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The Fateful Dark

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Download links and information about The Fateful Dark by Savage Messiah. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Rock, Metal genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:04:14 minutes.

Artist: Savage Messiah
Release date: 2014
Genre: Rock, Metal
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:04:14
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49
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Buy on Songswave €1.81

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Iconocaust 6:15
2. Minority of One 4:18
3. Cross of Babylon 4:51
4. Hellblazer 3:59
5. Live As One Already Dead 5:39
6. The Fateful Dark 6:27
7. Zero Hour 6:33
8. Hammered Down 4:11
9. Scavengers of Mercy 5:04
10. The Cursed Earth 4:48
11. Be Quick or Be Dead (Bonus Track) 3:28
12. Lightning to the Nations (Bonus Track) 4:31
13. Killers (Bonus Track) 4:10

Details

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The fourth long-player from England's Savage Messiah, the Fateful Dark forgoes any and all attempts at subtlety by infusing its very Seventh Son of a Seventh Son-era Iron Maiden-inspired inaugural moments with a wailing air raid siren. It's an effective move, and also a bit of a red herring, as the remaining five minutes of album-opener "Iconocaust" are more concerned with navigating the serpentine hallways of groove-kissed, melodic thrash than they are the dual lead-driven blast of traditional power metal. Vocalist/guitarist Dave Silver can sneer like Dave Mustaine, but he can also reach the nosebleed seats with a fairly convincing Halford-esque falsetto, which he does to great effect on the meat-and-potatoes single "Hellblazer," a propulsive slice of double-kick-fueled melodic metal mayhem that evokes classic Helloween, Testament, and even Dio. The first half of Fateful Dark feels somewhat traditionally structured, leaning harder on the Bay Area thrash-meets-new wave of British heavy metal side of things, but the proceedings adopt a more progressive state of mind on the back half, with the surging, funereal title cut and the like-minded "Zero Hour" tearing through genres like the Big Bad Wolf blowing down a line of hastily constructed Mc-Mansions. Things speed up again with the one-two punch of "Hammered Down" and "Scavengers of Mercy," eventually coming to a head on the relentless closer "The Cursed Earth," and effectively signaling the end of another seductively wild ride from one of heavy metal's last purists.