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    Dominate
    Dominate

    zoom enlarge 
    Artist: Adagio
    Label: Avalon Japan
    Category: Music

    List Price: $47.98
    Buy New: $22.27
    You Save: $25.71 (54%)



    New (9) Used (1) from $22.27

    Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
    Sales Rank: 360186

    Format: Extra Tracks, Import
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    EAN: 4527516005818
    ASIN: B000BX4CB4

    Release Date: December 26, 2005
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Fire Forever
      • Dominate
      • Terror Jungle
      • Children of the Dead Lake
      • R'lyeh the Dead
      • Darkitecht
      • Kissing the Crow
      • Fame
      • Undying

    Similar Items:

      • Underworld
      • Sanctus Ignis
      • The 1st Chapter
      • The Origins Of Ruin
      • Isolate

    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    Japanese pressing has the earliest release and includes the bonus track 'Undying'. The album is produced by Stephan Forté and Kevin Codfert, mixed at House Of Audio Studios in Germany by Dennis Ward. Avalon. 2005.

    Album Details
    Third Album from the Progressive Metal Band, featuring Vocalist Gus Monsanto.


    Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars quite a bit different from the other albums, but awsome!!!!!   March 20, 2006
     6 out of 6 found this review helpful

    i have read quite allot of bad reviws of this album so i was very worried when i picked it up and was about to listen. when i herd it i was amazed to hear this album is amazing from begining to end. and yes there is a new singer, and yes he growls and screams. but he also sings very well. and he does the growls and screams very well in my opinion. i acully like this singer better. he does not sound so damn 80's, i hate 80's vocals. the music is still progressive as hell. guitar solos and keyboard solos are all over.
    the drums and bass are very tight. still has the odd timeing. i like it so much too because its not like all these other prog metal albums. it acully is something quite different. i enjoyed hearing a nice fresh band. so give this album a listen its quite great.



    2 out of 5 stars Warning - this is not the Adagio we've come to love.   February 7, 2006
     4 out of 9 found this review helpful

    This release is SO different from Sanctus Ignis and Underworld. Rarely do they recapture their fantastic orchestral sound. Missing are the challenging rhythms. Gone are the great choral sounding segments. Instead they've added a singer who growls and snarls way too much, despite having a good singing voice. And they did a cover song of the theme from FAME? Worst idea I've ever heard. It makes me sad. They tried to go darker, and it doesn't work. Adagio's first 2 albums will remain in my heavy disc rotation for many more years. Dominate will not.


    4 out of 5 stars Grows on Ya   February 5, 2006
     3 out of 5 found this review helpful

    Here is the new one from a great Progressive band..... At first listen I was kinda let down..wanting an "Underworld II" so to speak..
    But, after listening to "Dominate" a few times..It becomes apparent that this is a great CD..
    It does have elements of "Underworld" and "Sanctus Ingus"..
    With additions of Darker themes...And growling(New vocalist)..
    This is a great cd..Forte' still shreds (Big Time)
    Somewhere between Symphony X and Opeth
    To hear music like this go to.. progulus radio...The best internet site for progressive metal...



    5 out of 5 stars Dominate   June 18, 2006
     3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    After reading all these negative reviews I felt rather worried that Adagio had completely changed. Nonetheless I got this album and was pleasantly surprised. This is their third album.

    Adagio are a hybrid of Neo Classical, Progressive and Symphonic Metal. The band's talent is quite remarkable (thanks to Stephan Forte who writes all of the songs), and I'm surprised they are so little known. The songs are a lot shorter than that of Sanctus Ignis and Underworld. They are still of a decent length though: the longest song is R'Lyeh The Dead (8.25), followed by The Darkitecht (6.18) and Children Of The Dead Lake (6.04). The whole album is 47 minutes long. None of the songs are long enough to impress us with the intricate piano parts (I quite miss that). However with shorter songs, the music is faster and the guitar solos are still on top form. The old vocalist has been replaced with a new Death Metal vocalist (Gus Monsanto). Surprisingly enough he has a great voice. His clean singing is much better than his death vocals in my opinion. Most Death Metal vocalists cannot sing at all. (Except Mikael Akerfeldt from Opeth of course) Anyway why people complain about the death vocals in this album but love the last two albums are perplexing; seeing as From My Sleep To Someone Else (on the Underworld album) features some death vocals.

    The album starts off with Fire Forever a shorter, more straightforward metal song. There's sprinkling of death vocals here and there. Not much don't worry. More like whispered death vocals. It has a powerful melodic riff at the 3.00 mark. The guitar work is excellent with a very classical-esque solo.

    Dominate is my favourite song in the album. The bass and intense drumming in the first 40 seconds is quite overwhelming. The strings in the background add a nice touch to the darker atmosphere. There are more death vocals on this song than any other song but they just accompany the clean vocals, without overpowering the song. At the 3.48 the song shifts into a darker atmosphere with a grandiose symphony and then is followed by keyboard/guitar solo.

    Terror Jungle starts with crunchy guitars mixed with pianos then erupts into a part-metal-part-symphonic intro. This has the catchiest drumming, with cymbal crashing and even double bass drumming at some points. It's very reminiscent to Symphony X. The song mixes neo-classical metal with classic metal (Like Iron Maiden etc) and even thrashy riffs here and there.

    Children Of The Dead Lake starts with heavy guitars and pianos are thrown in to enhance the sound. The song mixes eerie diminished chords with `cheerful' major chords. Especially the chorus. It's very a happy `King of the World' chorus. Then the half-whispering half-singing menacing verse comes in followed by the chorus. I love the pianos in this. Though they aren't featured and are used infrequently they still sound impressive and provides something more to listen to. At the 3.14 mark the pianos take control with their own solo, and lasts 32 seconds. I've read somewhere the song may have something to do with Children Of Bodom, due to the title. Hmm...

    R'Lyeh starts off with strings and pianos in a creepy tension way. You've got to give Adagio credit for being extremely atmospheric in their music. The 1.52 minutes of aura would be good soundtrack for a movie. The dissonant guitar then kicks in and the intense drumming follows. The death vocals are fused with the clean vocals in this song to some pretty heavy music. The music at the three-minute mark is quite dramatic, like serial killer music if you want details. The bass part in the chorus is pretty notable. At the 4.42 the `serial killer' music starts again followed by double bass drumming. At 6.06 in comes the subtle piano followed by a solo. This is easily the heaviest song here.

    The Darkitecht probably has the most classical influenced parts, from the piano introduced to the strings. The chorus is very powerful with Gus singing his heart out. At the end of each chorus has the classical piano mixed with strings. At the 3.32 the piano plays a diminished part. It seems Adagio enjoys using the piano to darken the atmosphere. I'm pleased to say the piano is more prominent; the song is greatly enhanced by it.

    Kissing The Crow is a piano/strings ballad. You really get to hear the vocalist's range here: from growling, growly singing and powerful singing in previous songs and now to soft gentle singing in this song.

    Fame is ridiculously cheesy but makes a pretty good heavy metal song. Why they covered it though is beyond me. However the fact it sounds pretty good shows Adagio is a talented band. They introduce neo-classical metal, with rapid shredding to this joyful song. When I listen to it, I either admire the bands' spunk or just laugh at it. From the 3.25 mark to the end though, they invoke some heavier guitar parts, perhaps to redeem the hilarity. The bonus track Undying is very good and could easily be a normal album track. The swift fluid solos of the keyboard and guitar are majestic. There are no death vocals in this song. I like the solo around the three-minute mark.

    Since I wrote an essay on all the songs I'll make a quick comment on the lyrics. The lyrics are quite poetic and unique from emotions "Hold my tears sublime my wounds, drown humanity in tear-now dominant" (Dominate); evil and wrath "From now on, your flesh belongs to my master" (R'Lyeh TheDead - creepy!); to fantasy "I am the star charmer, the spell keeper, bound to me, all the chains to reverie" (The Darkitecht); even to love "I'll be forever screaming your name, my spells will bless your name" (Kissing The Crow). Quite sundry and innovative.

    This is an extremely long review but I thought I'd justify how good this album is. The songs are just catchy as hell; the compositions are intelligent and varied, with the use of keyboards and has great ambience. The guitars of Stephan Forte are as always heavy and each note he plays in a solo are crisp and articulate. Although there are less piano solos if you will, the pianos are still there, and add to the atmosphere. To me the album is simply diverse with the many genres thrown into this album. If those who haven't got the album yet are interested, go to "myspace dot com slash adagioofficial" where you can listen to Dominate and Children Of The Dead Lake. I recommend this to Progressive Metal fans (especially to fans of Symphony X), Power Metal fans and Symphonic Metal fans. Or to anyone who likes metal in general.



    4 out of 5 stars Different but great   January 29, 2007
     1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    After really liking the first two cds and hearing of the band changes , I wondered how this would be. I saw Adagio live 1 1/2 years ago and knew of the changes. The new singer is very good live and is very good on this recording although I don't care for the death vocals. Live , the new drummer was terrible. he couldn't play the drum parts from the first two albums , was very sloppy, and did not propel the songs as the songs sounded on the recordings. Adagio seemed perplexed at the poor crowd response and I believe this was the problem. A dragging drummer will make the best band sound bad-and they sounded bad. Here , the new drummer has laid down some great tracks for the songs recorded. Since you can do things over and over in the studio, i will be curious how they sound live now. He plays some fast double bass drum parts that he could not pull off live before. i will definately see this very talented band if given the chance again. Overall, the songs are more straightforward here and not as intricate but still very good. You will like this one if you liked the others.


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