Beethoven's Last Night
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Label: Lava
Number of Discs: 1
Format: Audio CD
Release date:11th April 2000
| Studio Audio CD |
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Track Listing
- 1. Overture Lyrics
- 2. Midnight Lyrics
- 3. Fate Lyrics
- 4. What Good This Deafness Lyrics
- 5. Mephistopheles Lyrics
- 6. What Is Eternal Lyrics
- 7. Moment Lyrics
- 8. Vienna Lyrics
- 9. Mozart
- 10. Dreams of Candlelight Lyrics
- 11. Requiem (The Fifth) Lyrics
- 12. I'll Keep Your Secrets Lyrics
- 13. Dark Lyrics
- 14. Für Elise
- 15. After the Fall Lyrics
- 16. Last Illusion Lyrics
- 17. This Is Who You Are Lyrics
- 18. Beethovan
- 19. Mephistopheles' Return Lyrics
- 20. Misery Lyrics
- 21. Who Is This Child Lyrics
- 22. Final Dream Lyrics
Product Description
No Description Available
No Track Information Available
Media Type: CD
Artist: TRANS-SIBERIAN ORCHESTRA
Title: BEETHOVEN'S LAST NIGHT
Street Release Date: 04/11/2000
Genre: XMAS INSTRUMENTAL
Amazon.com
Trans-Siberian Orchestra's first two recordings, a pair of late-'90s Christmas albums, hinted that some day TSO might evolve into a latter-day ELO or even an ELP. Instead, this overwrought concept album shares more common ground with ALW (Andrew Lloyd Webber) or Meat Loaf. TSO, in fact, aims to retrace a path once traveled by producer Jim Steinman, the mastermind behind the theatrical, over-the-top rock opuses that briefly transformed Mr. Loaf and Bonnie Tyler ("Total Eclipse of the Heart") into mass-audience favorites. TSO ringmaster Paul O'Neill (once a guitarist in Broadway productions of Jesus Christ Superstar and Hair) here ditches the holiday themes and instead scores a simple-minded fairy tale (whose text spans a 32-page CD booklet) that involves Beethoven's soul, the devil, and an imaginary Symphony No. 10. Too often, the music is the servant of the project's thin plot, and the rock-classical instrumental bravura that initially attracted public attention to TSO (at times, the group sounds like a symphonic Boston) is obscured by overheated vocal rantings. Meanwhile, the guitar-driven rendering of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony ("Requiem") is mundane. Yet, one vocal track, "After the Fall" with singer Patti Russo, jumps off the record as a Tyler-esque knockout, raging with emotion and melodic luster. It doesn't save the album, but it helps. --Terry Wood
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