The Gates of Oblivion

The Gates of Oblivion is the third full-length album of the Spanish power metal band Dark Moor, released March 31, 2002 on Arise Records. It's also the last album with singer Elisa C. Martín.

The Gates of Oblivion
Studio album by
Released11 March 2002
RecordedSeptember - October 2001
GenreSymphonic metal, power metal, neoclassical metal
Length56:38
LabelArise Records
Dark Moor chronology
The Fall of Melnibone
(2001)
The Gates of Oblivion
(2002)
Dark Moor
(2003)

This album had the collaboration of the Valcavasian Choir and the singer Dan Keying of Cydonia. It was produced by Luigi Stefanini.[1]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."In the Heart of Stone"4:40
2."A New World"5:56
3."The Gates of Oblivion"1:42
4."Nevermore"4:48
5."Starsmaker (Elbereth)"5:47
6."Mist in the Twilight"0:53
7."By the Strange Path of Destiny"5:51
8."The Night of the Age"4:40
9."Your Symphony"4:34
10."The Citadel of the Light"1:15
11."A Truth for Me"5:08
12."Dies Irae (Amadeus)"11:17
Japanese/Russian edition bonus track
No.TitleLength
13."The Shadow of the Nile"6:02
Japanese edition bonus track
No.TitleLength
14."Mystery of Goddess"05:30
2012 reissued edition bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
13."Flying (demo)"06:38
14."Halloween (Helloween cover)"13:23

Band

  • Elisa Martin - lead & backing vocals, soprano voice on #12
  • Enrik Garcia - guitars & backing vocals
  • Albert Maroto - guitars & backing vocals
  • Anan Kaddouri - bass
  • Jorge Sáez - drums
  • Roberto Peña de Camús - keyboards

Guest musicians

  • Valcavasia's choir - choir on #01, 02, 04, 08 & 12
  • Dan Keying - guest vocals on #04, 05, 07, 08 & 11

Production

  • Luigi Stefanini - producer
  • Andreas Marschall - artwork

Concept

gollark: So if I come up with the genius idea of a compact ore processing system by putting a pulverizer and redstone furnace next to each other, I can patent that?
gollark: Your server will just let you patent *anything*?
gollark: ?
gollark: So I guess you would have to either allow people to patent only new-for-CC things and ignore most existing implementations, or basically not allow patenting anything. Although I think patents (and half the legal system) as they stand aren't a great system and probably should not be copied into games?
gollark: At least, they mostly do somewhat new-for-CC things (except OSes) but not things which haven't been done before in another context.

References

  1. "Dark Moor – The Gates of Oblivion". metal-archives.com. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
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