The Roundhouse Tapes Opeth Artist
The Roundhouse Tapes Opeth Artist
Though {|Opeth|} have officially signed with {|Roadrunner|}, this double-live disc was released by former label {|Peaceville|}. This is welcome, because the band's first live offering, the DVD-only {|Lamentations: Live at Shepherd's Bush|}, was not a...
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Though {|Opeth|} have officially signed with {|Roadrunner|}, this double-live disc was released by former label {|Peaceville|}. This is welcome, because the band's first live offering, the DVD-only {|Lamentations: Live at Shepherd's Bush|}, was not able to focus on the first four recordings due to contractual problems. Apparently, this is worked out here, because all of the band's recordings are represented. That said, {|The Roundhouse Tapes|}, recorded at {|Camden Roundhouse|}, London, U.K., on November 9, 2006, is a double-disc set that captures this mighty band at their very best. The tour that {|Opeth|} undertook in support of {|Ghost Reveries|} was 18 months long; it began in June of 2005, and ended December 2006. They played 210 shows during that time. Given that this gig was near the end of the tour, it showcases the band at the zenith of their live powers. They run through not only {|GR|} material but across their entire career, digging deep into their history -- that includes a 19-minute version of Blackwater Park on disc two. The sound is tremendous; guitarist and lead vocalist {|Mikael Aekerfeldt|} is in excellent voice throughout. His engagement with the crowd and his sense of humor are wonderfully dry and welcoming. Unlike a lot of other acts, {|Opeth|} really seem to enjoy their fans, and as a result never need to pander to them as is evidenced by this righteous slab. The sheer subtlety of some of the band's quieter moment (is there any other heavy metal group that controls and uses dynamics as much as these guys?) is almost stunning when equated with the sheer intensity of their attack on the harder edges, as in the long middle section of Ghost of Perdition. The only confounding thing here is the odd time total for the package: an hour and a half. They certainly played longer gigs on this tour. But the length, and the sometimes thin presence of the deeply atmospheric keyboards are the only down points. As a whole, the sound is clean and {|Aekerfeldt|}'s vocals, even in full Cookie Monster mode, are discernible and easily understood, and the guitar interplay between {|Peter Lindgren|} and {|Aekerfeldt|} is downright intuitive and uncanny. (This was apparently {|Lindgren|}'s last appearance with {|Opeth|} as he officially left in the summer of 2007). There is one more added treat on this document, which is the inclusion of {|Popol Vuh|}'s Through Pains to Heaven as a lengthy interlude in the middle of Under the Weeping Moon. {|Opeth|}'s fans -- both hardcore and somewhat casual -- will want this. It captures of the most enigmatic metal bands at their very best. ~ Thom Jurek
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