Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Somber Eyes to the Sky

Somber Eyes to the Sky
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 30, 1997
Recorded1997
StudioZing (Westfield, Massachusetts)
Genre
Length48:34
LabelLifeless
ProducerAdam Dutkiewicz, Jim Fogarty, Shadows Fall
Shadows Fall chronology
To Ashes
(1997)
Somber Eyes to the Sky
(1997)
Of One Blood
(2000)

Somber Eyes to the Sky is the debut studio album by American heavy metal band Shadows Fall, released in 1997 on Matt Bachand's own label Lifeless Records in the United States, while the European release was handled by Genet Records.[2] This was the band's last release and only studio album with lead singer Philip Labonte, who helped form All That Remains the following year.

Background

Most of the album's songs had previously appeared on demo albums released by the band.

The songs "Lifeless", "Suffer the Season" and "Fleshold" originally appeared on the band's demo, Mourning a Dead World, released in 1996. The songs "Eternal" and "Somber Angel" were originally recorded and released on a demo EP in 1997. "To Ashes" originally appeared on the 7-inch EP of the same name, which was also released in 1997; the EP also contained a re-recording of "Fleshold".

Audio mastering was done at Monkeyhouse Studios in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Music and lyrics

Somber Eyes to the Sky is different from the usual metalcore sound of the band's subsequent albums, featuring a lo-fi melodic death metal sound with elements of standard death metal. Phil Labonte's vocals are generally death growl vocals that resemble Glen Benton of death metal band Deicide. Melodic guitar riffs and occasional dissonant riffs are featured throughout the album. The lyrics are dreary, with themes like despair, depression, suicide, isolation and loneliness being featured throughout the album.

Background, recording and release

In 1996, Shadows Fall recorded a demo called Mourning a Dead World, printing 200 copies. Guitarist Matt Bachand said the demo "was really intended just for us to work on things". People bought the demo and Shadows Fall began to have concerts. Bachand formed Lifeless Records to produce Somber Eyes to the Sky and both self-financed and self-promoted it. Genet Records of Belgium created a repress of the album, and Somber Eyes to the Sky sold 15,000 copies worldwide, including a few thousand in Europe.[3] Somber Eyes to the Sky was recorded in Zing Recording Studios in Westfield, Massachusetts.[4] Released on November 30, 1997, Somber Eyes to the Sky had success in late 1998 and early 1999 on CMJ New Music Report's Loud Rock airplay chart, reaching the top ten and remaining on the chart for several weeks.[5]

Touring and promotion

Shadows Fall toured in 1998 and opened for Six Feet Under, Overcast and Shai Hulud. Other shows the band had included the Cleveland "World Series of Metal" event, Milwaukee Metalfest, and one show on the Van Warped package tour. In the fall of 1998, Phil Labonte left Shadows Fall and was replaced by Brian Fair.[6] In a later interview in 2007, Labonte explained why he left Shadows Fall:

What happened was Brian [Fair], who is their current singer, the band that he was in broke up. When I tried out, they were like, "Oh, can you do stuff like Brian from Overcast?" And I was like, "OK, I'll try." I kind of had my own sound. I didn't sound like Brian, and when he became available, they were like, "Look, we want to get another singer. We want to get Brian." I was like, "Okay. Cool." There's no hard feelings or anything like that 'cause I knew it was the dude they had in mind in the first place and also I had already started writing stuff for All That Remains. We had probably three songs put together, so I was just like, "Alright, whatever." Shadows Fall wasn't — I mean, obviously Shadows Fall wasn't nearly as far along as they are now. They didn't even have a record deal at the time. So it's not like it was like, "Oh god, what could have been," you know? It was like, "Whatever." And last time we played here with Shadows Fall, it wasn't sold out. And they were headlining. We're headlining tonight and it's sold out, so I'm not sweating. I'm not sweating. I don't worry about what Shadows Fall does anymore, not even a little bit. I was never the dude that was like, "Oh my god." It never bothered me. We were always friends and stuff like that, but now, whatever. I don't care.[7]

Fair replaced Labonte after Fair's previous band Overcast disbanded. Shadows Fall then performed again at the Milwaukee Metalfest and the New Jersey March Metal Meltdown. This caught the attention of Century Media Records, and the record label signed Shadows Fall in late 1999. A headline show earned Shadows Fall the top billing for the New England "Metal & Hardcore" festival in 2000.[6]

Track listing

No.TitleLyricsLength
1."Revel in My Loss" 5:48
2."Pure" 6:11
3."Lead Me Home"Instrumental2:58
4."To Ashes" 5:53
5."Nurture" 5:16
6."Fleshold" 3:44
7."Eternal" 4:07
8."Suffer the Season" 4:12
9."Somber Angel" 6:36
10."Lifeless" 3:44
Total length:48:34

Personnel

Adapted from the album's liner notes.[4]

Shadows Fall

Additional credits

Citations

  1. ^ Sfetcu, Nicolae (May 7, 2014). The Music Sound. While death metal and hardcore had always intermingled to an extent, the first clearly identifiable instances of melodic Swedish metal being combined with hardcore seem to have sprung almost simultaneously, with Undying's This Day All Gods Die, Darkest Hour's The Prophecy Fulfilled, Prayer for Cleansing's The Rain in Endless Fall, Shadows Fall's With Somber Eyes to the Sky, and Unearth's Above the Fall of Man all being released within a year of each other (1998-99). It is unclear who first got the idea to combine the two styles. Darkest Hour had released an EP called The Misanthrope in 1996 which arguably contained elements of their later sound but was for the most part aggro-hardcore in the vein of Damnation a.d. On the other hand, Day of Suffering's 1997 album The Eternal Jihad is cited as an influence for many of the North Carolina bands that followed, such as Undying and Overcast is seen as having started the genre in Massachusetts.
  2. ^ "Interview with Matt Bachand" Archived 2013-01-27 at archive.today. Jen's Metal Page. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
  3. ^ "Shadows Fall". Metal Update. April 5, 2000. Retrieved February 9, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Somber Eyes to the Sky (CD liner notes). Shadows Fall. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  5. ^ "Loud Rock". CMJ New Music Report. 57 (604). CMJ Network, Inc. February 8, 1999. ISSN 0890-0795. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Sharpe-Young 1998, p. 260.
  7. ^ "All That Remains Vocalist Not Worrying About Shadows Fall". Blabbermouth.net. February 26, 2007. Retrieved August 27, 2022.

Bibliography