Ashes

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (51 ratings)
Ashes album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 47:44

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The best album in the world

mklafleur1976

Tristania is my favorite band. This is my favorite album by that band. The best tracks to get are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 ;). But mostly 4 even though it's so much different than most Tristania songs, it's probably my favorite song in the world

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A CALM TRISTANIA

ta_nia_tris

Even though its not as heavy as their older albums, this one is filled with the greatness that is Viveke. "LIBRE" is very old school Tristania with a twist and its very representative of what path they seem to be taking. My favorite track of this album is "CURE" its very calm and catchy, a must have. This whole album is great, Tristania always evolves they never regurgitate the same styles or songs, you either grow with them or cling to one album, either way they'll keep evolving, and that's what matters the most.

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get them all

jotahua

This band is killer. Awesome female singer,both clean and growling male vocals, which all fit quite nicely, great music,Heavy yet melodic, what more could you ask for? Favorite song...The Wretched. Get all their cd's.

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Strong music and vocals

elysianfield

If you do not know, this band utilizes male and female vocals (they do it very well, I might add). Like most male, female vocal bands, the female has the best voice, kind of like a beauty and the beast thing going on..hey, it works. Best songs on the album are: Equilibrium; Cure; Circus; and Shadowman.

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Disappointment

ZeroDogg

Sadly, this album does not do for me like the others did. Much less symphonic and more rough. It's not a bad album, but it's also not "Tristania". If you're a fan, maybe you should avoid this and go grab the two Sirenia albums instead. If not, have a listen to this and see if it fits your taste. Maybe it does. Though DO listen to the older Tristania albums too, so that you may hear the band in their full glory.

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They Say All Music Guide

Much to the delight of their fans, Norway’s Tristania continued to prosper after the departure of guiding songwriter Morten Veland, simply retooling the group’s lineup and shifting creative responsibilities to show no obvious ill effects with their next effort, 2001′s World of Glass. Then, following a troublingly long break from action, the group returned even more confidently with 2005′s Ashes — the first release for new label SPV. Quite simply a master class in goth metal 101, Ashes contains all of the requisite drama and mournful beauty of the genre, adds dueling, angular guitar riffs and sweeping synths, and then goes for broke thanks to Tristania’s unique three-pronged vocal attack. This, for those who don’t know, matches the sweet-singing Vibeke Stene with baritone Ă˜sten Bergoy and, for a truly unexpected, spine-tingling effect, the cookie-monster growls of Kjetil Ingebrethsen. Spun together, all of these elements result in often lengthy but always distinctive and immediate tunes like “Equilibrium,” “The Wretched,” and “Endogenisis,” as well as a couple of nearly perfect goth metal creations (both commercially viable and thoroughly metallic) in “Libre” and “Shadowman.” Slicing the album neatly in half, the evocative ballad “Cure” affords Stene a wonderful showcase on which to shine solo, and then segues nicely into one of the album’s most brutal offerings, “Circus,” completed by its eerie synthesizers and ghostly choral backdrops. In the end, if there’s one major gripe to be had over Ashes, it’s that it weighs in a little “light” at just seven songs and 43 minutes. But given the choice, most listeners would likely rather have focused restraint than diluted excess any day. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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