Jump to content

Dimensions (Believer album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 3family6 (talk | contribs) at 00:50, 15 April 2020 (added Category:Symphonic metal albums by American artists using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dimensions
Studio album by
Released1993
Genre
Length52:42
Label
ProducerThe Trauma Team with Ted Hermanson
Believer chronology
Sanity Obscure
(1990)
Dimensions
(1993)
Gabriel
(2009)
Alternative cover
R.E.X. Records

Dimensions is the third album by the Christian progressive thrash metal band Believer, released in 1993 on both Roadrunner Records and R.E.X. Records. The album's last song, "Trilogy of Knowledge", is split into four separate parts and tells of the life of Jesus Christ. The lyrics recount events from the Bible (often expressed in first person), and include opera vocals, orchestral instruments, acoustic guitars, distorted guitars, and more.[1] Although the album was critically lauded, the band disbanded the following year, but reformed in 2005.

Recording

The pre-production of Dimensions was recorded at Trauma Studios, and was produced by The Trauma Team and Ted Hermanson who did the engineering, assisted by the drummer Joey Daub. Wyatt Robertson and David Baddorf left Believer before the band began recording Dimensions. Jim Winters joined as bassist and also played some guitar parts during the recording sessions. On this album, Glenn Fischbach played cello, Scott Laird played violins and violas, and Julianne Laird Hoge performed soprano vocals. The album was mastered at The Hit Factory, DMS, New York, by Chris Gehringer. The cover art and illustration was done by Dave McKean.

The album was released in 1993 and turned out to be the band's most technical, progressive, and ambitious album. Both Roadrunner Records and R.E.X. Records released it with a different cover art.

The lyrics on Dimensions deal with philosophy. For example, on the song "Dimentia" the lyrics deal with the philosophical paradoxes and the ponderings of Sigmund Freud, Thomas J. J. Altizer, Ludwig Feuerbach and Jean-Paul Sartre about the existence of God. The song specifically quotes Altizer's The Gospel of Christian Atheism, Sartre's Being and Nothingness, Feuerbach's The Essence of Christianity, and Freud's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.

The symphonic metal suite ”Trilogy of Knowledge”, divided to three chapters and an intro, is an over 20 minute epic and Biblical story about life of Jesus Christ and knowledge of good and evil. ”Trilogy of Knowledge” once again featured the orchestral compositions of Scott Laird and soprano vocals by Julianne Laird Hoge.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Phantom Tollbooth[2]
Cross Rhythms[3]
Matt Morrow90/100[4]

While some fans preferred Sanity Obscure over Dimensions, the critics considered Dimensions as the album that separated Believer from average thrash metal groups,[5] and praised the album's musical output.[4] Tom MacMillan of The Phantom Tollbooth claims that "Believer's last offering to the musical world proved a metal classic" and "Dimensions is one of the greatest progressive metal albums of all time."[2] Rating the album 5/5, MacMillan writes:

Believer were masters at molding emotion and developing mood in songwriting. Immediately, the band stands out. The vocals are excellent, well-performed, and not as unpleasant as one might think growling to be. The lead guitar parts, performed by Kurt Bachman, are amazing; unrestrained without being pompous. Jim Winters matches the skill and precision of Bachman in a similar way with his bass guitar.[2]

Matt Anderson of Cross Rhythms also gave the album a perfect score, concluding that Dimensions was "A brilliant album. Only Believer could have dreamt up such an album."[3] AllMusic highlighted the 20-minute "Trilogy of Knowledge."[6]

Jeff Wagner stated in the book Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal that "as tech metal albums go, it is a masterpiece of frigid guitar tones, warped riffs, and constant tempo changes," and "with Dimensions, Believer had borne a dense, challenging monolith of progressive metal that has few equals, even years later."[7]

Track listing

  1. "Gone" (K. Bachman/ J. Winters) - 5:47
  2. "Future Mind" (K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J. Winters)- 5:34
  3. "Dimentia" (K.Bachman/ J. Daub/ J.Winters/ D. Man)- 5:36
  4. "What Is But Cannot Be" (K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J.Winters/ D. Man) - 5:28
  5. "Singularity" (K.Bachman/ J.Winters/ D. Man) - 4:24
  6. "No Apology" (K.Bachman/ J. Daub/ J.Winters/ D. Man/ D. Baddorf) - 4:55
  7. "Trilogy of Knowledge: Intro: The Birth" - 2:17 (S. Laird/ K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J. Winters)
  8. "Trilogy of Knowledge: Movement I: The Lie" - 5:27 (S. Laird/ K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J. Winters)
  9. "Trilogy of Knowledge: Movement II: The Truth" - 6:46 (S. Laird/ K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J. Winters)
  10. "Trilogy of Knowledge: Movement III: The Key" - 6:21 (S. Laird/ K. Bachman/ J. Daub/ J. Winters)

Personnel

Believer
  • Kurt Bachman - vocals, guitar
  • Joey Daub - drums, assistant engineer
  • Jim Winters - bass, guitar
Additional Musicians
  • Scott Laird - violins, violas
  • Glenn Fischbach - cello
  • Julianne Laird Hoge - soprano
  • William Keller - speaking voice
Production
  • Ted Hermanson & The Trauma Team - production and engineering
  • Chris Gerhinger - mastering
  • Dave McKean - cover art (Roadrunner version)

References

  1. ^ Bush, John (2005-04-30). "Dimensions". Allmusic. Open Publishing. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
  2. ^ a b c Shari Lloyd. "Phantom Tollbooth review". Tollbooth.org. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  3. ^ a b Anderson, Matt (April 1, 1994). "Believer - Dimensions". Cross Rhythms (20). Cornerstone House. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  4. ^ a b Morrow, Matt (2004-03-02). "Believer - Dimensions". The Whipping Post. Open Publishing. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
  5. ^ Majalahti, Michael (2004-03-02). "The Best Kept Secrets in Rock". Imperiumi. Open Publishing. Archived from the original on 2007-10-22. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
  6. ^ Bush, John. "Dimensions". AllMusic. All Media Guide. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  7. ^ Jeff Wagner (2010). Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal. Bazillion Points Books. ISBN 978-0-9796163-3-4.