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LYDIAN SEA

Progressive Metal • United States


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Lydian Sea biography
LYDIAN SEA is a progressive metal band from Chicago, Illinois consisting of Danny McCartney (vocals), Ron Gonzalez (vocals, guitars, keyboards), Mike Szot (bass, moog pedals), and Mike McCarron (drums, percussion, vocals).

They released their self titled debut album "Lydian Sea" in 2001 on GSS/Impulse Records.

In 2005, they released their second album "Architect of Humanity" also on GSS/Impulse Records.

In 2007, they released some earlier work from the 90s as "Invisible Reign" and "Portraits of Thought" both on Retrospective Records.

WHY THIS BAND IS IN THE ARCHIVES:

LYDIAN SEA concentrates on melodic vocal harmonies with complex rhythms, aggressive guitars and harmonious keyboard textures. They were approved by the Prog Metal Team and are recommended for fans of melodic metal.

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LYDIAN SEA discography


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LYDIAN SEA top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.05 | 2 ratings
Lydian Sea
2001
3.00 | 1 ratings
Architect Of Humanity
2005
5.00 | 1 ratings
Invisible Reign
2007
5.00 | 1 ratings
Portraits Of Thought
2007
0.00 | 0 ratings
III. Tranquil Memories
2018

LYDIAN SEA Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

LYDIAN SEA Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

LYDIAN SEA Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

LYDIAN SEA Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

LYDIAN SEA Reviews


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 Lydian Sea by LYDIAN SEA album cover Studio Album, 2001
3.05 | 2 ratings

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Lydian Sea
Lydian Sea Progressive Metal

Review by J-Man
Prog Reviewer

3 stars Lydian Sea is a melodic progressive metal band from Chicago, Illinois that has unfortunately slipped under the radar by most fans of the genre. A bit of a shame actually, since their sound on this self-titled debut album should be right up the alley of prog metal purists. Lydian Sea displays a strong influence from the likes of Fates Warning and Queensr˙che on this debut, and while this is certainly not a unique release by any stretch of the imagination, it's a competent enough debut from these American lads. While I am not yet familiar with the Lydian Sea's later releases to see if they've gained a more original approach over time, this is a good album with an abundance of catchy hooks, intricate musicianship, and memorable choruses.

The music on Lydian Sea is best described as a cross between Fates Warning, Queensr˙che, and Dream Theater, but I'd say the album most heavily relies on the intricate melodic heavy metal formula of Fates Warning's Parallels. Most of the songs here are rather straightforward and chorus-based, yet the intricate musicianship keeps it from ever sounding quite like a standard melodic metal album. While there are plenty of catchy choruses and impressive instrumental showcases on Lydian Sea, my biggest gripe is that it hardly brings anything to the table that hasn't been done dozens of times before. This is a very 'safe' release that does little to establish Lydian Sea from your average twenty-first century progressive metal act with little more to offer than what Fates Warning did back in 1991. The production isn't too great either, and the sound is a bit too muddy for my tastes. While certainly not horrible, the production does come across as a bit amateurish to these ears. Thankfully, the songwriting is generally pretty solid, and the nine-minute "Infinite Journey" is actually an excellent composition to these ears.

This can best be described as a promising debut, but not a whole lot more than that. Lydian Sea established themselves as competent musicians and capable songwriters without much to offer in the creativity department - listening to future albums will determine whether or not the band gained their own identity later on in their career. As far as this album is concerned, it's a decent but entirely non-essential debut that's only recommended to fans of the band and forgotten melodic progressive metal releases. This is average in nearly every sense of the word, so 2.5 - 3 stars would be a pretty appropriate score. While my reaction has been rather lukewarm, I am curious to hear what Lydian Sea has to offer on future efforts.

Thanks to Plankowner for the artist addition.

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