Time can sometimes play tricks on us. So, when the facts state that it's been a decade since the last studio album from Enchant, 2003's TUG OF WAR, you could be forgiven the thought that fate, as mischievous and misleading as ever, has been messing with out memory. A combination of family life, other musical projects and tours had delayed this album, but it's also made the payoff that much sweeter for their loyal fan base. Enchant's 8th album is titled THE GREAT DIVIDE, which is a comment on the way the band have overcome the problems of their lengthy time away and come back better than ever.
S**.
Great CD from a band I should have been paying more attention too.
Years ago I had purchased a live DVD of the band. I’ve listened to it over the years. I like the band, I like their songs. I had intentions of further exploring their catalogue but never got around to it. On a whim, I noticed they came out with a brand new CD, so I ordered a copy. It took a couple of listens but I’ve really grown to love this disk. Circles, is probably my most favorite but there isn’t a song I don’t like. I didn’t really know much about the band other than the front man also is a current member of Spocks Beard and toured with Transatlantic. I was surprised when comparing the line up with the older DVD I have, it’s the same original band. If they toured near me, I’d see them. What else can I say, it’s not hard core prog but this band has their own style and sound. There is a strong bass sound in a few of the tracks that gets my attention but generally, all musicians and vocals on this disk work. Buy it, don’t buy it, that’s up to you. Good band, good CD.
J**R
Very good effort from a really good group!
I've been a long time fan of Enchant and I would consider this to be one of their better CDs. Virtually every song on this CD is excellent and continues to get better with each subsequent listen ... very good music!
C**S
Great Band, Not Great Album
I'll preface this by saying I own all Enchant's work, I love them, and they have been one of my three or four most favorite bands to listen to. I felt their last album, "Tug of War", was their weakest effort. But much like Spock's "guessing" on Star Trek is better than most people's facts, Enchant's worst effort is still pretty darn good in the progressive rock landscape. There are some good tunes on "Tug of War", it's just not as cohesive or as completely good of an album as its predecessors.So what about "The Great Divide"?It leaves a lot to be desired. I'd say it is even weaker than "Tug of War." There's just not a lot here to love.The biggest problem with this album is the lyrical content. One of the reasons I've been a huge fan of Enchant is because of their lyrics. Albums like "Juggling 9 and Dropping 10", "Wounded", or "Break", just slay me. I love those albums. I can't get enough. They wrote some great, smart, often insightful lyrics on those albums. I mean, this has been a progressive rock band that has figured out how to meld challenging rock art music with great lyrical content. But both seem to be lacking on this album.The lyrics on "Great Divide" are just weak. Really weak. Embarrassingly weak. Someone in another review mentioned the spoken word on "Within An Inch". That doesn't even touch the surface of how bad most of the lyrics are. Doesn't matter if they're spoken or not. They just didn't write good lyrics.And musically, this album falls short of the creativity that is evident on other Enchant albums. I say that as a guitar player who spends a lot of time figuring out Ott's work; I love Doug Ott and what he's written on the prior Enchant albums amazes me (the arpeggios on "My Everafter", for instance, are amazing to hear, and so difficult to play). I've always admired his work, how he managed to blend the technical expertise of a guy like Petrucci with the soaring leads of a guy like Neal Schon. Ott is a rare guitarist. He has a history of knowing just what notes to play, and how to phrase leads and melodies. But all his awesome playing is largely missing on this album.Others have said the album and riffs sound recycled, but I'd disagree. I'd take recycled; at least I'd get to hear some of the awesome work from the previous albums. I think the reason this album sounds recycled to people is because the production, when compared to the past albums, is so spot-on. It doesn't sound like these guys took 10 years off. It sounds like they recorded this album alongside "Wounded," which is amazing.What does sound recycled is the riffs *on this album*. Nothing on this album sounds interesting. Most of the guitar work is simple and boring. The lyrics are stale and uninteresting (and often quite cheesy). Where is the Enchant I fell in love with? It's not here on this album.All that said: "All Mixed Up" is a good song, and sounds like it should have landed on the "Wounded" album.
K**9
Great progressive CD.
Excellent CD by this long-time progressive band.
N**N
Two Stars
This album is downright Boring. I like Tug of War much better.
D**M
Five Stars
Excellent copy/Perfect shipping
R**A
Five Stars
The best album to date from this amazing band!! Absolutely stunning arrangements and musicianship!! Can't stop listening!!
M**T
Prognosticator, Indeed!
IMO, their best sounding release to date (and the others are pretty stellar, so this is saying something). Dynamic, punchy, crisp. Thought-provoking lyrics. Progressive, but not arrogantly inaccessible. Welcome return of one of the underrated masters of the subgenre.
O**E
Polished, rousing prog
Prog rock is a funny old beast: on the one hand it is typified by complex time signatures, virtuoso musicianship and profound - frequently rather ludicrous and over-earnest - concepts. On the other hand it can't make up its mind whether it's metal, prog or some weird hybrid. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Take Enchant, for example. They've been around a while and have produced some worthy stuff over the years but they'd be the first to acknowledge that they're not at the more intellectual end of the prog spectrum. Enchant produce rousing, polished, enjoyable prog chock full of luscious harmonies, immaculate production and anthemic soloing - all very American. I stumbled across this band while surfing Amazon for new stuff to listen to and was drawn to the fact that Ted Leonard - once of Spock's Beard, one of my favourites - is vocalist and his precise, high-register style of singing suits the group perfectly. The Great Divide, their first release after a decade-long hiatus, is a great listen and a great package for the uninitiated as it comes with a bonus track and a Best Of album tacked on, a fabulous example of value for money. Great what you can stumble across on Amazon, ain't it?
A**R
Great band, Greater album
Great band ,Greater album !
M**N
Five Stars
excellent
C**E
Excellant CD. Great music highly recommended.
What a great band. Will be buying more of their CD's in the future.
H**D
tolle Vinyl-Ausgabe eines guten Albums
Nachdem über 10 Jahre seit dem letzten Enchant-Album vergangen waren und Sänger Ted Leonard mittlerweile bei Spock`s Beard den scheidenden Nick D`Virgilio am Micro ersetzt hatte, hatte ich kaum noch Hoffnung, daß das lange angekündigte Album der kalifornischen Rocker tatsächlich noch entstehen würde.Umso größer war dann meine Freude,als "THE GREAT DIVIDE" 2014 bei InsideOut veröffentlicht wurde.Die Besetzung war mit Douglas A.Ott (Gitarren, Mellotron), Bill Jenkins (Keyboards, Piano, Orgel), Ted Leonard (Gesang, Gitarre), Ed Platt (Baß) und Sean Flanegan (Drums, Percussion) tatsächlich unverändert geblieben.Nach einer solchen Pause erwartet man ein tolles Album, logisch, fragt sich aber auch, ob es einen Stilwechsel geben würde.Das Cover macht schon mal gut was her, komponiert haben die Musiker mit Übergewicht bei Ott, also alles wie immer.Nun, einen Wechsel in der musikalischen Ausrichtung hat es wahrlich nicht gegeben, das ist zwar irgendwo auch positiv, in diesem Falle deutet es aber auch etwas Negatives an.Es hat keinerlei Fortschritt, keine Weiterentwicklungen gegeben; das ist an sich noch kein Problem, wenn der gewohnte Stil mit tollen frischen Melodien geschickt umgesetzt wurde.Hier ist es jedoch so, daß es etwas an Abwechslung fehlt.Jedes Stück auf "THE GREAT DIVIDE" wäre auf einem Enchant-Album von vor 15 Jahren nicht aufgefallen und umgekehrt.Selbst das stört mich noch nicht wirklich, problematisch ist jedoch, daß sich die Tracks selbst innerhalb des Albums nur moderat voneinander unterscheiden und man ständig das Gefühl hat, das alles schon mal gehört zu haben.Da sind die Riffs, die Breaks, die Art des Gesangs, das Abgehackte an manchen Stellen, die Sounds, die ein Gefühl von Wiederholung bei mir erzeugen.Wieder hat man es hier mit hartem Melodik-Rock mit kleinen Prog-Anteilen zu tun, der an etwas krankt, das, ebenso, wie die oft allzu ähnliche Gangart, bei Enchant nicht neu ist.Es ist ein Verharren im Tempo, ein Fehlen von Tempiwechseln, was die Möglichkeiten der Steigerung, des Spannungsaufbaus, einschränkt bis verhindert.Auf keinem anderen Album der Band fällt mir dies so sehr auf, wie auf "THE GREAT DIVIDE".Innerhalb der Stücke wird zwar schon etwas variiert, über das gesamte Album gesehen habe ich jedoch ständig den Eindruck, daß Stimme, Schlagzeug usw immer im gleichen Modus laufen; es wird nie richtig hart, richtig ausladend, richtig schnell, richtig kuschelig, richtig anders, verändert mal die Klangfarben, den Sound, überrascht mal irgendwie.Diese Gleichförmigkeit im Aufbau in Verbindung mit der Stimme kann sogar zu Lästigkeiten führen, je nach Stimmung.Das alles klingt sehr negativ und tatsächlich bin ich von der Gleichmäßigkeit der Musik etwas enttäuscht, das ändert aber nichts daran, daß das Leiden auf hohem Niveau ist.Selbstverständlich sind, gerade im Bereich Gitarre, viele Details zu entdecken, wirkt die Musik in mancher Melodie-/Rhythmik-Linie vielschichtig und vertrackt, ohne Zweifel ist Ted Leonard ein Sänger mit packender Stimme, welche sich etwas voluminöser, dunkler gibt als früher, was nicht heißt, daß der typische Schrei-Sound seiner Stimme nun Geschichte ist.Die Musiker sind einzeln und im Zusammenspiel eine Bank, die Melodien gut.....und es rockt."THE GREAT DIVIDE" ist also insgesamt schon ein gutes Rock-Album geworden.Ein überragendes allerdings nicht.Sehr erfreulich ist die faire Veröffentlichungspolitik.Zur Doppel-Vinyl-Platte erhält man die CD dabei zusätzlich in einem transparenten Schutzumschlag.Klasse!Die CD-Ausgabe gibt es auch als schicke Special Edition mit Bonus-Live-CD.Da beim Mastering der CD die Dynamik massakriert wurde, lohnt sich die Vinyl-Ausgabe umso mehr.Ohne auf das alte Streitthema (Vinyl oder CD-was klingt besser?) eingehen zu wollen, ist es Fakt, daß die Vinyl-Ausgabe über deutlichst mehr Dynamik verfügt und hörbar luftiger, freier, transparenter klingt, als die CD.Auch das Artwork gewinnt durch die Größe mächtig.Die CD ist übrigens zu der gekillten Dynamik auch noch sehr hoch ausgesteuert.Ob es deshalb durch Fehler beim Mastering zu Clipping kommt, weiß ich nicht, da ich es, den Klang der Vinyl-Ausgabe von "THE GREAT DIVIDE" gewohnt, nie durchgehalten habe, die CD mal durchzuhören.
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