AYREON: THE SOURCE (2017)
CD
I: Chronicle 1: The 'Frame: 1) The
Day That The World Breaks Down; 2) Sea Of Machines; 3) Everybody Dies; Chronicle 2: The Aligning Of The Ten: 4)
Star Of Sirrah; 5) All That Was; 6) Run! Apocalypse! Run!; 7) Condemned To Live.
CD
II: Chronicle 3: The Transmigration:
1) Aquatic Race; 2) The Dream Dissolves; 3) Deathcry Of A Race; 4) Into The
Ocean; Chronicle 4: The Rebirth: 5) Bay
Of Dreams; 6) Planet Y Is Alive!; 7) The Source Will Flow; 8) Journey To
Forever; 9) The Human Compulsion; 10) March Of The Machines.
Where do you go, exactly, after you have just
dealt with The Theory Of Everything?
Any other deity of rock would probably retire into singularity, the karmic
cycle being completed once and for all. And yet again, Arjen
«Beyond-The-Cosmic» Lucassen proves to us that his conscience penetrates far
behind the limits of the unlimited — with his thoughts now bent upon the source that sets the «everything» in
motion. Physicists and cosmologists all over the world, beware: you've got
literally nothing on this guy, who,
with just a humble budget of a few thousand dollars and a little help from his
illustrious friends, is capable of penetrating the mysteries of the universe in
a way that all your billion-dollar colliders and synchrotrons will never be
able to replicate...
...but actually, no. Once you look into the
concept, disappointment quickly sets in, because technically, The Source functions as a constrained prequel
to 01011001, telling the story of an
early human (humanoid?) race living somewhere in the Andromeda Galaxy and
eventually forced out of their homelands by machines that they created
themselves — a story told so many times that I guess it must be true, be it in
the distant future or in the even more distant past. So, a few of these humans
escape, develop some sort of superdrug that helps them live underwater
(apparently, it is the drug that is called ʽThe Sourceʼ), and eventually settle
on Planet Y in the system of Sirrah, where they begin working on even more and
better machines, rebooting the cycle. Frankly, I sort of expected better from
the guy than this regurgitation of a motive he'd already used at least once, or
maybe more than once (honestly, I do not remember).
And if his basic fantasy channels have ceased
to transmit fresh ideas, then what is to be said about his musical channels?
This here is yet another sprawling «soft power metal» opera, spread across four
parts on two CDs and featuring a cast of 12 vocalists for 12 different roles —
this time, however, somewhat less eminent than last time; I recognize Dream
Theater's James LaBrie, Blind Guardian's
Hansi Kürsch, and Symphony X's Russell Allen, but most of the rest are
from even lesser entities (Nightwish, Between The Buried And Me, etc.); then
again, why should the biggies want to star in some wretched prequel, of all things?.. And in terms
of melodies, this is precisely what you expect of Ayreon these days — nothing
more, nothing less; refer to the Theory
Of Everything review, whose musical summary is perfectly applicable to this
album as well.
Which is not to say that it sounds bad, mind
you. By this time, we all know how to treat Ayreon space operas — they are the
musical equivalent of your average Hollywood sci-fi blockbuster, with the word average heavily stressed: good enough
for a relaxed evening of popcorn and Coke, and maybe one extra night of Walter
Mitty-style dreaming if you, like, totally let yourself go. His big advantage
is diversity: the music is still well correlated with the dynamic twists of the
story, so you have your metallic sections with chuggin' riffage, your lyrical
sections with strings and angelic harmonies, your desperate-suicidal sections
with delirious guitar solos, your pastoral sections with Tull-style flutes, and
your ambient-atmospheric sections with electronic loops and heavenly synth
tapestries. If not for the fact that most of the guest vocalists take the «rock
opera» moniker way too seriously and end up outscreaming each other, there
would be very few irritating factors about The Source. But this is power metal, apparently, and so everything
has to be done with power, or else the loyal fans will think they're all faking
it, you know.
Was there anything special, this time, that
somehow managed to seduce my attention? Over ninety minutes of music?
Absolutely and totally nothing. At
best, it was "this sounds totally like Eighties' metal-era Jethro Tull"
(ʽDeathcry Of A Raceʼ), or "this sounds totally like the Alan Parsons
Project" (ʽThe Source Will Flowʼ — needless pun on Frank Herbert here?),
or "this is like a 100% Iron Maiden rip-off, man!" (ʽRun! Apocalypse!
Run!ʼ, for some strange reason not featuring
Bruce Dickinson, but featuring three or four guys who all want to sound like
him). And no, it's not like all the music here is completely stolen — it's that
the tunes to which you might really want to pay some attention are precisely
the ones that sound like classic acts. The ones that just sound like Ayreon
pass by without a twitch.
As for the storyline, I'd advise not to look
too deeply into it. Typical lyric is: "Planet Y is alive, our race will
survive! Forever we're free and forever we'll be and forever we will
dream!" (For some reason, as I mentally translate this into High German
and try to picture this in a Wagner libretto, it no longer sounds that bad — perhaps it is the
operatic-pop singing style, after all, that completes the Heavy Blush effect).
Just drift on the fringes and you'll be okay to survive the ride, with a large
size bucket of heavily buttered popcorn and, preferably, the speakers blasting
this shit at top volume. Also, Floor Jansen (Nightwish) as The Biologist is
hot. I wish they'd give her a couple arias or something (actually, this is one
more flaw: every track here is
delivered by multiple vocalists in short bits, never giving us the chance to
establish much of a bond with any single character — certainly not something
you could ever accuse Wagner of).
I don't know why I am not giving this a thumbs
down. I guess there is still something vaguely amusing about all these Ayreon
albums and how he not only seems to take it all quite seriously himself, but
convinces all his endless guest stars to take it seriously as well. On the
other hand, The Source, like
everything that precedes it, completely lacks the preachy aspects of the worst
prog rock — it's just a sci-fi roller coaster, with an amazing shitload of work
going into it, too, so I can understand all the rave reviews from power metal
and neo-prog lovers. I certainly won't be the one to stop the source from
flowing, much as I'd wish that, every once in a while, it would flow through
slightly less predictable ground.
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