Lemuria/Sirius B [Extra tracks] [Import]
Lemuria/Sirius B [Extra tracks] [Import]
Track Listings
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1. Thyphon
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2. Uthark Runa
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3. Three Ships Of Berik Part 1 (Calling To Arms And Fighting The Battle)
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4. Three Ships Of Berik, Part 2 (Victory)
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5. Lemuria
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6. Quetzalcoatl
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7. Dreams Of Swedenborg
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8. Arrow Fron The Sun
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9. Abraxas
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10. Feuer Overture / Prometheus Entfesselt
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11. Blood Of Kingu
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12. Son Of The Sun
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13. Khlysti Evangelist
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14. Dark Venus Persephone
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15. Kali Yuga, Part 1
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16. Kali Yuga, Part 2
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17. Wondrous World Of Punt
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18. Melek Taus
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19. Call Of Dagon
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20. Sirius B
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See all 21 tracks on this disc
Lemuria/Sirius B,Therion,Toy's Factory Japan,Death Metal/Black Metal,Heavy Metal,Pop,Progressive Metal,Rock,Scandinavian Metal,Symphonic Black Metal
Average customer rating:
- Majestic
- As hard to review as it is to classify.
- Highly enjoyable album that keeps growing on me!
- A smidge overrated.
- "When you watch the sky/You feel a longing for the stars"
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Lemuria/Sirius B
Therion
Manufacturer: Nuclear Blast Americ
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Progressive Metal
| Progressive
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Death Metal
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Secret of the Runes
- Vovin
- Deggial
- Gothic Kabbalah
- Theli
ASIN: B00023PB04
Release Date: 2004-09-07 |
Tracks:
- Typhon
- Uthark Runa
- Three Ships Of Berik, Pt. 1: Calling To Arms And Fighting The Battle
- Three Ships of Berik, Pt. 2: Victory!
- Lemuria
- Quetzalcoatl
- The Dreams Of Swedenborg
- An Arrow From The Sun
- Abraxas
- Feuer Overtometheus Entfesselt
Tracks:
- The Blood Of Kingu
- Son Of The Sun
- The Khlysti Evangelist
- Dark Venus Persephone
- Kali Yuga, Pt. 1
- Kali Yuga, Pt. 2
- The Wondrous World Of Punt
- Melek Taus
- Call Of Dagon
- Sirius B
- Voyage of Gurdjieff (The Fourth Way)
Customer Reviews:
Majestic.......2007-01-12
My first Therion album was Theli, which sounded by all accounts as a good starting point. All I can say is if you've only heard Theli and thought the band wasn't quite your cup of tea (like I nearly did), don't forsake them until you've heard Lemuria/Sirius B.
Theli isn't a bad album, just really tough to get into and a little tedious at times. Lemuria/Sirius B is not only a better album (both of them), but also easier to get your teeth into simply because the songwriting and performances are so much stronger and more cohesive. Even the death vocals, which I usually hate, works beautifully the few times they are used here.
Lemuria is the standout album, with hardly a weak moment across all 10 tracks. Typhon is a blistering opening track, with beautiful female singing mixed with a few murderous bursts of death vocals. So often death vocals end up sounding cheesy, but here they actually manage to sound mean and scary. It's magnificently done.
I'm not going to describe every song, it's hard to describe Therion's music in words. Let's just say there's enough beautiful melodies, varied singing and great guitar solos on Lemuria to keep current Therion fans happy and win them lots of new ones.
Typhon, Uthark Runa, Three Ships of Berik, Lemuria, Quetzalcoatl and Abraxas count as my favorites here.
Sirius B continues in much the same vein. The only song that I'm finding a little hard to get into here is Kali Yuga Part 1, but that's hardly a blot on the page. Sirius B, the song, is also just a little off course, a little tedious to get through. The rest of the album rocks, with The Blood Of Kingu, Son Of The Sun, The Khlysti Evangelist, The Wondrous World Of Punt, Melek Taus and Voyage Of Gurdjieff all deserving special mention.
I don't easily give out 5 stars, but Therion has earned it with two albums that could hardly be a whole lot better than they are. The variety in the songs, like different vocalists on different songs, melodic guitar solos, well implemented and executed death growling, choirs, orchestras, it's the whole package.
Whatever genre you want to throw this in, the bottom line is it's good music, plain and simple. Really good. Choirs and orchestra mixed with opera and metal isn't exactly a new or original concept in music, but Therion executes it so much better and on a much grander scale than most of the other pretenders.
The word "majestic" describes Lemuria/Sirus B quite well and although I haven't heard any other Therion albums except these two and Theli, I can't imagine a better starting point than Lemuria/Sirus B for anyone who wants to explore this band's music.
As hard to review as it is to classify........2006-12-16
I've wanted to write a review about this double CD set ever since I listened to both, but coming up with a rating was difficult. See, I don't want to keep giving out as many 5 stars as I've given out, and while I for the most part love this music, there are a few minor niggles I have with it. In the end though, I decided that the value of getting two close to excellent CDs for just a bit over the price of one means I can't give it anything but five stars.
Ok, so with that out of the way, why should you buy it? You definitely need to like either classical music or some version of Metal. You probably need to at least be able to tolerate the other genre. If you're able to listen to Phantom of the Opera and love mid range to heavy Metal, then you'll probably like this. If you love both, you might just have found your Nirvana of music.
The history's been documented in other reviews, but basically goes like:
Boys form death metal band.
Boys add more complexity in the form of classical instruments, choirs, etc.
Boys suddenly come out with a masterpiece that more or less creates a new genre in which they incorporate classical instruments, classically trained singers, choirs and whole orchestras while retaining their Metal roots (but dropping the growls). See "Theli" (which by the way I have not yet heard.. it's currently flying my way though).
With most things that I hear great things about, I'm ultimately somewhat disappointed. My initial reaction is often almost fanboyish. If I'm told the music/book/movie is spectacular and it fits a genre I like, I also think it's spectacular on my first listening/reading/viewing. Usually however, after a few songs/chapters/scenes, cracks start showing and while I might still very much like the purchase, it drops to the above average-good category for me (3-4 stars here).
Well, the first time I listened to "Lemuria", I was busy doing other things. I paused for a moment to listen once in awhile, and decided that "I liked it" but I didn't just stop everything to listen to it, unlike some more recent metal purchases. A few days later, I dropped "Sirius B" into the player, and pulled out the lyrics pamphlet (and by the way, everything about this product screams quality, including the full color artwork on each page of both pamphlets). Instead of feeling less fulfilling as the tracks changed, the music seemed to only get richer and more interesting.
It's hard to describe exactly what it sounds like, but the basic point is you get a melding of Metal riffs and hooks (expertly done), classical instruments, classical singers and choirs to such an extent that it's hard to envision (enlisten?) what the music would sound like without any of the other elements present.
That said, there are a couple of niggles. If you can't stand Death Metal 'growls', they make an appearance in a couple of songs (mainly Lemuria). I don't like them as a rule myself, but they work better here in moderation than they do exclusively on other CDs. It seems that ever since Theli, the band dropped the growls, until this CD came out. So you might prefer to try "Secret of the Runes" instead as your entry point to Therion. Additionally, "Sirius B" is billed as the more 'experimental' CD and I'll agree. Some parts feel off when listened to very closely, the best example for me is the switching between vocalists from verse to verse. A couple of songs on the second CD have at least 4 vocalists, with wildly varying styles, each singing one verse only of a quarter. It's still good music, but more disjointed than the rest.
The Metal aspect of the CDs is pretty heavy in many cases, but often the heaviest of the tracks also have more balancing lightness in the form of other instruments and sopranos. There are a couple of songs that are very upbeat/catchy, along with the heavier, more melancholy tracks. Unlike many CDs, not all the songs sound the same, although if you put this in with a mix of other artists, it will be almost immediately obvious that a Therion song has come up.
I've seen a frequent comparison to Nightwish in other forums and here. While it's apt to some degree (especially the "Once" CD where Nightwish brings in a full orchestra), the two really have very different feels. Whereas "Nightwish" might be a very tasty Samuel Adams (or other ale of your choice), Therion feels much more like a Guinness or 90 minute Indian Brown Ale. You might enjoy both, and if you do, then only your mood at the time will determine which you most want to listen to. But for those times when you need something dark, complex and filling, you could do a lot worse than Therion.
Highly enjoyable album that keeps growing on me!.......2006-10-21
Nobody does symphonic hybrid metal better than the Scandinavians. And nobody does this type of metal better than Therion. Sure Nightwish's latest had a nice rounded Bob Rock-type production quality, and Tarja's voice is very cool, but the compositions were fairly bland in my opinion. Tristiana just gets a tad annoying with all the vocal growling in behind the choral vocals. There are of course bands like Rhapsody, but it's hard to get into anything that is really just power-puff metal filled with absurdly poppish style riffs, or even Thy Majestie, who do a very good job at blending more medieval elements with their unique use of their choirs... but one can only take so much double-kick! And so one is left with the truely outstanding Therion. Now this is not to say that all their albums are outstanding. Far from it. However, those that are ("Secret of the Runes", "Vovin", and this double-album) are really good. I especially like how the keyboards are layered in with orchestra samples and live orchestral elements which reduces the cheeze factor often associated with keyboards and metal music (yeah, I need some more DX7 Bells and Supersaw oscillators to really make my day [sarc]). I'm very much looking forward to their newest "Gothic Kabbalah" due in 2007 to see what they bring to us next.
A smidge overrated........2006-07-09
Ok, ok, Therion is great, symphony, opera, orhcestra, metal, it's all very nice, but it's overproduced and the guitars are oversimplified. Great album, could be better, but hey, at least they used a real orchestra.
"When you watch the sky/You feel a longing for the stars".......2006-06-27
Where to start on something so complex? First the simple and obvious: for the price of one CD you get two, with 21 tracks running a total of 99 minutes. Then the performers involved. Therion consists of only three individuals but no less than 170 people are involved in this music, including 9 performing guests, 7 classical vocal soloists, the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and the Kuhn Mixed Choir. Next the subject matter: every song is related in some way to a mythical or legendary being, place or thing, some purely mythical and some real with legendary overtones. And they cover just about every corner of the globe, extending over nearly the entire record of human history, from Rasputin to Quetzalcoatl to Typhon (a 100 headed monster that nearly destroyed Zeus) to Kingu, a Babylonian god involved in their creation myth, and on and on. I don't know how the lyric writer came up with all these, many of which I had never heard, but they can all be investigated on the internet. If done, you will find that the words describe the subject very accurately, with a feeling of mysticism, which is enhanced in all cases by the music itself. So finally to the music, being the hardest to relate. Every song is different, every song combines many types of music and many different performers and every song rates somewhere between very good to excellent, my favorite being Lemuria, which I can listen to about 20 times in a row and still want to hear once more.
Actually, the subject matter covers more than just the Earth. Sirius B is a white dwarf companion to Sirius, the brightest star in the sky and located 8.6 light years away in the constellation Canis Major. Does that mean this one song has no connection to legend/myth like all the others? No. Basically an instrumental, the song Sirius B has only two words, Po Tolo, repeated over and over. Po Tolo is what the Dogon people of Mali call Sirius B and the myth/legend involved here is that they knew about details of Sirius B prior to contact (supposedly) with "the white man", who discovered Sirius B telescopically in 1862. So, either the Dogon were visited by aliens from Sirius sometime in the past or they were visited sooner than recorded by an earthman with astronomical knowledge. Choose your legend. And the track previous to Sirius B, Call of the Dagon, probably refers to the Phillistine god of that name, which may be the derivation of Dogon. Also this track, the source of my review title, ends thusly: "Dagon sing/Stargoddess/Sothis dance." Sothis is apparently the Egyptian name for Sirius, so yet another little known mythical/mystical connection woven into the framework of the music. Totally amazing!
One more thing, every page of both inserts features artwork, all being of cover quality, that, like the music and the lyrics, descriptively matches each song's subject. To say the least, I am overwhelmed by the complexity of this work and by its beauty. In fact, it does not seem humanly possible. Hmm, I wonder; were there any UFO sightings in Sweden about 3 years ago? (Please see my profile for a brief discussion of my rating philosophy.)
Average customer rating:
- Import is Important
- INCOMPARABLE
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Lemuria/Sirius B
Therion
Manufacturer: Toy's Factory Japan
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Progressive Metal
| Progressive
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Death Metal
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
Hard Rock & Metal
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B0001Z2YW6
Release Date: 2004-06-07 |
Tracks:
- Thyphon
- Uthark Runa
- Three Ships of Berik Pt 1: Calling to Arms and Fighting the Battle
- Three Ships of Berik, Pt 2: Victory
- Lemuria
- Quetzalcoatl
- Dreams of Swedenborg
- Arrow Fron the Sun
- Abraxas
- Feuer Overture/Prometheus Entfesselt
- Blood of Kingu
- Son of the Sun
- Khlysti Evangelist
- Dark Venus Persephone
- Kali Yuga, Pt 1
- Kali Yuga, Pt 2
- Wondrous World of Punt
- Melek Taus
- Call of Dagon
- Sirius B
- Voyage of Gurdjieff (The Fourth Way)
Customer Reviews:
Import is Important.......2004-06-29
o.k., i know what yall are thinking, it's the $. i was suprised too, but, hey, there is no price on quality! this is the best cd in my collection of over 100 cds, handsdown. i didn't know whether to get the regular or import. it was against my own jugement but i was curious 'bout the bonus track. so i took my chances and got the import. that was one of the best (and important) in my life... well... not as dramatic...
INCOMPARABLE.......2004-06-12
If you were to ask me to compare Therion's music with other artists, I would probably think, and scratch my head, think some more and finally say, there is none. Fact is there is none. Therion is incomparable. I do get a similar feeling from few of the songs of power metal band extraordinaire Thy Majestie and a little from Rhapsody but that's it. I guess nobody else can do it or if the can, don't want to or can't go through the expense of hiring Symphonic orchestras and large choirs.
Therion, brainchild of Swedish musical obergenius Christofer Johnsson, creates the most beautiful heavy metal music imaginable. His use of classical oriented elements in confluence with heavenly choirs and symphonic orchestras is becoming legendary.
Having said that, the new double release Lemuria / Sirius B is just a little heavier than their last five releases. This is not bad, no, it's very good just different, so don't expect a repeat of Theli etc. Lemuria / Sirius B has more metal and even a little electronica but don't worry there's still plenty of the recent Therion to go around.
More than 170 musicians and singers participated in the creation of Lemuria / Sirius B with the recording sessions taking over nine months. With this release, Therion have taken on the challenge of revisiting their roots. Therion have, until now, not been able to meld the harder facets of their early years with the new bombastic symphonic aspects for which Therion have become renown for, like they have on this album!
I like the new direction of Therion. There is nothing wrong with their older material, after all it is all five stars, but this is an exiting change of pace. A fresh perspective from one of the most creative minds in the music industry. I think, in the long run I may like it more.
As usual with Therion, there are no mediocre let alone bad songs. I'm tempted to give all songs five stars but I guess there are a couple that only deserve four and a half stars. This(these) album(s) is(are) in the running for album of the year
Average customer rating:
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Lemuria / Sirius B
Therion
Manufacturer: Nuclear Blast
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Death Metal
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000LWSHO8 |
Music Track:
- Let the Demon Rock N Roll
- Life Is Killing Me [Import]
- Live in Japan [Live]
- Lost [Import]
- Love Machine
- Magic
- Masters of Moral, Servants of Sin
- Metal Generation: Anthology [Import]
- Metus Mortis [Import]
- Mob Rules [Import]
Music Track
music track
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Thickfreakness
The Story of the Ghost
The Singles Collection Plus
This Is It: The Best of Faith No More
Siete Vidas
The Prezident [Explicit Lyrics]
Violin Concerto / Scottish Fantasy
Happenings