Progarchives, the progressive rock ultimate discography
Psychotic Waltz - Dark Millenium CD (album) cover

DARK MILLENIUM

Psychotic Waltz

 

Progressive Metal

3.04 | 8 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

UMUR
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Dark Millenium is a post/ archives release from US progressive metal act Psychotic Waltz. I´ve recently reviewed another archive release from the band called Live & Archives (1998) which I found was solely a fan item. Very interesting for me as a fan but not recommendable for anyone just partially interested in the band. Dark Millenium is a notch more interesting and even though this album is also mostly a fan release it does have some songs that could be interesting for the more casual fan/ listener.

The first six songs on the album are all in the vein of keyboard soundtrack music. Very classical music influenced. Sadness is the only song with drums and some melodic guitars. I´m not very impressed by those songs but then again I´m not annoyed either. Very average though. The most exciting part of Dark Millenium for me starts with track number seven called Pleasures of the Flesh and the two following songs Flight to Nowhere and The Dream, the latter two are also featured on the second Darkstar ( Dan Rock project) album Heart of Darkness (1999). I haven´t heard that album yet so I don´t know if those two songs appear in different versions here. All three songs are great instrumental songs with lots of tasty melodic guitars and spacy keyboard sounds. Very Darkstar like. This first part of the album cannot be said to be a band performance as only the two guitarists Brian McAlpine and Dan Rock are credited as performers on those songs. The first seven songs are created by Brian McAlpine and is a concept called PENETRALIA, a soundtrack for reaching the higher spheres into narcotic dances ( Typical weird title). Flight to Nowhere and The Dream are credited to both Dan Rock and Brian McAlpine.

The second part of the album is a band effort and it starts with a studio cover version of Black Sabbath´s Disturbing the Priest. A really enjoyable cover song that one. The three next songs are live versions of Nothing, And the Devil Cried and In this Place ( all from the debut album A Social Grace) recorded on the 20th of May 1991 at the Dynamo festival in Eindhoven, The Netherlands. The songs have bootleg sound quality which is not very impressive when you remember that Dark Millenium is an official release. There´s nothing wrong with the performance though. Powerful and skilled performance. The next three songs are cover versions of In the Flesh ( Pink Floyd), Disturbing the Priest ( Black Sabbath) and Diary of a Madman( Ozzy Osbourne) recorded live in the summer of 1990. Again the performance is great but the sound is bootleg quality. The album ends with a short interview clip with Mike Clift ( I´m not sure who he is?).

Dark Millenium is as I mentioned in the beginning of the review mostly a fan release and maybe I should only rate it 2 stars but I do feel that it could have some value for the casual listener and I think a 2 star rating will give the wrong impression so my final rating will be 3 stars. I would get the four studio albums before this one though.

UMUR | 3/5 |

MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE

As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.

You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).

Forum user
Forum password

Share this PSYCHOTIC WALTZ review

Social review comments () BETA







Review related links

Copyright Prog Archives, All rights reserved. | Legal Notice | Privacy Policy | Advertise | RSS + syndications

Other sites in the MAC network: JazzMusicArchives.com — jazz music reviews and archives | MetalMusicArchives.com — metal music reviews and archives

Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.