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Tarja – What Lies Beneath Review
Posted by Michael Melchor on 08.31.2010



Tarja (Turunen) is back, and about 95% of the female singers on the planet should be put on notice as a result.

Once the voice of Nightwish, Tarja was released from the band almost five years ago. Since then, she has carved out her own niche on her own using her authoritative singing talents. After a Finnish Christmas album (for her native nation) and 2007’s My Winter Storm, Tarja’s What Lies Beneath is the latest to display her abilities.

The problem with Tarja’s voice is that it’s so forceful, it’s rather difficult to find the right music to support it without being drowned out or made to sound generic against such a force. What Lies Beneath succeeds in this more often than not, but that issue is still problematic to Tarja making a classic (as opposed to classical) record.



“Anteroom Of Death” stands as arguably the most daring opening track of the year. No, you don’t understand. The song actually dares you to continue through the rest of the album. Not because it’s a horrible song at all, but more because Tarja’s classical leanings are thrown directly in your face via a myriad of tempo changes, a harpsichord (?!), sections of both chamber music and flat-out metal, and choir vocals (courtesy of German cappella/metal band van Canto), among many other turns. It’s what might be expected of a symphonic metal album turned up to about 15 and a fascinating song that can easily have the proverbial layers peeled away with each listen. “Anteroom Of Death” simply has so much going on - all, somehow, seamlessly put together. It could be declared , at best, symphonic metal’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” and, at worst, a feat in and of itself to make it to track 2.

Once that’s accomplished, however, the rest settles back in to much less mind-bending territory. Tarja’s vocals are designed to shine over hard-driving music, but it’s the music sometimes that becomes that becomes an issue. “Until My Last Breath” features great work by her, but the backing is almost pedestrian in comparison. Tarja’s voice is so powerful that it tends to outshine the music she’s singing over. With Nightwish, she never had this issue; Tuomas Holopainen wrote the music specifically for her, and the compliment ranged from thrilling to outright staggering.

Here, having just the right music and arrangements behind her sometimes hampers What Lies Beneath as a whole. The arrival of guest stars, such as All That Remains’s Phil Labonte on “Dark Star” and Joe Satriani on “Falling Awake”, sometimes helps the issue. Vocally, the exchange between Tarja and Labonte on “Dark Star” is about as close to old-school Nightwish as it gets. Satriani, meanwhile, provides about the only guitar solo on the album that matches Tarja’s power. Living Colour’s Will Calhoun sounds great on the closer “Crimson Deep”, but it’s almost a moot point as the song is already a 7:36 epic that was written to stand out, anyway.

What Lies Beneath isn’t a one-trick pony, however. After “Anteroom Of Death”, there are certainly other reasons to stick around other than guest stars. “Little Lies” has a great driving rhythm and an infectious chorus - the kind of things that are taken to higher levels by a dominant soprano. “Underneath” is a soaring piano ballad; yes, they still exist, they just don’t happen but once in a blue moon. If that’s not unbelievable enough, it happens twice on the same record (at least on the US version), as "Montanas de Silencio" takes a minute to build, but the effect is enough to savor when Tarja delivers vocal poetry that I’m pretty convinced very few other singers (and certainly none in popular music) could muster.


The 411What Lies Beneath is an enjoyable album if you can lean more towards classical (opera) vocal stylings for a bit. However, it’s also inconsistent; the music could certainly serve her better in many songs. With the right band (which won’t be her old one, much as we could dream), Tarja could flatten any arena on this planet with a voice superior to countless others - and, with more effort in to songwriting and musicianship, could render a record an instant classic. This would have been it if the music could support the weight and strength of her voice.
 
Final Score:  7.5   [ Good ]  legend


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Comments (5)

 
This album was so amazing. Tarja is an incredible singer. It was much better than my winter storm. God willing she comes to Tampa or Orlando.

Posted By: Mark Radulich (Registered)  on September 03, 2010 at 08:48 PM

 
 
Get past track 1, and this is simply an incredible CD. Tarja has such an increidble voice, and the driving guitars (especially in We Are) were a fantastic complement. Just as strong as Nightwish's last... with a much better singer.

Posted By: Michael (Guest)  on September 17, 2010 at 12:53 AM

 
 
Just horrible. It is so sad to see how she is floundering without the genius of Nightwish behind her. She desperately needs new writers. Awkward sounding and uninspired melodies.

Posted By: Mikey (Guest)  on October 14, 2010 at 09:49 PM

 
 
Album is not as good as My Winter Storm. The first song is terrible, especially the vocal volatilities. She is leaning towards heavier sound, i think this is not what she needs. It should have some riffs, but this is far too heavy and doesn`t match well with the opera/classical sound she tries. She has a powerfull voice which needs very special compositions to match it. I would rate it 5/10.

Posted By: MP (Guest)  on October 27, 2010 at 10:10 AM

 
 
the opening song was great, really different yes, but very imaginative, the whole album is so much more mature and better than the first. maybe her operatic vocals in some songs didn't jibe with the music as they should have but over all an excellent album, money well spent.

Posted By: lorenqo (Guest)  on March 02, 2011 at 03:31 PM

 


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