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Description: Opeth
Blackwater Park (with bonus CD)
2001
FLAC - Lossless
Tracks:
1. "The Leper Affinity" – 10:23
2. "Bleak" – 9:15
3. "Harvest" – 6:01
4. "The Drapery Falls" – 10:53
5. "Dirge for November" – 7:53
6. "The Funeral Portrait" – 8:44
7. "Patterns in the Ivy" – 1:52
8. "Blackwater Park" – 12:08
This is a special 2-CD edition of Blackwater Park which contains the regular album (as above) as well as an extra CD with two bonus tracks.
1."Still Day Beneath the Sun" – 4:34
2. "Patterns in the Ivy II" – 4:12
Personnel:
Mikael Ĺkerfeldt – Vocals, Guitar
Peter Lindgren – Guitar
Martin Mendez – Bass
Martin Lopez – Drums
Steven Wilson – Backing Vocals, Keyboard & Guitar
Blackwater Park is the fifth studio album from the Swedish progressive death metal band Opeth. It was originally released on February 27, 2001 under Music For Nations and Koch Records. The album is a further continuation of the styles explored on Still Life, incorporating and further expanding on the band's signature sound, which features the merger of death metal, progressive metal and doom metal elements.
Blackwater Park was the first Opeth album to be produced by Porcupine Tree's Steven Wilson, who also provided backing vocals in some of the album's songs. The album was a critical and commercial success for the band, introducing them to a new range of fans. It is generally seen as their breakthrough work. A special edition was later issued with a second disc consisting of two bonus tracks (which were also released separately on the limited edition Still Day Beneath the Sun vinyl record single) and a music video for the song "Harvest".
A radio edit of "The Drapery Falls" was also released as a single to promote the album.
As is typical to Opeth albums, Blackwater Park contrasts both death metal and soft progressive rock styles, often within one song. Typical examples include the opener "The Leper Affinity" and, perhaps most famously, "The Drapery Falls". Both "Harvest" and "Patterns in the Ivy" focus on Opeth's mellow side exclusively, while "The Funeral Portrait" and the title track more or less present the heavy death metal elements.
Several of the songs in this album feature "telephone vocals", an equalization effect which is common in Steven Wilson's music (Porcupine Tree).
The album is named after an obscure German heavy progressive rock band called Blackwater Park.
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