Epica (band)

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Epica
Epica performing at The White Rabbit (Texas, USA) in 2007.
Epica performing at The White Rabbit (Texas, USA) in 2007.
Background information
Also known as Sahara Dust
Origin The Netherlands
Genre(s) Symphonic metal
Gothic metal
Years active 2003–present
Label(s) British Plastic Head Distributions Ltd.
Nuclear Blast
Associated acts Kamelot
After Forever
Website www.epica.nl
Members
Simone Simons
Mark Jansen
Ad Sluijter
Yves Huts
Coen Janssen
Ariën van Weesenbeek
Former members
Jeroen Simons
Helena Michaelsen

Epica is a Dutch female-fronted symphonic metal band founded by guitarist and vocalist Mark Jansen subsequent to his departure from After Forever.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Sahara Dust (2002–2003)

In early 2002, Mark Jansen left After Forever due to creative differences and began looking for musicians to integrate a new musical project, initially named "Sahara Dust". In late 2002, the band courted Helena Michaelsen (from Trail of Tears) as its frontwoman, but shortly after she was replaced by the then unknown mezzo-soprano Simone Simons, Jansen's girlfriend at the time. The band's line-up was completed by guitarist Ad Sluijter, drummer Jeroen Simons, bassist Yves Huts, and keyboard player Coen Janssen. The name was later changed to Epica, inspired by Kamelot's eponymous album.

Epica then assembled a choir (made up of two men and four women) and a string orchestra (three violins, two violas, two cellos and a upright bass) to play along with them. Still under the name Sahara Dust, they produced a two-song demo entitled "Cry for the Moon" in 2003. As a result, they were signed to Transmission Records.

[edit] The Phantom Agony (2003–2004)

Their debut album, "The Phantom Agony", was produced by Sascha Paeth (known for having produced bands such as Angra, Rhapsody of Fire and Kamelot) and released in late 2003. The song "Façade of Reality" on the album was written about the September 11, 2001 attacks and includes fragments from speeches by Tony Blair.

The album was followed by three singles: "The Phantom Agony", "Feint" and "Cry for the Moon".

[edit] Consign to Oblivion / The Score (2005–2007)

Their second release, entitled "Consign to Oblivion", was influenced by the culture of the Mayan Civilization, which can be noticed on songs in the "A New Age Dawns" series. "A New Age Dawns" refers to the time system of the Mayan people, which extends up to the year of 2012, and makes no reference of what may happen past said year. Consign to Oblivion was composed with film scores as a basis, with Hans Zimmer and Danny Elfman being cited as major inspirations. The album features guest singing by Roy Khan (from Kamelot) on the song "Trois Vierges". Epica also joined Kamelot as a support band on parts of their tour for promotion of the "The Black Halo" album, to which Simons had contributed her vocals on the track "The Haunting (Somewhere In Time)".

Two singles were released from the album, "Solitary Ground" and "Quietus (Silent Reverie)".

Epica's "The Score - An Epic Journey" was released in September 2005 and is the soundtrack for a Dutch movie called Joyride, though it can also be seen as their third album. Mark Jansen describes the album as typical Epica "only without the singing, without the guitars, no bass and no drums".[1]

In 2005 and 2006 Epica went on their first tour throughout North America with Kamelot. After the tour, their drummer, Jeroen Simons, left the band, due to his wish to pursue other musical interests. In fall 2006, Simone once again contributed vocals to Kamelot's new album "Ghost Opera", this time on the tracks "Blücher" and "Season's End". In December Ariën Van Weesenbeek from God Dethroned was announced at the official website of the band to be the drummer for their new album, though not to become a band member.

[edit] The Divine Conspiracy (2007–present)

In September of 2007, Epica headlined their first tour through North America and released their latest album, "The Divine Conspiracy", this time on a new label, Nuclear Blast. That December, Ariën Van Weesenbeek was announced to be Epica's permanent new drummer. They will once again tour North America in April 2008, with Into Eternity and Symphony X, this time with Amanda Somerville due to Simone's sickness.

The first single of the album was released on August 10, 2007 entitled "Never Enough".

[edit] Style

The contrast between Simone Simons' operatic vocals and Mark Jansen's death grunts is a feature of Epica's music.
The contrast between Simone Simons' operatic vocals and Mark Jansen's death grunts is a feature of Epica's music.

Epica's performs a blend of gothic metal[2][3][4] and symphonic metal.[5][6] Another component of Epica's style is power metal[5] with their guitarist Ad Sluijter describing the band as "a bridge between power metal and gothic metal."[7] Vocalist Simone Simons has expressed a preference for the group to be described as symphonic metal[8] though the founder of the group Mark Jansen notes that they do not mind being called gothic metal.[9]

The music of Epica is aggressive, bombastic[10] and excessive[6] with some songs being "epic, grand and majestic" and others "more subdued and introspective."[3] The band is also known to have progressive tendencies[11] while a gothic atmosphere and sentimentality is also present in their music.[3][6]

Epica uses a "trademark of many symphonic and gothic metal bands" in contrasting "two extremes, death grunts and brutality on one side, airy female melodiousness on the other."[6] Eduardo Rivadavia of Allmusic notes that the band's "attraction ultimately hinges on exploring the sonic contrasts of light and dark; the punishing intensity of those elephantine guitar riffs and hyperactive drumming cast against the soaring, layered sweetness of the orchestrated strings and keyboards."[12] Simone Simons delivers operatic vocals in a mezzo-soprano range[11] though she has also been known to sometimes sing "with a clear alto voice that has a flawless tone and a lot of emotion."[3] Mark Jansen delivers death grunts "that are secondary to Simons' singing, but very important in terms of balance and variety."[3] The group is also known to employ human choirs and orchestras[11] with additional embellishments such as spoken word recitals and lyrics in Latin and Arabic.[5]

[edit] Line-up

[edit] Past members

  • Jeroen Simons - drums
  • Helena Michaelsen - vocals

[edit] Session members

[edit] Discography

[edit] Demos

[edit] Studio albums

[edit] EPs and singles

[edit] Compilations

[edit] DVDs

[edit] Music Videos

  • 2003: "The Phantom Agony"
  • 2004: "Feint"
  • 2005: "Solitary Ground"
  • 2005: "Quietus"
  • 2007: "Never Enough"

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jansen, Mark (2005). Album notes for The Score - An Epic Journey.
  2. ^ Sharpe-Young, Garry. Rockdetector Epica. Rockdetector.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e Bowar, Chad. The Divine Conspiracy Review. About.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  4. ^ Smit, Bas. Consign To Oblivion Review. Lordsofmetal.nl. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  5. ^ a b c Rivadavia, Eduardo. The Phantom Agony Review. Allmusic.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c d Fox, Keith. The Divine Conspiracy Review. Metalreview.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  7. ^ Cursed With Oblivion. Interview with Mark Jansen, Simone Simons and Ad Sluijter of Epica. Xs4all.nl/~cursed. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  8. ^ Rademacher, Brian. Interview with Simone Simons of Epica. Rockeyez.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  9. ^ Vayner, Ofer. Interview with Mark Jensen of Epica. Alternative-zine.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  10. ^ Van der Wal, Kim. The Divine Conspiracy Review. Lordsofmetal.nl. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  11. ^ a b c Rivadavia, Eduardo. Consign to Oblivion Review. Allmusic.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  12. ^ Rivadavia, Eduardo. Divine Conspiracy Review. Allmusic.com. Retrieved on March 30, 2008.
  13. ^ Revealed on the official band page on 2007-12-03
  14. ^ http://www.epica.nl/?page=news

[edit] External links

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