ANATHEMA — The Optimist

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ANATHEMA - The Optimist cover
2.77 | 9 ratings | 2 reviews
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Album · 2017

Filed under Non-Metal
By ANATHEMA

Tracklist

1. 32.63N 117.14W (1:16)
2. Leaving It Behind (4:28)
3. Endless Ways (5:49)
4. The Optimist (5:37)
5. San Francisco (4:59)
6. Springfield (5:49)
7. Ghosts (4:17)
8. Can't Let Go (5:00)
9. Close Your Eyes (3:38)
10. Wildfires (5:39)
11. Back To The Start (7:30)*

Total time 58:14

Line-up/Musicians

- Daniel Cavanagh / guitars, vocals, keyboards, bass
- Vincent Cavanagh / vocals, guitars, keyboards, programming, bass
- Jamie Cavanagh / bass
- John Douglas / drums, keyboards, programming
- Lee Douglas / vocals
- Daniel Cardoso / drums

Additional musicians:
- Greg Lawson / violin
- Alistair Savage / violin
- Emily Ward / violin
- Kobus Frick / violin
- Liza Webb / violin
- Paul Medd / violin
- Tom Dunn / viola
- Sophie Rathbone / viola
- Robert Anderson / cello
- Duncan Lyall / double bass
- Michael Owers / trombone

About this release

CD, Kscope - kscope356 (UK, 2017)
2xLP, 180, Kscope - Kscope922 (2017, Europe)
2xLP, Ltd, Blu, Kscope - KSCOPE944 (2017, Europe)
2xLP, Ltd, Cle, Kscope - Kscope944/KSCOPE944C (2017, Europe)
2xLP, Ltd, Red, Kscope - Kscope944/KSCOPE944D (2017, Europe)
2xLP, Ltd, Sil, Kscope - Kscope944/KSCOPE944D (2017, Europe)
2xLP, Whi, Kscope - Kscope944 (2017, Europe)
Blu-ray, Blu-ray-A, MC, Kscope - Kscope532 (2017, Europe)
CD, Kscope/Chaos Reigns/Ward Records - GQCS-90360 (2017, JP)
CD, Blue-ray, Blue-ray-A, Ltd, Kscope/Chaos Reigns/Ward Reigns - GQCS-90358 (2017, JP)
CD, CD + DVD-V, Blu-ray + D, Kscope - Kscope531 (2017, Europe)
CD, CD + DVD-V, NTSC + S/Edition, Kscope - kscope491 (2017, Europe)
CD, Dig, Kscope/Soyuz Music - kscope356 (2017, RU)
CD, Unofficial, Kscope - kscope356 (2017, RU)

Published by Imagem Music Publishing.
Produced, recorded, and mixed at Castle of Doom Studios in Glasgow, Ireland.
Also recorded at Attica Audio in Donegal, Ireland.
Mastered at Abbey Road Studios.

Released by Kscope on June 9, 2017.
Produced by Tony Doogan.
Artwork by Travis Smith.
Concept and writing concept by Daniel Cavanaugh.
Mastered by Krank Arkwright.
String arrangement by Paul Leonard Morgan.

*includes hidden track after 3 minutes of silence at the 7:35 mark and lasts approximately 1:10.

Thanks to aglasshouse for the addition

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ANATHEMA THE OPTIMIST reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

The Crow
Why, Anathema? Why?

Distant Satellites was by no means a bad album. It had even truly brilliant moments. But its experimental parts were too vague and disoriented. And The Optimist is sadly a follow-up of all this. We can hear a band trying to retrieve the alternative feeling of A Fine Day to Exit without achieving that, offering a monotonous and repetitive collection of songs unworthy of a band with this status.

32.63N 117.14W is just a brief introduction to Leave it Behind, which starts with the typical Anathema guitar, which automatically bring to mind the most alternative records of the band like the aforementioned A Fine Day to Exit or A Natural Disaster, despite its horrible electronic rhythm at the beginning of the song. But the song it's too repetitive to be considered a brilliant track, and the instrumental interlude is just awful.

Endless Ways brings the much appreciated Lee's voice and the album automatically get better. In addition, the orchestral arrangements of the song are beautiful. Sadly this track is also too repetitive for my taste, but better than The Optimist nevertheless, which is a dull and absolutely not inspired song, despite its fine guitar melodies towards the end. Till this point the quality of the album is not good, but acceptable.

But then we find San Francisco... A piano melody which repeats itself during four minutes without any kind of progression or interest, apart from its U2-type guitars. What the hell is that? Are you trying to cheat us, guys? And Springfield is even worse, another swindle with absurd lyrics and repetitive melodies... Again. Because that's the main problem of this album. The melodies and compositions are Ok, but the repetition of the same melodies again and again in almost every song give an impression of vagrancy and lack of compositional work that deeply disappoints me coming from one of my favorite bands.

Luckily, Ghosts is the best track of The Optimist. Very beautiful orchestral arrangements (this album is pretty symphonic) and vocal melodies from Lee, who sings a rather brief text. That's another interesting point of the album... The lyrics are pretty short in words and ideas. I don't really know the goal of this very minimalistic approach in the lyrics, but that's also a disappointment coming from a band with wonders like One Last Goodbye.

Can't Let Go is more lively and more guitar-oriented. Vincent's voice sounds very contained, like in the whole album... And that's also a shame, because his voice was so incredible in the previous albums! Nevertheless, it's a good song. In opposite to Close Your Eyes, another boring and insipid moment with uninspired lyrics. Only the final part with wind instruments which reminds me to Van Der Graaf Generator deserves a mention. Wildfires is one of the lowest points of the album. Depressing, repetitive and with horrible vocal effects. I really don't know how a track like that could make it into the final record. Even the typical increase of intensity in its final part is foreseeable and lame. But Anathema had mercy of us and they managed to put a decent song at the end of the CD named Back to Start, which contains good verses with a warm interpretation from Vincent and good piano melodies. The chorus is not so good and so is the final part, unnecessarily bombastic and pretentious. This could have been a good ending for a better album... But after the average or directly bad content of The Optimist, Back to Start is just utterly overblown.

Conclusion: The Optimist would be an average release for a novel band. But talking about Anathema, this record is their worst album, including their doom metal ones. A repetitive, uninspired and pretentious collection of songs with a worrying lack of ideas and direction. The attempt to retrieve the alternative rock of A Fine Day to Exit failed, and despite the orchestral arrangements the musicians don't shine like in other records of the band.

I really hope that they make it better in their next album, because after the just decent Distant Satellites and this mediocre The Optimist, I am really not so optimistic about the future of the band.

Best Tracks: Ghosts, Can't Let go, Back to Start.

My rating: **

This review was originally written for ProgArchives.com

Members reviews

Peacock Feather
All of a sudden, brave creators from Liverpool decide to go back to their ideological roots, and not just anywhere, but straight to the fan-controversial A Fine Day to Exit, and decide to continue the story of the lyrical hero who eventually (spoiler!) changed his mind to drown in the ocean near the beach in San Diego, whose coordinates gave the name to intro of the Optimist. To be honest, I find this approach a little strange, because for AFDtE, as for me, it would be good to remain exactly as it was conceived by the "anathemists" themselves, unsaid, with an open ending, giving the listener the right to choose the fate of the main character. Besides, isn't a return to the past, a rollback - not a betrayal of their own principles, dogmas for the band itself, even if only in lyrical terms?

And to hell with the concept itself, with the lyrical component, although, of course, there are hardly more lines here than in the conceptual predecessor. Let's turn to the musical component. What have the eternal prophets presented to us on a saucer, who are fit to create their own religion and anathematize every parishioner for good, though known only to the group, purposes? And then out of my mouth comes a desperate and hopeless: "Eh, how come?". First, the "electronic" ending of the last album did not receive proper development. Although I admit initially that this is all subjective by and large, but still Leaving It Behind and instrumental San Francisco look much weaker than Distant Satellites and Take Shelter. At the point of the route marked by the city in the style of disco, the band so generally sounded almost like the eternally despised Coldplay, with whom the band was sometimes compared in the context of recent albums, although even a hedgehog can understand that Anathema wrote songs many times better. Here, the group took a serious step back.

As for the classic songs, the group again, for the fourth time in a row, writes the same thing, trying to cross out the logical ending in the form of the title song for the group from the same Distant Satellites, with the difference that the melodies have become weaker and more nondescript. I don't know what the situation is, whether Danny is in a state of mind, which is about the time of recording the album, caught another mental problems, or in the long course of recording the album itself. A sense of deja vu is present even among the songs themselves, when Endless Ways and The Optimist begin almost identically, despite the fact that they follow each other.

It's funny, but at times the Optimist still does not disappoint, but pleasantly surprises. Post-rock song Springfield is really beautiful with its appropriate cold beauty (perhaps the best song on the album), Ghosts and Wildfires adequately accumulate a mixture of the classic sound of Anathema and subtle inclusions of electronics, and Close Your Eyes along with You're Not Alone from the last album can rightfully be considered as the most unusual song of the group. Beautiful and elegant dark jazz, which would like more timekeeping.

At the same time, I have no questions about the technical side of the execution. Everything is as always good and verified. The only thing that bothers me (and the band lives, unfortunately, confirm this) is that Vinnie has started to give up on his vocals. Lee Douglas, on the other hand, remains at her old, very high level, and this time there's a hell of a lot of her on the album itself. Yes, I am certainly happy to hear her wonderful, feminine voice, but in comparison with past albums, she was somehow indecently given a lot of solo numbers. An attempt to equalize the rights of vocalists in order to bend under the current social trends? In fact, it's a consequence, as I said, of Vinnie's declining vocal range.

If Anathema were not in double demand as post-progressive rock prophets and undisputed masters of their craft, it would be possible to give up on this under-sequel of A Fine Day to Exit, because it really does not deserve the level of such a beautiful and diverse album, just as it does not deserve the level of its predecessors, which are among the best albums of Anathema. Alas, the reality is that with this album, my favorite English people from Merseyside have definitely failed. As if The Optimist have become a controversial end of the history of the beautiful band, as it was with Porcupine Tree or Isis, and everything is going to this, given that the band went on indefinite leave, and Danny announced a new solo album and a project called Weather Systems, declared as "a continuation of the legacy of the previous group".

Ratings only

  • karolcia
  • stefanbedna
  • sploosh
  • Tupan
  • kalacho
  • cefr45
  • Bartje1979

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