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| Watershed | 
enlarge | Artist: Opeth Label: Roadrunner Records Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $11.98 You Save: $7.00 (37%)
New (46) Used (14) Collectible (1) from $8.18
Avg. Customer Rating: 45 reviews Sales Rank: 4634
Format: Enhanced Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 179362 UPC: 016861793623 EAN: 0016861793623 ASIN: B0018CWWFK
Release Date: June 3, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW/SEALED - Free Upgrade to 1st Class Shipping or Air Mail for International Orders - Everything is Guaranteed or Simply Return It in the Same Conditon for a Complete Refund
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| Tracks:
| • | Coil | | • | Heir Apparent | | • | The Lotus Eater | | • | Burden | | • | Porcelain Heart | | • | Hessian Peel | | • | Hex Omega |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description 2008 album from the forward-thinking Swedish titans, who seemlessly and fluidly combine Metal, Classic Rock, Prog, Folk and Free Form Jazz. With this, their ninth effort, Opeth continue to shake things up, turn the corner and push the limits of their sound. And the results are breathtaking. Ultimately, Watershed sounds at once completely like and absolutely nothing like previous Opeth records. Watershed takes all that is Opeth, and goes where Opeth have never gone before.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 40 more reviews...
"My sweet Satan, I see you..." June 3, 2008 32 out of 35 found this review helpful
Watershed is the ninth Opeth album; and in some ways it signifies a new start for them. This is not totally surprising, given the band has a new guitarist and a new drummer now. Also, they they seem to be in a transition phase musically because Watershed, while encompassing lots of their past hallmarks, also delves into new musical territory.
The differences are mainly demonstrated in their impenetrable song structures, as Mikael Akerfeldt has constructed the album in a more evocative way this time time around. Unlike any other Opeth album, Watershed begins with the short acoustic track "Coil", where strummed acoustic guitars and beautifully arranged string work form the leeway for Akerfeldt and female guest singer Nathalie Lorichs to deliver the verses in an addictively melodic tone. Lorichs' vocals are amazing, and while the song clocks in at only three minutes, that's its charm.
Overall, Watershed is no where near as heavy as the previous Opeth discs, as it boasts a more experimental aesthetic throughout. However, the second track "Heir Apparent" is arguably the heaviest, most brutal Opeth song to date. Not only is it crushingly heavy, it is also the first Opeth tune with no clean vocals whatsoever. Sure, they have other tracks like "Blackwater Park", "Wreath", "The Amen Corner", and "April Ethereal" among others, but all of them contain some clean backing vocals, whispers, humming, et cetera whilst "Heir Apparent" is delivered with Akerfeldt's unmistakable growls from start to finish. Occupied by an assault of guitar fury in its chaotic intro, the piece contains laser-precise drumming and Akerfeldt's suffocating vocals that are contrasted by deft string work and clean, psychedelic-like guitar harmonies soaring over Axenrot's percussion. The ending to the song is equally baffling: smooth layers of guitar melodies overlapping each other.
New drummer Martin Axenrot will pleasantly surprise many an Opeth fan with his performance here. Not only does he play with admirable restraint on most of the album, but he also proves how capable a drummer is on "The Lotus Eater", which is another sound experiment for the band. The drumming on this dissonant tune is stupifyingly good, perhaps among Opeth's finest. Certainly the most technical song on the disc, it features blast beats over which Akerfeldt sings with clean vocals and then growls atop rapid-fire guitar riffery. Very interesting. The rhythm exercise of the song brims with energy, particularly during the instrumental break where guitars, drums and bass clash with each other without taking away from the composition.
Akerfeldt's love for the 70's is exemplified by the gorgeous ballad "Burden", whose main melody is very similar to the stuff Dan Swano does on Unicorn's Emotional Wasteland album. A bit like the material on Damnation, this one sees Opeth branching off into pure balladry mode, with moving guitar solos and vocals. The ending is especially confusing, as Akerfeldt's guitar is manually detuned in the finale. They obviously did it to escape the mellow ballad mood of the tune, and it definitely sets it apart. Despite that weird ending, Opeth proves they can write the best songs in any genre.
This album contains some of Akerfeldt's most enigmatic and personal lyrics, hence the reason why they have been excluded from the booklet. "Hessian Peel", the only ten-plus-minute song on the album, is a total embodiment of Opeth's current musical and lyrical vision. From the sombre acoustic intro to the mournful clean vocals, it evokes a funereal atmosphere where Martin Mendez' bass stands out in the mix. Too bad the bass in Opeth has been almost inaudible since the band's Dan Swano-produced albums, but this track has a healthy dose of his bass throbbing beneath Axenrot's calculated drum battery and the guitar duo's smashing rhythm parts. The song also contains some backward lyrics, most notable between 2:03-2:22. Obviously a reference to Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven", the lyrics read: "Out of the courtyard | Come back tonight | My sweet Satan| I see you". It's a dark tune with ghostly bursts of atmosphere, and Per Wiberg's Mellotron sounds as well as the string arrangement further enhance the tune's power.
Great shifting of dynamics permeats "Porcelain Heart", the only track Akerfeldt co-wrote with Fredrik Akesson. This is perhaps the only song where polar opposites are merged in a single composition: hammering guitar riffs are side by side with oboes (speaking of which, there is plenty of flutes, oboes, cellos on this album -- all live, not keyboard generated) and Akerfeldt's shift from hellish growls to lullaby-like singing in the middle part attests to his diversity. This is perhaps his most haunting moment -- very emotive and heartfelt.
The album ends on a creepy note with "Hex Omega", a curious mix of waves of guitar dissonance, strings floating across the whole track, and a forlorn piano motif. The droney ending of the song lends it a very creepy feel as well.
Watershed to me is a transition from Ghost Reveries much the same way Still Life was from My Arms, Your Hearse. It was only with Blackwater Park when they fully achieved the sound they were aiming for, so I feel their next album may present a larger picture as to where they want to go musically. At any rate, this album is another worthy addition to Opeth's back catalog.
for hopeless delight June 8, 2008 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Among the unknowing, Opeth has a reputation as one of those typical Scandinavian black metal bands. But they left most of that genre's stereotypes behind ages ago when they went prog. This album will probably divide longtime fans sharply into two camps - those who praise the band's continuing progression and experimentation, and the rest who cry sellout. (You can see that pattern in the reviews here.) Regardless, open-minded and adventurous listeners will find this album unexpectedly fascinating. The album is primarily quiet and haunting, with snippets of brutal metal appearing occasionally to manipulate the mood. (Your typical prog metal band constructs albums in the opposite fashion.) Keyboards and melodic vocals are prominent, with the lengthy songs laid out as suites passing through many experiments in style and emotion.
On first playing the opener "Coil," I was telling myself that the fragile acoustic balladry was just an intro and would surely erupt into loud metal at any second, but the song remains quiet throughout. Other thematic surprises include the bizarre jazz fusion break in "The Lotus Eater" and the detuned acoustic guitar solo that finishes off "Burden." Opeth remains among a dying breed of artists who construct albums as full compositions, with unexpected connections between songs and unconventional arrangements, and all of the band's adventures in experimentation can be found in the extra-epic "Hessian Peel." The only potential source of concern for this album is that with so many recent line-up changes, the Opeth sound now appears to be mostly a showcase for the ideas and talents of leader Mikael Akerfeldt and not so much a group effort, though fortunately keyboardist Per Wilberg and brand new drummer Martin Axenrot are especially impressive here. Not to mention Akerfeldt's continuing sense of musical adventure, on constant display throughout this fascinating album. [~doomsdayer520~]
disappointing for opeth's standards June 4, 2008 8 out of 14 found this review helpful
Let me start by saying I am a devoted Opeth fan and am in love with almost everything they have ever recorded. I had very high expectations for this album, and had been looking forward to its release for many months. I was a little disappointed by the result though. Maybe I just had my hopes up too high and was expecting another Ghost Reveries?
The main thing that bugs me about this album is the arrangements of the songs themselves. They are made up of a bunch of cool-sounding sections that don't seem to go with each other at all. It sounds like they were thrown together last minute in the studio from a collection of incomplete parts. Opeth has always put a huge number of musical ideas into each song from the beginning, but transitions were something that has improved in each successive album. For example, the songs on Morningrise abrubtly change back and forth between heavy walls of sound and soft acoustic sections, while Ghost Reveries sounds more like one big piece of music. The heavy and soft parts flow together smoothly and even overlap sometimes. Watershed was a step backwards in this department. It feels like they just lay out each section in a broken, unconnected sequence. This is most apparent in The Lotus Eaters and Porcelain Heart, but also bugs me a little in Heir Apparent and Hex Omega. (The explosion into the heavy part of Hessian Peel I think is an exception and works brilliantly because of the building tension in the first part of the song.)
Axe's drumming for the most part I think is very good. I love the blastbeats in The Lotus Eaters and I think it's clever that they were paired with clean vocals. Sometimes it seems like he's a little too ambitious though. The extended 4-measure fill before the 2nd verse of Porcelain Heart, however, is terrible and sounds like the whole band falls apart momentarily, only to be saved by a click track and studio editing.
I also noticed that growling vocals are pretty sparse on this album. They only exist in Heir Apparent, The Lotus Eaters, and a very small section of Hessian Peel. That's not neccessarily a bad thing, but I do miss them a little. I especially think Hex Omega and Porcelain Heart could use some to break up the repetition and make the heavy parts a little more intense, but I guess that's just a matter of personal taste. Overall, it's a good album by general standards of metal, but I'm holding Opeth to the standards they've set for themselves with albums like Ghost Reveries, Blackwater Park, and Still Life. That being said, I think Heir Apparent is possibly the heaviest song they've ever recorded, and Hessian Peel I also cannot get enough of. However, I'd like to see them fine tune some of the experimental directions they explored on this album and make another masterpiece next year.
"Giving up the ghost" June 13, 2008 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
4.5 stars. While I do not think of "Watershed" as their finest hour, Opeth have crafted an intelligent Progressive Rock/Metal album that continues with the direction of their previous album "Ghost Reveries" but incorporates more Rock than Metal this time around. Mike Akerfeldt is the only remaining band member who has made the entire journey from debut album to current day activity. After hearing that all the other band members were gone I was listening to this new album and waiting for a huge crash and lack of creativity but "Watershed" is innovative beginning to end. Mike Akerfeldt wrote most of the music on previous albums anyway, so my anticipation of the worst was almost entirely unnecessary. With this new recording he adds even more '70s Prog-Rock touches than ever before all the while maintaining that undeniable Opeth feel to the music. As far as hearing anything here resembling albums from the past I am frequently reminded of the slower sections from "Still Life". Those thinking this new album is going to be their most Metal album yet will be disappointed. In fact, the very first time through "Watershed" I was a little confused. The more times I spin the CD the more details I notice, the more ingenious the arrangements become, the more impressive this album sounds. "Blackwater Park" and "Still Life" continue to battle for the top spot as my favorite Opeth album, but I intend to listen to "Watershed" many more times in the future regardless of where it ranks in their amazing catalog.
A perfect blend of experimentation and accessibility June 3, 2008 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
Watershed has been created by a very different Opeth than 2005's Ghost Reveries, and it shows. With the arrival of ex-Arch Enemy guitarist Fredrik Akesson and new drummer Martin Axenrot, Opeth has taken a hard right turn toward prog and thrash, adding harder blastbeats and over-the-top technical guitar work to their formidable sound. Though its heavy elements have moved somewhat closer to the prog-metal norm, Watershed also features a stunning amount of experimentation and richness in its clean sections, making this Opeth's most bizarre, and possibly most satisfying, record.
While the heavier in some ways makes for a more immediate record, one that grabs you by the throat in a way that other Opeth efforts have not, it is also a bit disappointing. In the past, the absence of these traditional metal elements has almost seemed to create a halo effect. Even the heaviest and most punishing songs (post-Morningrise) always seemed to have been written as much for acoustic guitar as electric, and those big, epic chords made Opeth sound like nothing else. Now, traditional speed metal breakdowns and twin harmonies eclipse that particular brand of thunder on some tracks, which is satisfying but is also common in the metal scene. Still, it's effective and will certainly satisfy your headbanging urges.
The clean side of Watershed makes up for the heavy bits' hint of conservatism. These parts are as gorgeous as ever, and now add instruments not heard before. The brief opener, Coil, is entirely acoustic and features a number of new sounds for Opeth - woodwinds, strings, and female vocals. At the end of Lotus Eater, an accordion, or maybe a street organ, can be heard. The lush Burden is a career high point, featuring a deeply lush and beautiful intro and an equally striking and bizarre outro as Akerfeldt detunes his acoustic guitar while playing, until the chords fall apart completely.
There's no question that Watershed lives up to its title. It is more richly orchestrated than any other Opeth album before it, and Akesson's guitar work is undeniably technically superior to Lindgren's. Taken in the context of the rest of Opeth's outstanding catalog, Watershed is vital and forceful, breaking more new ground than any of their albums since My Arms Your Hearse. Highly recommended and easily a record of the year candidate for me. Highlights: Coil, Heir Apparent, Burden.
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