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Fearful Symmetry

Daniel Amos

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Album Review

Fans of Daniel Amos' early guitar rock may regard this new wave pop album as an artistic surrender to the electronic trends of the 1980s. But this album is in fact a good deal more creative and intelligent than most of the Euro-synth music that influenced it. The band (identified only as DA this time) does invoke the computerized stylings of Depeche Mode, Human League, and Alphaville, but echoes of Pink Floyd are equally audible. Terry Taylor's verse is at its most sublimely lyrical, describing familiar Christian theology with a fresh mysticism. In Taylor's hands, doctrine that in lesser hands would sound sterile is full of shadows, beauty, fear, and hope. DA has made an interesting choice: to use this trendy, much-debased synthetic pop genre as a context for its most poetic material. There is a sizable dose of Taylor's usual goofy humor and biting cleverness ("Sudden Heaven" is a manic electronic hoedown; "Instruction Through Film" mocks campy '50s educational films while taking shots at moral legalism), but there's also a good bit of serious literary allusion (the album title is a reference to William Blake's "Tyger! Tyger!," "Beautiful One" paraphrases Robert Frost, and much of Taylor's poetry evokes the spiritual awe of Gerard Manley Hopkins or T.S. Eliot). Unfortunately, the low-budget pop sound does sometimes slip into the tinny hokiness common to the lesser purveyors of '80s pop. But DA's high ambition never falters.

Customer Reviews

A Stupendous Album: The Last of the Chronicles is First!

One down - three to go! When this album came out back in the 80's as the fourth and last of the Alarma Chronicles, I didn't like it one bit. Gone were the driving guitars, the demented, silliness that graced the first three of the albums. Perhaps I was not mature enough to understand it. Perhaps I just loved "Youth With a Machine" too much. Perhaps I missed Jerry's rambunctious guitar licks and riffs. Perhaps TS Elliot spoke to me (via Terry Taylor) more than William Blake did (via Terry Taylor.) No matter. Turns out I was wrong and this album is the deepest and the most mature of all The Chronicles.

This album is just fantastic from beginning to end. "Strong Points, Weak Point" is probably the best song written about our unsaid doubts. "Instruction Though Film" is best thought of as a musical mockumentary, ala the government's Duck and Cover ridiculousness. "Sleep, Silent Child" is renders the emotionality surrounding death, chillingly. This is a deep album that avoids the goofy synth-pop sound found on some of Vox Humana, delivering a more mature, more nuanced Daniel Amos. In it you can see Darn Floor, Big Bite just around the corner.

The Alarma Chronicles: Part 4

Daniel Amos used the 80s to great effect, combining Christian-themed concept albums with New Wave musical techniques to create "The Alarma Chronicles," a series of albums that, while targeted mainly towards Christians, have enough great songs to be enjoyable to music lovers of secular or other religious mindsets. It annoys me that iTunes put this one up but not the ones that followed ("Alarma," "Doppelganger," Vox Humana,") but even then, it's still nice that they at least posted SOMETHING by this obscure and underrated group up for others to enjoy. I assume "The Pool" relates to baptism, and I love how the music uses completely different keys for the verses and chorus/bridge, although I would have personally loved to have heard more of the verses' key, but as is, it's awesome and unique. The other songs are great as well, like "A Sigh For You," "When Moonlight Sleeps," and the chilling "Sleep Silent Child" and there are some other fun listens on this album as well, like "Neverland Ballroom," "Strong Points, Weak Points," and "Instruction Through Film," all enhanced with Terry's lyrics and the band's enjoyable music, and the entire thing closes on "Beautiful One," a song that, while not something I like to listen to all the time, is still a nice theme to sum up The Alarma Chronicles. Overall, great album, I can't think of much to say except can we have the rest of Daniel Amos' catalog now, iTunes?

Fearful Symmetry, Daniel Amos
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Customer Ratings

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