Whenever something that comes underneath the surface from either
the Progressive Rock or Symphonic Metal genre, I know that something special
awaits for me. And one of those up-and-coming bands that have really taken me
by surprise is another band from Israel alongside Orphaned Land, Aperco, Ninet
Tayeb, and Ahvak, is Tillian. Launched in 2014 from Tel Aviv, Tillian is the
brain child of Leah Marcu.
Taking inspirations between Ayreon, Pain of Salvation,
Gentle Giant, and Kate Bush, Marcu wrote it as if it was a solo album around
the concept of alchemical transformations of the self. What she wanted to do
was exploring those inner progressions; love to pain, pain to beauty, beauty to
spirit, and spirit to love. It started to transform itself as Tillian.
And with help from Orphaned Land’s producer Erez Yohanan
along with some hand-picked musicians while being mastered by Forrester Savell who
worked with Karnivool. Alongside Leah who does the vocals, the line-up from the
recording considers alongside Leah herself; Alexandra Marcu on Cello, Yadin
Moyal on Guitars, Yoav Weinberg on drums, bassists Yanai Avnet and Alon Shulman
on two tracks, and keyboardist Lior Goldberg.
Lotus Graveyard is
their debut released this year. It is such a killer release for a band that’s
delivering not just the goods, but combining metal, prog, and ominous haunting
melodies, Tillian have unleashed an amazing debut. From the opening track of Reborn featuring the crossover sections
between nylon strings, piano, and haunting electric guitars between Yadin,
Alexandria, and Lior, walks down this twisted corridor to give Leah a chance to
shine.
Her vocals resembles Within Temptation’s Sharon Den Adel and
Anneke van Giersbergen as she rises from the ashes by becoming X-Men’s answer
to the Dark Phoenix as she sings the line “Will
I wither like all roses?/Will I forfeit my own cry?/But the blackness held its
silence/The golden scales in perfect balances.” When she sings that section
in the song, the music becomes this nod towards Muse’s Absolution as she tips her hat to Matt Bellamy’s arrangement.
The sections on Touched
between the piano, moog, and classical structures by giving Leah a chance to
spread her wings while Yadin’s guitar goes into the nylon strings into a
battering ram line on his electric guitar with some heavy riffs while she
channels her inner vision of Kate Bush as if she had sung for Gentle Giant by
making her vocalizations go up a notch.
Yadin channels the bands between Judas Priest, Deep Purple
(MKII), and Iron Maiden with some arpeggiated fast-driven lines and riffs for a
short minute on Caught in your Slought while
I’m Too Close tackles the themes
dealing with obsession and domestic abuse. Leah’s vocals and Yadin’s guitar
goes through the ascending mountains as you can imagine the woman herself going
through this struggle to escape after being tormented by this person’s
obsession and abuse towards her.
It’s not an easy subject to tackle, but the intensive
arrangements makes this woman’s point of view to being free and escaping from
the torment she was going through, but the moment she goes to sleep, he will
haunt her in her dreams for the rest of her life.
Black Holes goes
into full speed between Yadin’s riffs, Goldberg’s keyboards, and electronic
drum sounds that have a trip-hop effect as the gates open up with the vocals
and chords rising from the grave. It delves into a spaghetti western waltz
before heading back into the territories of Gentle Giant as the tidal wave
crashes down the cities with a mighty crash.
And it gives the band members some free-rein to have the
waves to crash even more to hit those powder kegs at the exact moment they
explode with a big gigantic bang. And then that gates open up even more on Love or Heaven for the battles to begin
as guitars and drums go in full throttle with the bullets go into some rapid
firing with snarling vocals thanks to Shachar Bieber (not related to Justin,
mind you).
While I’m not crazy about the snarling voices from Shachar,
but after Leah sings, she gives Shachar a chance to deliver those beast-like
vocals as he is ready to raise hell even more to give Leah a chance to hit
those notes on a big massive scale. Earth
Walker is a nod between Iamthemorning and Steven Wilson’s Grace for Drowning. Leah channels the
vocal arrangements of Marjana Semkina on the closing track.
Alexandra, Lior, and Yadin sets up this aftermath from the
battle which has now become a massive bloodbath while delving into the
atmospheric sections of Klaus Schulze’s Irrlicht.
Alexandria closes up the book to give Lior a chance to wait at the exact
moment for Leah raising her arrangements on her vocals.
This took me about two listens to delve into Tillian’s Lotus Graveyard. And the moment I
listened to this from start to finish, I was completely spellbound that they’ve
brought the genre of both Progressive Metal, Classical Music, and Symphonic
Metal with a gigantic crunch by bringing them into one. I hope they continue to
do more because the yellow brick road for Leah and her bandmates, have only
just begun to follow in Dorothy’s footsteps.
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