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Compilations    Soundtracks

Evergrey Band Picture

Evergrey

Solitude - Dominance - Tragedy

Evergrey Homepage

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Category: Prog Metal

Year: 2000

Label: Hall Of Sermon

Catalog Number: 7111

Average Rating: 77 / 100 (2 ratings)

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Evergrey Solitude - Dominance - Tragedy Album Cover

Personnel
Tom Englund lead vocals, guitar
Dan Bronell guitars
Daniel Nojd bass, backing vocals
Patrick Carlsson drums
Zachary Stephens keyboards
Erik Ask harp
Stuart Wyatt six string violin
Tracks
1.  Solitude Within  5:33
2.  Nosferatu  5:41
3.  The Shocking Truth  4:35
4.  A Scattered Me  4:18
5.  She Speaks to the Dead  4:59
6.  When Darkness Falls  4:52
7.  Words Mean Nothing  4:13
8.  Damnation  3:52
9.  The Corey Curse  5:23
  
Total Running Time:  43:26

If you see any errors or omissions in the CD information shown above, either in the musician credits or song listings (cover song credits, live tracks, etc.), please post them in the corrections section of the Brutal Metal forum/message board.

The music discographies on this site are works in progress. If you notice that a particular Evergrey CD release or compilation is missing from the list above, please submit that CD using the CD submission page. The ultimate goal is to make the discographies here at Brutal Metal as complete as possible. Even if it is an obscure greatest-hits or live compilation CD, we want to add it to the site. Please only submit official CD releases; no bootlegs or cassette-only or LP-only releases.

EPs and CD-singles from Evergrey are also welcome to be added, as long as they are at least 4 songs in length.




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Existing comments about this CD

From: evergrey_fan Date: March 16, 2003 at 19:27
This album is very strong. Especially the lead guit is pretty impressive, but still Englund is the brain behind all of this......His singing makes the album great...

From: Rycheage Date: April 20, 2003 at 16:16
This CD is just awesome. They just get better from album to album. Highly recommended!!

From: Hrudet Date: June 19, 2003 at 21:30
From accessible, catchy power metal boomers, to soft, cushy, atmospheric ballads, the band shows that they are also capable and not afraid to mix up the music a bit to complement their dark, conceptual stories - usually about life / death relationships to each other, abstract emotions, the here beyond, and the constant fight within oneself living in darkness.

From: Doghouse Reilly Date: August 8, 2024 at 14:53
Look, I love latter-day Evergrey, and I even enjoy the mid-period albums so many others hate. But there's something special about the early incarnation of the band that's been lost in the ensuing 20-plus years. As with the debut album, there are just some jackhammer riffs here that would have been right at home on Cowboys From Hell in style and especially tone, and which elevate these songs into absolute bangers. And that's somewhat unusual for European power-prog. Henrik Dangage has yet to join the band, and this is before he and Tom started tuning down before switching to seven-strings, and as a result, Tom's vocals are in a higher pitch. Which leads to a whole chicken-and-egg discussion: is he singing lower nowadays because they're writing songs in lower keys, or are they tuning down to accommodate his changing voice? Either way, SDT is a strong, strong album that I really wish I would have heard when it came out. Those crushing riffs, Tom's emotional vocals, the keys that are just

From: Doghouse Reilly Date: August 8, 2024 at 14:57
... as important an ingredient as either of the above, and that haunted, melancholy atmosphere, all-bine to make this one of Evergrey's very best albums. Highlights include "Solitude Within," "Nosferatu," "The Shocking Truth" (which foreshadows the next album with its alien-abduction theme), one of their best-ever ballads in "Words Mean Nothing," the almost-thrashy "Damnation," and the closing epic "The Corey Curse."


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