’t to say that their style has changed drastically; in fact, it hasn’t changed at all. Equilibrium is still black/pagan metal with various folk elements interwoven, most notably the flute. It is the execution that has evolved significantly since we last saw the band only three years ago, in so much as the new album is a mature, refined, weathered Equilibrium. The orchestration and composition exhibits a level of care and finesse that rivals the most dramatic cinematic score. The melodies traded between guitars, flute, and keyboards are tightly spun, making typical metal songwriting sound crude and brutish by comparison. Small, impressive flourishes by all instruments can be found in abundance. In short, Equilibrium regards folk metal as a fine craft, and has created a gem that so much time and talent has clearly gone into it is almost unfathomable to think that only three years went into its making.

To call Sagas any combination of grandiose, majestic, epic, or any similar words would be a gross understatement. At the same time, however, it is notable that Equilibrium avoids every cheesy pitfall that plagues most metal soundscapes of larger proportions. There are no awkward spoken passages, only snarled black metal screams. There are no overbearing sections that hammer the listener with overwrought vocals or melodies, nor is there anything that would cause one to shift guiltily in one’s seat. The amount the band has matured their sound is how much the band has matured the sound of epic metal as a whole. The way the various instruments seemingly dance with the furious guitars chills the spine, particularly the wondrous pan flute (played by Ulrich Herkenhoff, whose talents are present in the score for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King) that can be heard throughout the whole album. There is no folk metal that is as seamless and cohesive as can be heard on Sagas. Every single song is a masterful fusion of bombastic conventional metal and equally bombastic supporting instruments. The sum is too powerful for words. “Heiderauche”, a beautiful pan flute instrumental, and “Die Weide und der Fluß”, an awe-inspiring combination of choirs and absolutely epic guitarwork with a magnificent guitar solo, are a duo the likes of which is rarely heard. But to distinguish any song from the rest feels like a slight to all of the brilliant instances on every song. A slight to, for example, the violin solo on the already momentous sixteen minute instrumental “Mana”, the wonderful pan flute transitions of the same song, the enthralling melodies of “Ruf in den Wind”, the grace of “Dämmerung”, the whimsy of “Heimwärts”, the crescendo of “Verrat”, the triumphant flight of “Snüffel”, the galloping opening of “Wurzelbert”… Simply put, every minute is riveting and emotional, effortlessly carrying the listener into sublime landscapes.

And while the quality of the songs contained within Sagas is almost unrivalled, Equilibrium is not content to supply that alone. When “Dämmerung” begins to close, the melody harkening back to “Prolog auf Erden” a full hour earlier, the listener has already been given more than is usual for a full-length disc. As the pan flutes usher in the end of “Dämmerung”, the listener has enough to reflect on, to immediately replay and eagerly re-experience. There is still, however, the aforementioned sixteen minute instrumental by the name of “Mana” left to hear. The fact that “Mana” could be considered the crown jewel of what is a masterpiece of an album even without it is staggering. The flow of the melodies and tempo, the flawless transitions, the pervading theme throughout that serves as perfect closure, the grippingly dramatic composition, all of it falls into place, every note the crucial brushstroke that could not be placed anywhere else or removed. Where most bands stumble and end up including weaker material in the misguided hopes that more is better, Equilibrium shines without peer.

It is here, at Sagas, that the countless merely above average bands that make up the bread and butter of monthly musical consumption fade from memory as time passes. This is a recording that will stick with me for many years to come, the time spent first listening to it, and constantly replaying it, emblazoned into my memory. This is the rare work that transcends the surrounding scene entirely, and speaks to the listener on a personal level as art. Sagas is a perfect album, and is, without question or hesitation, the album of the year, and of recent years. It's here, at Sagas, that I am not a reviewer, but rendered an ardent fan who cannot string together any arrangement of words that would accurately encapsulate or do justice to the immensity of the music I attempt to address.



Lacertine_Forest's Avatar
Lacertine_Forest | posted on 10/2008 | Reply
Holy, holy shit is this album great! I've only recently gotten into folk metal, but this is about the best thing I've ever heard from the genre. Great review - I'm glad I read it and decided to gave them a listen.
tiberious's Avatar
tiberious | posted on 8/2008 | Reply
For one thing, Europe was a fucking awesome band, and every one of ya'll were blasted those fuckin horns back in the day. Theres only one part that is Final Countdown similiar, and thats the first song, but its still a strench to say it sounds exactly like it. I have been playing this album non-stop for like the last month, it never gets old! This is one of the best albums of the year for me, set in stone.
Dead2u's Avatar
Dead2u | posted on 8/2008 | Reply
I just made a complete idiot of myself listening to this on my IPod at work. The whole office got to see a 40 YO metalhead spontaneously explode in a frenzy of headbanging and I'm sure the lunch girl will one day forgive the sudden scream that made her drop the orders. Fuck it, this is a excellent CD.
wolf in the throne room's Avatar
wolf in the throne room | posted on 8/2008 | Reply
What ethr said. Perhaps my listening mood, too, isn't right for listening to something like this, but my initial thoughts haven't changed: I still hear Europe and I still hear 'The Final Countdown'.
tiberious's Avatar
tiberious | posted on 8/2008 | Reply
This album is of some high ass fucking greatness
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
after a few spins and some headphone time this would be much better if they were to lose the sympho keyboard hits and reduce the pan flute by 50+% - this album would be much much better - too much cringe inducing euro power cheese for repeated listens - best kept to low doses
Chris McDonald's Avatar
Chris McDonald  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Finally got around to listening to this today. You're right Bob-great album. However, I have to say I think the stretched their formula a little too far on this album. Its long, and while the songs are all enjoyable as hell things start to feel a little familiar around the half-way point. I think that Ensiferum and Moonsorrow are both better at pacing their albums. Still, I know I'm going to be spinning this one a shitload in the near future.
Reason's Voice's Avatar
Reason's Voice | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Did someone just refer to this as "power metal"?
The Great Cretaceous Bob's Avatar
The Great Cretaceous Bob | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I'm pretty sure you guys talking about keys are actually referring to the pan flute. Just letting you know.
DeathHead's Avatar
DeathHead | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Lately I've been getting more into experimental/avant garde and "epic" metal (Negura Bunget, Moonsorrow, etc). To me this sound is a lot less appealing than those two bands, mainly because power metal is one of my least favorite of all of the metal subgenres (for me it's down in the cellar with nu-metal, metalcore, etc). These guys need to tone down the keys. There's some cool melodies and atmospheres here, but there's also way too many passages where the keys ride over top of the galloping guitar rhythms, and that kills a lot of the songs for me. I'll be interested to see what direction these guys take in the future.
wolf in the throne room's Avatar
wolf in the throne room | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Why does the first minute of this album remind me of Europe's 'The Final Countdown'?
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Hope springs eternal
The Great Cretaceous Bob's Avatar
The Great Cretaceous Bob | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Wintersun won't be showing this year, and that's the only contender in my eyes.
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
"songwriting for +me"
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Wow there is a ton of german power metal influence on this one. The only thing that is "black" about this one are the vocals. All that being said the non-opinion parts of this review are dead on. As far as the opinion parts? - album of the year or the past few years? I'd never dare say that with Wintersun, Enslaved, Gojira, and Amon Amarth (I am sure I am forgetting some) all releasing discs later this year. 666? I'll agree with the Prod and Musicianship but the songwriting for is only around a 4.5 right now. I much prefer Moonsorrow and Wintersun's take on the genre.
zach's Avatar
zach  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
As an update, this is really good, but not a 666 for me. I don't really like the keyboard sound, and its just not as epic as people are saying. Moonsorrow is epic, this is half humppa, half epic metal. Still really good though, I'm nitpicking.
slaytanic1's Avatar
slaytanic1 | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This is my favourite release of the year so far.. Folk metal is starting to get over-saturated but this stands out from the pack for me - brilliant.
crucifiedjesus's Avatar
crucifiedjesus | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
this is really good but a lttle too symphonic for me
mastoman's Avatar
mastoman | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
"Every single song is a masterful fusion of bombastic conventional metal and equally bombastic supporting instruments. The sum is too powerful for words." = Music
zach's Avatar
zach  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
With a few exceptions (mostly Falkenbach and Moonsorrow), the pagan metal thing is something I consider a "how much do I really need of this style" style. But this sounds like it belongs in the collection. Will investigate further. Nice review.
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Top of the to buy list...
Reason's Voice's Avatar
Reason's Voice | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Gave this a once over. I hear the epic love child of Wintersun and Finntroll, with a dash of something extra special. And I like it.
scintilla's Avatar
scintilla | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Usually, i have a hard time getting into this kind of metal, but from your review and the samples on their ecard, i will probably get it. I love the ass kicking riffs & vocals, and the usual cheese sections/aspects are really well integrated. Talking about ass kicking, any review of Dead to this World (Iscariah & Kvitrafn) comin round?
The Metal Mallet's Avatar
The Metal Mallet | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Why do I suddenly feel like spending money on a CD...?
misanihil's Avatar
misanihil | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Wow, I need this . . .
rat's Avatar
rat | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Sounds like this avoids some of the pitfalls that normally keep me from listening to this style. Great review!
Twilight Frost's Avatar
Twilight Frost | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This sounds like something I need to hear.
The Great Cretaceous Bob's Avatar
The Great Cretaceous Bob | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Quite the opposite, in fact. Though, at only $20 for this CD, I feel like I'm robbing them.
JB's Avatar
JB | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I'll check this out. Hope I'm as blown away as you were. Especially after a review like that. They're not paying you are they?
ash's Avatar
ash | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Another 6 6 6 from Nuclear Blast....Not bad
Agarwaen's Avatar
Agarwaen | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I wish they had a real song on their myspace page instead of this shitty medley. I need to hear an entire song to tell if I like the songwriting. I found the first Equilibrium record to be somewhat onedimensional when it came to dynamics and speed. It's hard to tell if this has improved much from the sample selection on the myspace page.
JW's Avatar
JW  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Good review, Bobbo. I shall check this out ASAP.
Mortem's Avatar
Mortem | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This is my next purchase. Can't fucking wait!
Zaibach's Avatar
Zaibach | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
That album is majestic. I tried to get into Equilibrium in the past but something about them didn't quite grabbed me. But damn, this one is a savior to my ears, epic stuff.
Rocco's Avatar
Rocco | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I agree with Erik. Really fucking good album.
erikt@metalreview's Avatar
erikt@metalreview | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
The album is absolutely fucking inbeleivablly good
sloanan's Avatar
sloanan | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Looking forward to what you have to say aboot this one... Did I just do the first pre-lash? I've made history!