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Sanity Obscure

Sanity Obscure is the second studio album by the American Christian thrash metal band Believer. It was initially released in 1990 on R.E.X. and later in 1991 on Roadrunner, marking the band's label debut for Roadrunner.[1] Several mainstream magazines praised the album.[2]

Sanity Obscure
Studio album by
Released1990 (1990)
Recorded1990
StudioMorning Star Studios, Spring House, Pennsylvania
GenreProgressive metal, thrash metal, symphonic metal
Length37:49
LabelR.E.X., Roadrunner, Retroactive, Metal Mind
ProducerDoug Mann, Paul Krueger
Believer chronology
Extraction from Mortality
(1989)
Sanity Obscure
(1990)
Dimensions
(1993)

Style, writing, composition edit

The band thought that the album "highlighted our German thrash influences such as Kreator and Destruction". Also, they "started experimenting with different rhythm structures" and "decided to expand our use of strings" with the song "Dies Irae (Day of Wrath)" as a result.[1]

Sanity Obscure begins with an intro called "Teddy Bears", in which a musical box tune distorts into obscurity. The album contains "dissonant guitar riffs, unusual stop-start rhythms and complicated arrangements", with Kurt Bachman's vocals being "the only conventional sounding characteristic of Sanity Obscure."[3]

The lyrics deal with theology and social issues. "Wisdom's Call" is about personal wisdom and its calling that simple people reject. "Stop the Madness" talks about a drug user who has been brainwashed by a decaying world, and is always searching to belong but is unable to tell where their shattered dreams are. "Nonpoint" takes a stance on the dark side of the industrialized society where general ignorance has caused pollution that corrupts nature, and in the end, man's soul. "Like a Song" is a cover of a U2's rebel song which ponders that one must start revolution from within oneself before one can change the world.

According to Jeff Wagner in his book Mean Deviation, the song "Dies Irae (Day of Wrath)" was a creative watershed in metal, and except for Mekong Delta, no other extreme metal band at the time had merged the genre with classical music so seamlessly.[4] The orchestral section was conducted by Scott Laird, "who was Kurt's orchestra teacher in High School and also recorded the strings for the intro to the title track on 'Extraction From Mortality'".[1] The song's first three minutes consist of orchestrated strings, synthesizer effects and the soprano vocals of Julianne Laird Hoge, Scott Laird's sister and at the time working as a professional opera singer.[1] After that the band joins in with its thrash metal output in contrast with the orchestration. Doug Mann executed the concept of the song and the band section was composed by Kurt Bachman. Dies irae itself is a Latin poem or hymn which prays mercy at the dawn of apocalypse. The poem was originally written by Thomas of Celano, an Italian friar of the Franciscans, who lived in 13th century and was an obligatory part of the Roman Catholic Requiem Mass for some centuries before 1969. Kurt Bachman stated that the song was inspired by Mozart's Requiem Mass.[3] The song's text can be found as the Catholic chant "Libera me" and is sung in its entirety in Latin. Due to "the expense needed to travel and perform with an orchestra" the song was performed live only once.[1]

Recording, production edit

Sanity Obscure was recorded and mixed within approximately two weeks. The band used four layers for the rhythm guitar tracks.[1]

Release edit

The band released a promo single for the track "Stop the Madness", which also featured album track "Like a Song" and an anti-drug PSA.[5]

The original pressings of both R.E.X. Records and Roadrunner Records are sold out these days and are hard to find.[2]

In 2005, Canadian record label Retroactive Records issued a 1000 units pressing of Sanity Obscure, in which they had included an instrumental "bonus track" from Believer's 1987 demo The Return titled "I.Y.F.". This caused some controversy when both Kurt Bachman and Joey Daub informed that they would have not give permission to include extra material if they were asked. In their opinion, the track listing should have stayed as it originally was. However, the record company did not break any copyright laws.[6]

Polish label Metal Mind Productions reissued Sanity Obscure as a remastered digipak version with liner notes by the band on November 5, 2007, along with the albums Extraction from Mortality and Dimensions.[7]

Reception and legacy edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [2]
Cross Rhythms10/10[8]
Fear     [9]
Guitar World     [10]

Sanity Obscure received a wider audience than Extraction from Mortality. Although Sanity Obscure never really became popular, several mainstream magazines praised the album.[2] According to Jeff Wagner, the song Dies Irae "foreshadowed the operatic approach of future metal bands such as Therion and Nightwish."[3] A retrospective review by Decibel called the song "one of the earliest recorded examples of symphonic metal, using orchestral parts and operatic female vocals that presaged both Nightwish and S&M."[11]

According to the members of Doomworld, the video game musician Robert Prince covered the title song "Sanity Obscure" for the video game Doom in E1M6 level's song "On the Hunt" (see: Making of Doom). The song "Dies Irae (Day of Wrath)" also appeared on the soundtrack of the skating video series of CKY.

The alternative metal band Nonpoint got their name from the namesake song off Sanity Obscure.

In 2010, HM Magazine ranked Sanity Obscure #42 on its Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of all-time list stating: "When Christians make art that blows people away with its creativity, skill and excellence ... well, isn’t that the way it’s supposed to be when people are in relation to the Creator? Sanity Obscure – case in point."[12] In the August 2010 issue of Heaven's Metal fanzine, the album ranked #10 on the Top 100 Christian metal albums of all-time list.

Touring edit

Following the release of Sanity Obscure, Believer toured first in Europe and then, in 1991, with British death metal band Bolt Thrower and Canadian thrash metal band Sacrifice in the United States.[1][13]

Track listing edit

All tracks are written by Kurt Bachman, Joey Daub, David Baddorf and Wyatt Robertson except where noted

No.TitleLength
1."Sanity Obscure"6:06
2."Wisdom's Call"3:44
3."Nonpoint"5:14
4."Idols of Ignorance"4:39
5."Stop the Madness"3:56
6."Dies Irae (Day of Wrath)"5:41
7."Dust to Dust"5:02
8."Like a Song" (Written by U2)3:27

Personnel edit

Believer edit

  • Kurt Bachman – vocals, guitar, band section composition (6)
  • Joey Daub – drums
  • Wyatt Robertson – bass
  • David Baddorf – guitar

Additional musicians edit

  • Julianne Laird Hoge – soprano (6)

Technical personnel edit

  • Doug Mann – production
  • Paul Krueger – production
  • Paul Krueger – engineering
  • Jeff Spencer – cover art
  • Tom Storm – photos
  • Ted Hermanson – intro engineering (1)
  • Scott Laird – orchestral composition (6)

Chart positions edit

Chart (1991) Peak
position
US Top Contemporary Christian (Billboard)[14] 25

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bachman, Kurt; Daub, Joey (2007). Sanity Obscure (booklet). Believer (band). Katowice, Poland: Metal Mind Productions. p. 2.
  2. ^ a b c d Torreano, Bradley. Believer Sanity Obscure at AllMusic. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Wagner 2010, p. 155
  4. ^ Jeff Wagner, Steven Wilson (2010). Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal. Bazillion Points Books. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-9796163-3-4. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
  5. ^ Waters, Scott. "Believer". No Life 'til Metal. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  6. ^ Waters, Scott (May 6, 2005). . Blabbermouth. Roadrunner Records. Archived from the original on May 7, 2005. Retrieved December 4, 2007.
  7. ^ "Believer Albums To Be Reissued". Blabbermouth.net. October 12, 2007. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  8. ^ Bibby, Si (August 1, 1991). "Believer - Sanity Obscure". Cross Rhythms. No. 7. Stoke-on-Trent: Cornerstone House. ISSN 0967-540X. OCLC 500051110. from the original on July 1, 2013. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  9. ^ Braille, Andy (July 1991). "Sanity Obscure Believer". Fear. No. 31. Ludlow, Shropshire: Newsfield. p. 78. ISSN 0954-8017. OCLC 500100046.
  10. ^ Sides, Marc; Whitman, Keith (October 1991). "Believer Sanity Obscure". Guitar World. Vol. 12, no. 10. New York: Harris Publications. p. 109. ISSN 1045-6295. OCLC 878444575.
  11. ^ Treppel, Jeff (November 9, 2012). "The Lazarus Pit: Believer's Sanity Obscure". Decibel. Alex Mulcahy. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  12. ^ HM Staff. . HM Magazine. Open Publishing. Archived from the original on July 20, 2010. Retrieved July 17, 2010.
  13. ^ Sharpe-Young, Garry (2007). Metal: The Definitive Guide. London: Jawbone Press. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-1-906002-01-5.
  14. ^ "Top Contemporary Christian". Billboard. Vol. 103, no. 16. New York: BPI Communications. April 20, 1991. p. 60. ISSN 0006-2510. OCLC 4086332.

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Sanity Obscure is the second studio album by the American Christian thrash metal band Believer It was initially released in 1990 on R E X and later in 1991 on Roadrunner marking the band s label debut for Roadrunner 1 Several mainstream magazines praised the album 2 Sanity ObscureStudio album by BelieverReleased1990 1990 Recorded1990StudioMorning Star Studios Spring House PennsylvaniaGenreProgressive metal thrash metal symphonic metalLength37 49LabelR E X Roadrunner Retroactive Metal MindProducerDoug Mann Paul KruegerBeliever chronologyExtraction from Mortality 1989 Sanity Obscure 1990 Dimensions 1993 Contents 1 Style writing composition 2 Recording production 3 Release 4 Reception and legacy 5 Touring 6 Track listing 7 Personnel 7 1 Believer 7 2 Additional musicians 7 3 Technical personnel 8 Chart positions 9 ReferencesStyle writing composition editThe band thought that the album highlighted our German thrash influences such as Kreator and Destruction Also they started experimenting with different rhythm structures and decided to expand our use of strings with the song Dies Irae Day of Wrath as a result 1 Sanity Obscure begins with an intro called Teddy Bears in which a musical box tune distorts into obscurity The album contains dissonant guitar riffs unusual stop start rhythms and complicated arrangements with Kurt Bachman s vocals being the only conventional sounding characteristic of Sanity Obscure 3 The lyrics deal with theology and social issues Wisdom s Call is about personal wisdom and its calling that simple people reject Stop the Madness talks about a drug user who has been brainwashed by a decaying world and is always searching to belong but is unable to tell where their shattered dreams are Nonpoint takes a stance on the dark side of the industrialized society where general ignorance has caused pollution that corrupts nature and in the end man s soul Like a Song is a cover of a U2 s rebel song which ponders that one must start revolution from within oneself before one can change the world According to Jeff Wagner in his book Mean Deviation the song Dies Irae Day of Wrath was a creative watershed in metal and except for Mekong Delta no other extreme metal band at the time had merged the genre with classical music so seamlessly 4 The orchestral section was conducted by Scott Laird who was Kurt s orchestra teacher in High School and also recorded the strings for the intro to the title track on Extraction From Mortality 1 The song s first three minutes consist of orchestrated strings synthesizer effects and the soprano vocals of Julianne Laird Hoge Scott Laird s sister and at the time working as a professional opera singer 1 After that the band joins in with its thrash metal output in contrast with the orchestration Doug Mann executed the concept of the song and the band section was composed by Kurt Bachman Dies irae itself is a Latin poem or hymn which prays mercy at the dawn of apocalypse The poem was originally written by Thomas of Celano an Italian friar of the Franciscans who lived in 13th century and was an obligatory part of the Roman Catholic Requiem Mass for some centuries before 1969 Kurt Bachman stated that the song was inspired by Mozart s Requiem Mass 3 The song s text can be found as the Catholic chant Libera me and is sung in its entirety in Latin Due to the expense needed to travel and perform with an orchestra the song was performed live only once 1 Recording production editSanity Obscure was recorded and mixed within approximately two weeks The band used four layers for the rhythm guitar tracks 1 Release editThe band released a promo single for the track Stop the Madness which also featured album track Like a Song and an anti drug PSA 5 The original pressings of both R E X Records and Roadrunner Records are sold out these days and are hard to find 2 In 2005 Canadian record label Retroactive Records issued a 1000 units pressing of Sanity Obscure in which they had included an instrumental bonus track from Believer s 1987 demo The Return titled I Y F This caused some controversy when both Kurt Bachman and Joey Daub informed that they would have not give permission to include extra material if they were asked In their opinion the track listing should have stayed as it originally was However the record company did not break any copyright laws 6 Polish label Metal Mind Productions reissued Sanity Obscure as a remastered digipak version with liner notes by the band on November 5 2007 along with the albums Extraction from Mortality and Dimensions 7 Reception and legacy editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 Cross Rhythms10 10 8 Fear nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 Guitar World nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 Sanity Obscure received a wider audience than Extraction from Mortality Although Sanity Obscure never really became popular several mainstream magazines praised the album 2 According to Jeff Wagner the song Dies Irae foreshadowed the operatic approach of future metal bands such as Therion and Nightwish 3 A retrospective review by Decibel called the song one of the earliest recorded examples of symphonic metal using orchestral parts and operatic female vocals that presaged both Nightwish and S amp M 11 According to the members of Doomworld the video game musician Robert Prince covered the title song Sanity Obscure for the video game Doom in E1M6 level s song On the Hunt see Making of Doom The song Dies Irae Day of Wrath also appeared on the soundtrack of the skating video series of CKY The alternative metal band Nonpoint got their name from the namesake song off Sanity Obscure In 2010 HM Magazine ranked Sanity Obscure 42 on its Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of all time list stating When Christians make art that blows people away with its creativity skill and excellence well isn t that the way it s supposed to be when people are in relation to the Creator Sanity Obscure case in point 12 In the August 2010 issue of Heaven s Metal fanzine the album ranked 10 on the Top 100 Christian metal albums of all time list Touring editFollowing the release of Sanity Obscure Believer toured first in Europe and then in 1991 with British death metal band Bolt Thrower and Canadian thrash metal band Sacrifice in the United States 1 13 Track listing editAll tracks are written by Kurt Bachman Joey Daub David Baddorf and Wyatt Robertson except where notedNo TitleLength1 Sanity Obscure 6 062 Wisdom s Call 3 443 Nonpoint 5 144 Idols of Ignorance 4 395 Stop the Madness 3 566 Dies Irae Day of Wrath 5 417 Dust to Dust 5 028 Like a Song Written by U2 3 27Personnel editBeliever edit Kurt Bachman vocals guitar band section composition 6 Joey Daub drums Wyatt Robertson bass David Baddorf guitarAdditional musicians edit Julianne Laird Hoge soprano 6 Technical personnel edit Doug Mann production Paul Krueger production Paul Krueger engineering Jeff Spencer cover art Tom Storm photos Ted Hermanson intro engineering 1 Scott Laird orchestral composition 6 Chart positions editChart 1991 PeakpositionUS Top Contemporary Christian Billboard 14 25References edit a b c d e f g Bachman Kurt Daub Joey 2007 Sanity Obscure booklet Believer band Katowice Poland Metal Mind Productions p 2 a b c d Torreano Bradley Believer Sanity Obscure at AllMusic Retrieved May 24 2020 a b c Wagner 2010 p 155 Jeff Wagner Steven Wilson 2010 Mean Deviation Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal Bazillion Points Books p 155 ISBN 978 0 9796163 3 4 Retrieved August 6 2011 Waters Scott Believer No Life til Metal Retrieved March 6 2021 Waters Scott May 6 2005 Believer Frontman Slams Label For Reissuing Band s Catalog With Bonus Tracks Blabbermouth Roadrunner Records Archived from the original on May 7 2005 Retrieved December 4 2007 Believer Albums To Be Reissued Blabbermouth net October 12 2007 Retrieved March 6 2021 Bibby Si August 1 1991 Believer Sanity Obscure Cross Rhythms No 7 Stoke on Trent Cornerstone House ISSN 0967 540X OCLC 500051110 Archived from the original on July 1 2013 Retrieved May 24 2020 Braille Andy July 1991 Sanity Obscure Believer Fear No 31 Ludlow Shropshire Newsfield p 78 ISSN 0954 8017 OCLC 500100046 Sides Marc Whitman Keith October 1991 Believer Sanity Obscure Guitar World Vol 12 no 10 New York Harris Publications p 109 ISSN 1045 6295 OCLC 878444575 Treppel Jeff November 9 2012 The Lazarus Pit Believer s Sanity Obscure Decibel Alex Mulcahy Retrieved June 4 2015 HM Staff Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of All Time HM Magazine Open Publishing Archived from the original on July 20 2010 Retrieved July 17 2010 Sharpe Young Garry 2007 Metal The Definitive Guide London Jawbone Press pp 139 140 ISBN 978 1 906002 01 5 Top Contemporary Christian Billboard Vol 103 no 16 New York BPI Communications April 20 1991 p 60 ISSN 0006 2510 OCLC 4086332 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sanity Obscure amp oldid 1165555041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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