Edguy
Edguy (Prounouced "Ed-gai") is a German Power Metal band that was founded in 1992. Their music is heavily influenced by both Iron Maiden and Helloween, although they tend to have a more symphonic sound with greater use of keyboards.
Tobias Sammet also has a Rock Opera side project, Avantasia.
Members:
- Tobias Sammet (vocals)
- Jens Ludwig (guitar)
- Dirk Sauer (guitar)
- Tobias Exxel (bass)
- Felix Bohnke (drums)
Discography:
- 1995 - Savage Poetry
- 1997 - Kingdom of Madness
- 1998 - Vain Glory Opera
- 1999 - Theater of Salvation
- 2000 - The Savage Poetry (re-recording)
- 2001 - Mandrake
- 2004 - Hellfire Club
- 2006 - Rocket Ride
- 2008 - Tinnitus Sanctus
- 2011 - Age of the Joker
Edguy provides examples of the following tropes:
- All Drummers Are Animals: In this case, a highspeed alien drum bunny.
- Audience Participation Song: "This is the boring part of the show, the part where you have to sing along to whatever comes to my mind, allright?" makes for midtros or intros for many songs.
- Also, all of their choruses. Most notably, Tears of a Mandrake and Out of Control.
- Break Up Song: "Trinidad". And it is awesome!
- Cluster F-Bomb: "New Age Messiah" and "Life and Times of a Bonus Track", and of course, "Fucking With Fire".
- Cover Version: "Hymn," which was originally an Ultravox song, and was turned into something awesome.
- Creator Backlash: Tobi is not fond of their early material, and thus none of the songs from their albums Kingdom of Madness or The Savage Poetry ever gets performed live.
- Epic Rocking: "Eyes of the Tyrant," "The Pharaoh," "Theater of Salvation,", "The Piper Never Dies", "Speedhoven" and "Robin Hood".
- Faust: "The Devil and the Savant" is based on this.
- Heavy Mithril: Several of their songs, though not as many as some other power metal bands.
- Hey, It's That Voice!: Hansi Kürsch guested on Vain Glory Opera. Also very common on Avantasia.
- Intercourse with You: "Lavatory Love Machine" is rather obvious...
- ... but "Fucking With Fire" ("Hair Force One") is even more blatant.
- Lighter and Softer: The latest couple of albums have moved from power metal towards a more hard rock sound. Also, their later albums usually have at least one joke song.
- Loudness War: Tinnitus Sanctus, badly. Might be intentional given the name, the cover, and the fact that the band describes the album as "a penetrating wall of sound."
- Mile-High Club: Again, "Lavatory Love Machine".
- Monster Clown: On the cover of Mandrake.
- Power Ballad: "Scarlet Rose," "Holy Water," "Forever," "When A Hero Cries," "Save Me," and the incredibly awesome "The Spirit Will Remain."
- Shout-Out: Given that the structure of the songs are almost identical, "Vain Glory Opera" commonly gets its first verse replaced by the first verse from The Final Countdown when performed live.
- "Vain Glory Opera" often gets introduced as the song the stole or ripped off.
- Also, Felix Bohnke creates drum solos to the soundtracks of Pirates of the Caribbean and Star Wars. During the latter, he sports an iconic mask, complete with sounds.
- Sexy Stewardess: In "Lavatory Love Machine".
- Slasher Smile: Also on the cover of Mandrake.
- Take That:
- "Judas At The Opera", while first appearing like a barrage of random lyrics, is actually an attack against the critics who accuse them of being too happy and upbeat with their music. Unsurprisingly, critics then attacked the song for being too cheerful and uptempo.
- "Catch Of The Century" is a Take That to the record labels that refused to sign the band in their infancy and predicted that they would have no future.
- Sympathetic POV: Inverted in "Robin Hood"; as it shows that by taking away the POV from the eponymous character, you can easily turn the Lovable Rogue into The Dreaded.
- This Trope Is Bleep: Their live DVD/album is called Fucking with F*** . "F*** " is really "fire".
- Tuckerization: The name "Edguy" is an affectionate epithet for Mr. Edgar Siedschlag, their math teacher from when they were young.
- Villain Song: "Robin Hood", as it portrays the eponymous character as The Dreaded... While still set to an incredibly heroic tune! (and some surprisingly humorous lyrics)
- Ye Olde Butchered English: In "Robin Hood," Tobi tells the audience to "bewareth."
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