trivium - The Perge https://michaelperge.com Official site for Michael Perge Fri, 08 Oct 2021 09:27:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/michaelperge.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-the-perge-website-logo-icon.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 trivium - The Perge https://michaelperge.com 32 32 195043406 [Review] Trivium – In The Court Of The Dragon https://michaelperge.com/2021/10/08/review-trivium-in-the-court-of-the-dragon/ https://michaelperge.com/2021/10/08/review-trivium-in-the-court-of-the-dragon/#respond Fri, 08 Oct 2021 09:27:07 +0000 https://michaelperge.com/?p=924 Sixteen years ago, in the now forgotten year of 2005, when things like Youtube were in their infancy and the analog format of receiving information was still king, I found Trivium. And I hated them....

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Sixteen years ago, in the now forgotten year of 2005, when things like Youtube were in their infancy and the analog format of receiving information was still king, I found Trivium.

And I hated them.

Well okay, hate is a strong word. I loathed the idea of them.

You see I had heard about them as much of the world had. Their (major label) debut album Ascendancy grabbed the metal world by the balls (with or without consent) and they were bestowed with the ever accursed title “The next Metallica.” I’ll never forget the sight of walking into my local Best Buy, and front and center on my left, right as you got into the music section, is the gigantic visage of the front cover of Ascendancy with like four, huge holders for rows of the CD. Right next to it, was a cutout of the band.

Trivium during that era.

To almost 15 year old me, the idea of a band that looked like this being the next Metallica, my favorite band, was as maddening as it was confusing. How could this band, who looked right at home to next to the Screamo, Emo, and Metalcore bands I was seeing take over, be given such high praise? But something that never left my mind was the cover itself, it grabbed my attention. I never wanted to admit to myself at the time, but I loved it.

A year later roles around, and I find out that Kerrang is releasing a cover album of Master of Puppets, featuring newer and now-established bands. To my shock and surprise, Trivium did Master of Puppets. If I had been a betting man I would have put it on Sanitarium. I quickly acquired the release, and started the CD and went right to Trivium to see if they could do this, if they were good enough to do it.

And the rest is history.

A history that I’m retelling because I was there during Trivium’s next album, and the album that has become the holy grail to Trivium fans, Shogun.

Shogun is three things simultaneously to me:

It’s one of the greatest metal albums of all time.

It’s one of the greatest metal songs of all time.

And it is the best Trivium album of all time.

Does that give away the ending to the review? No, because all of this has a point.

THE SETLIST:

1.“X” (instrumental)1:27
2.“In the Court of the Dragon”5:09
3.“Like a Sword Over Damocles”5:30
4.“Feast of Fire”4:18
5.“A Crisis of Revelation”5:35
6.“The Shadow of the Abattoir”7:11
7.“No Way Back Just Through”3:53
8.“Fall Into Your Hands”7:45
9.“From Dawn to Decadence”4:08
10.“The Phalanx”7:15
Total length:52:11

Top 3:

  1. The Phalanx
  2. In the Court of the Dragon
  3. Like a Sword Over Damocles / A Crisis of Revelation

Pros: You know an album is an amazing album when you feel like leaving a song off the top 3 is doing it a disservice. As a Trivium fan this was like having Christmas and your birthday on the same day, there’s so much to love and gush about this album. A Crisis of Revelation would easily be at home among the best on Ascendancy. Songs like Shadow of The Abbattoir showcase the dynamic range that singer Matt Heafy has refined over years of experimentation, while epics like The Phalanx are literal lost cuts from their Shogun days. Also, can we just take a moment to talk about the monster choruses for songs like Like A Sword Over Damocles and No Way Back But Through?

One thing that has become a reoccurring sentiment in the metal community is that for the last few years since The Sin and The Sentence is that Trivium has been “returning to form”. Due largely to incredibly divisive releases after In Waves stemming from both the lack of a stable, reliable drummer who can play their music, and the loss of lead singer Matt Heafy’s voice in the early 2010s.

Well I can safely say that their reforming is complete, and what’s come out on the other side of it is an album that can stand toe-to-toe with some of its greatest hits.

And that’s what’s so great about this album, it took what The Sin and The Sentence started and realized that full potential, which was taking all of the elements that the band had acquired over the years and honed them. It took it one step further though, by finding the aggression that had largely been missing since halcyon days I had started the review off with. There were moments where I felt like a teenager again, a very hard thing to recapture.

This is Shogun 2 in all the right ways.

You go on this journey with each track and by the end of it, perfectly by the way with The Phalanx, you wonder, even entertain the idea if it really can dethrone Shogun as the best of all time.

Cons: Ordinarily, I would put a bottom 3 here, but there’s no reason to. Each song is unique enough, and dynamic enough, and hooky enough to where every single song at the very least surprised me with a riff or sequence.

If I had to even attempt to find a flaw in this masterful album, it’s that I felt I knew exactly where each chorus was going to hit and how, but can that even be considered a con when it was well done?

VERDICT: 9.8 / 10

I was very, very conflicted on whether I could give this a perfect score or not. I think one of the things I really struggled to also do was let it be its own thing. So much of Trivium’s efforts stand in the shadow of an album they released 13 years ago. Whether that’s the fans or even the band themselves, they’re oftentimes found standing in the shadow of nostalgia, something that will only get stronger with time.

Does In The Court of The Dragon dethrone Shogun as the best? No, it doesn’t.

However, it does something almost as important, it can stand toe to toe with it. It proves that looking forward to new Trivium is as exciting as going back and listening to the old.

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[Review] Trivium – The Sin and the Sentence. https://michaelperge.com/2021/07/04/review-trivium-the-sin-and-the-sentence/ https://michaelperge.com/2021/07/04/review-trivium-the-sin-and-the-sentence/#respond Sun, 04 Jul 2021 21:11:13 +0000 https://michaelperge.com/?p=866 [Originally posted on Facebook: 10/20/2017] So, time for another album review! After a couple stinkers this year, I was starting to wonder if the bands I follow are just getting tired or out of creative...

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[Originally posted on Facebook: 10/20/2017]

So, time for another album review!

After a couple stinkers this year, I was starting to wonder if the bands I follow are just getting tired or out of creative juice, thankfully Trivium proved that they still have A LOT more to prove. This review is about their new album released today, “The Sin and the Sentence”.

Sweet baby Jesus!

Top 3:

  • 1. Beyond Oblivion
  • 2. The Revanchist
  • 3. The Wretchedness Inside

Pros: Trivium has returned! There are so many good things about this album that I don’t know if I can get them all. The guys in Trivium have truly returned to form, and for the first time since Shogun, have a clear and concise goal and sound, and it’s just amazing to listen to. “Beyond Oblivion” and “The Revanchist” are two of the best songs they’ve ever made. Period. Across any album they’ve ever done.

Even though I do a Top 3, 95% of the album is outstanding, all killer no filler. I also particularly liked “The Wretchedness Inside” is also a nice change of pace, harkening back to their earlier Ember to Inferno days.

Bottom 3:

  • 1. Betrayer
  • 2. Other Worlds
  • 3. N/A

Cons: Ironically, the heavier of the singles “Betrayer” ended up being one of my least liked songs. It’s not even really a bad song but it’s just considerably “weaker” than the rest of the album. In fact I really only had negative things to say about that and “Other Worlds”, which also was decent but again, compared with the album just doesn’t do as good. I don’t think the singles did this album any justice whatsoever. BUT, I’m glad the singles were what they were, because it made the rest of the album a treat.

OVERALL: 9.3 / 10

This album has something for every Trivium fan out there. Newer fans who came in through Silence in the Snow will appreciate stuff like “The Heart from Your Hate” and “Endless Night”, and older Trivium fans will appreciate literally everything else.

[New note: I have to knock the album up to like 9.6 or 9.8, Other Worlds has become just as loved. Really I could call this a perfect album because I can sit down and listen to it top to bottom without skipping anything, but Betrayer is still ok. I didn’t want to include it in the original review, but what puts this over as tied for being my favorite Trivium album ever, is the Japanese bonus track, “Pillars of Serpents ’17” which is a rerecording of an Ember to Inferno track of the same name. Sounds even better than the original.]

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