Lament for the Weary explained

Lament for the Weary
Type:Studio
Artist:Seventh Angel
Cover:Seventh Angel - Lament for the Weary.jpg
Released:1991
Recorded:4–16 July 1991
Studio:ICC Studios in Eastbourne, England
Genre:Christian metal, thrash metal, doom metal
Length:55:45
Label:Edge Records, Under One Flag (Music for Nations), Metal Mind Productions, Retroactive Records
Producer:Roy M. Rowland
Prev Title:The Torment
Prev Year:1990
Next Title:Heed the Warning: Live & Demo Recordings
Next Year:2005

Lament for the Weary is Christian thrash metal band Seventh Angel's second studio album, released in late 1991 on Music for Nations. The album saw the band incorporating doom metal elements to thrash. The album garnered generous reviews from British music press at the time. Lament for the Weary is a concept album about a man who suffered abuse during childhood and struggles with depression and suicidal thoughts in adulthood. On his deathbed, the man gets his childhood faith back and is not afraid to die anymore.

Recording history

The album was recorded during 4–16 July 1991 at ICC Studios with producer Roy Rowland. The album was mixed during 1–10 August 1991., from the New Testament, is written on the back cover of the album. The cover art for the album was done by British artist Rodney Matthews.

On the album, the style changed to a more progressive and atmospheric combination of doom metal and thrash. The guitars were tuned down to D, and the compositions include acoustic passages such as on the title track, driven with a samples of raining to create a melancholic atmosphere. The drummer Tank's musicianship is more varied compared to that on The Torment (1990). The album begins with a mid-tempo instrumental. The tempo increases as "Life in All Its Emptiness" begins. Arkley plays curbed yet intimidating solos and melodies on technical rhythm guitar riffs.

Lament for the Weary has been reissued on various record labels. In 2008, a remaster was released by Polish label Metal Mind Productions, which was limited to 2,000 copies and included the demo song "The Turning Tide" as a bonus track. In 2005 and 2018, American label Retroactive Records released remasters of the album, the latter being part of the "Legends Remastered" series of reissues.

Reception

Lynn Williams of UK magazine Cross Rhythms wrote in an issue published on 1 July 1992 that Lament for the Weary is a clear improvement over The Torment and called Lament "superior thrash". In a 2005 review of the album's reissue, The Whipping Post's Matt Morrow states that Lament for the Weary belongs to one of the very best albums of heavy metal music in general and that the album is "a classic in every sense of the word".[1] In the 2005 reissue edition's liner notes, Nick Bolton writes that "the guitar work led one reviewer to declare that the album contains some of the best guitar solos he had ever heard". After the release, the band played concerts in Germany and the Netherlands.

In the 2018 reissue liner notes for Lament for the Weary, Ian Arkley writes: "The recordings we ended up with are something I am still very proud of."[2]

Track listing

live version appears on Heed the Warning: Live & Demo Recordings (2005)

appears on the Demo Collection (2017)

Personnel

Seventh Angel

Production

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/seventhangellamentforthewearyreissue.htm "Seventh Angel – Lament for the Weary"
  2. Arkley, Ian. Lament for the Weary (booklet). 2018 reissue. Retroactive Records. Consulted 18 February 2023.