
Garden Of The Titans (Live At Red Rocks Ampitheatre): Limited Blu-Ray/DVD/2CD Earbook
There are few bands that can or will match Swedenâs OPETH. Since forming in the tiny Stockholm suburb of Bandhagen in 1990, the Swedes have eclipsed convention, defiantly crushed the odds, and, most importantly, crafted 12 stunningly beautiful, intrinsically intense albums to become one of the best bands on the planet; whether that be live or on record. Ask any OPETH fan. Enquire with any band thatâs shared the proverbial pine with the Swedes. Or, get a label representative to talk OPETH. Theyâll all tell you the same thing: OPETH are peerless. And theyâre only getting better.
Certainly, every OPETH record has had diversity. In 1995, âOrchidâ reset the rules of death metal. Six years later, âBlackwater Parkâ hit the high note for musicality in a genre generally devoid of it. âDamnationâ, in 2003, was the work of a band determined to upend the norm. Five years after that, âWatershedâ closed OPETHâs chapter on death metal by visiting its darkest corners and holding its native brutality aloft. And in 2014, âPale Communionâ officially bridged the progressive music gap by twisting the intrepid sounds of â60s, â70s, and â80s into contemporary brilliance.
For 12th album âSorceressâ, OPETH returned to Rockfield Studios in Wales, where the Swedes had tracked âPale Communionâ with Tom Dalgety. The experience was positive and historicalâthe countryside studio was also home to pivotal BUDGIE, QUEEN, RUSH, JUDAS PRIEST, and MIKE OLDFIELD recordingsâthere really was no other option for OPETH and crew. Mainman Mikael Ă kerfeldtâs was very aware of what the masses have had to say about the band since âWatershedâ. While some disliked the musical shift on âHeritageâ, most have applauded it. Theyâve come to expect something new from the Swedes. True to form, âSorceressâ gave long-time fans and weary critics reason to re-think OPETH and what it takes to be musically fearless.
Luckily, for Ă kerfeldt and crewâbassist MartĂn MĂ©ndez, drummer Martin Axenrot, guitarist Fredrik Ă kesson, and keyboardist Joakim Svalbergâhave not been in a better band situation before. This unity is re-inforced when the band plays live with Metal Hammer recently crowning them âthe reigning kings of progressive musicâ while Kerrang! insist they are âone of the most peerless bands of our time.â For proof, check out this live DVD filmed in the magnificent surrounding of Red Rocks Ampitheatre.
There are few bands that can or will match Swedenâs OPETH. Since forming in the tiny Stockholm suburb of Bandhagen in 1990, the Swedes have eclipsed convention, defiantly crushed the odds, and, most importantly, crafted 12 stunningly beautiful, intrinsically intense albums to become one of the best bands on the planet; whether that be live or on record. Ask any OPETH fan. Enquire with any band thatâs shared the proverbial pine with the Swedes. Or, get a label representative to talk OPETH. Theyâll all tell you the same thing: OPETH are peerless. And theyâre only getting better.
Certainly, every OPETH record has had diversity. In 1995, âOrchidâ reset the rules of death metal. Six years later, âBlackwater Parkâ hit the high note for musicality in a genre generally devoid of it. âDamnationâ, in 2003, was the work of a band determined to upend the norm. Five years after that, âWatershedâ closed OPETHâs chapter on death metal by visiting its darkest corners and holding its native brutality aloft. And in 2014, âPale Communionâ officially bridged the progressive music gap by twisting the intrepid sounds of â60s, â70s, and â80s into contemporary brilliance.
For 12th album âSorceressâ, OPETH returned to Rockfield Studios in Wales, where the Swedes had tracked âPale Communionâ with Tom Dalgety. The experience was positive and historicalâthe countryside studio was also home to pivotal BUDGIE, QUEEN, RUSH, JUDAS PRIEST, and MIKE OLDFIELD recordingsâthere really was no other option for OPETH and crew. Mainman Mikael Ă kerfeldtâs was very aware of what the masses have had to say about the band since âWatershedâ. While some disliked the musical shift on âHeritageâ, most have applauded it. Theyâve come to expect something new from the Swedes. True to form, âSorceressâ gave long-time fans and weary critics reason to re-think OPETH and what it takes to be musically fearless.
Luckily, for Ă kerfeldt and crewâbassist MartĂn MĂ©ndez, drummer Martin Axenrot, guitarist Fredrik Ă kesson, and keyboardist Joakim Svalbergâhave not been in a better band situation before. This unity is re-inforced when the band plays live with Metal Hammer recently crowning them âthe reigning kings of progressive musicâ while Kerrang! insist they are âone of the most peerless bands of our time.â For proof, check out this live DVD filmed in the magnificent surrounding of Red Rocks Ampitheatre.
Description
There are few bands that can or will match Swedenâs OPETH. Since forming in the tiny Stockholm suburb of Bandhagen in 1990, the Swedes have eclipsed convention, defiantly crushed the odds, and, most importantly, crafted 12 stunningly beautiful, intrinsically intense albums to become one of the best bands on the planet; whether that be live or on record. Ask any OPETH fan. Enquire with any band thatâs shared the proverbial pine with the Swedes. Or, get a label representative to talk OPETH. Theyâll all tell you the same thing: OPETH are peerless. And theyâre only getting better.
Certainly, every OPETH record has had diversity. In 1995, âOrchidâ reset the rules of death metal. Six years later, âBlackwater Parkâ hit the high note for musicality in a genre generally devoid of it. âDamnationâ, in 2003, was the work of a band determined to upend the norm. Five years after that, âWatershedâ closed OPETHâs chapter on death metal by visiting its darkest corners and holding its native brutality aloft. And in 2014, âPale Communionâ officially bridged the progressive music gap by twisting the intrepid sounds of â60s, â70s, and â80s into contemporary brilliance.
For 12th album âSorceressâ, OPETH returned to Rockfield Studios in Wales, where the Swedes had tracked âPale Communionâ with Tom Dalgety. The experience was positive and historicalâthe countryside studio was also home to pivotal BUDGIE, QUEEN, RUSH, JUDAS PRIEST, and MIKE OLDFIELD recordingsâthere really was no other option for OPETH and crew. Mainman Mikael Ă kerfeldtâs was very aware of what the masses have had to say about the band since âWatershedâ. While some disliked the musical shift on âHeritageâ, most have applauded it. Theyâve come to expect something new from the Swedes. True to form, âSorceressâ gave long-time fans and weary critics reason to re-think OPETH and what it takes to be musically fearless.
Luckily, for Ă kerfeldt and crewâbassist MartĂn MĂ©ndez, drummer Martin Axenrot, guitarist Fredrik Ă kesson, and keyboardist Joakim Svalbergâhave not been in a better band situation before. This unity is re-inforced when the band plays live with Metal Hammer recently crowning them âthe reigning kings of progressive musicâ while Kerrang! insist they are âone of the most peerless bands of our time.â For proof, check out this live DVD filmed in the magnificent surrounding of Red Rocks Ampitheatre.














