The Graveyard (album)

The Graveyard is the seventh studio album by King Diamond, released in 1996. This was also the first album by King Diamond to be featured on the Massacre Records label. The album was remastered by Andy LaRocque and was re-released in 2009. The Graveyard is the last album to feature drummer Darrin Anthony.

The Graveyard
Studio album by
Released30 September 1996
RecordedMarch–May 1996
GenreHeavy metal, doom metal
Length61:11
LabelMassacre
ProducerKing Diamond
King Diamond chronology
The Spider's Lullabye
(1995)
The Graveyard
(1996)
Voodoo
(1998)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

This album is one of the most successful King Diamond's albums, peaking at #23 in the Finnish Charts and remaining for two weeks in the Top 40.[2]

Plot

In this story, King's character is an employee for a crooked, perverted and immoral mayor, Mayor McKenzie. One night, King's character happens to walk in on his boss molesting his daughter, Lucy. King doesn't keep quiet about this, but the mayor testifies that King is insane and has him locked up in Black Hill Sanitarium. After years of being there, King sees his chance to escape and takes it, strangling the nurse that arrives at his cell to administer his medication and stealing her keys. Now mentally destroyed, King runs off to the local graveyard to hide from the police. King plots his revenge against Mayor McKenzie, and begins killing people who pass through the graveyard at night. King is obsessed with an urban legend that if you die in a graveyard and lose your head, your soul does not escape, and it lives forever in your head. With that thought in the back of his mind, he kidnaps Lucy McKenzie, the mayor's daughter, and calls the mayor out to the graveyard for the two of them to play a game. Eventually, Mayor McKenzie does arrive after King calls him by phone. Before he arrives, King buries Lucy - still conscious - in one of seven empty graves, the tombstones of which read "LUCY FOREVER".

King eventually reveals himself to the Mayor and offers him a game. Mayor must dig out his little daughter from one of seven graves while wearing a blindfold. There are seven mounds, and he'll have three guesses or else he'll kill both of them. The Mayor gets the third guess right, but King knocks him out, dragging him to his tomb and tying him down.

While the Mayor slowly regains consciousness, King digs up Lucy and takes her out of the coffin while he starts to torture the Mayor. To King's surprise, Lucy ends up pulling down on a cord that sends a sheet of broken glass from a broken chapel window down on King, decapitating him. The urban legend King was obsessed with turns out to be true, as his living head beckons Lucy not to leave him as she walks away with her father. To his relief, Lucy takes King's head and puts it in her backpack, so King can be with her forever.[3]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."The Graveyard"King Diamond1:22
2."Black Hill Sanitarium"King Diamond, Andy LaRocque4:28
3."Waiting"King Diamond4:26
4."Heads on the Wall"King Diamond, Andy LaRocque6:20
5."Whispers"King Diamond, Andy LaRocque0:31
6."I'm Not a Stranger"King Diamond4:03
7."Digging Graves"King Diamond6:56
8."Meet Me at Midnight"King Diamond, Andy LaRocque4:46
9."Sleep Tight, Little Baby"King Diamond5:38
10."Daddy"King Diamond3:22
11."Trick or Treat"King Diamond5:09
12."Up from the Grave"King Diamond3:18
13."I Am"King Diamond5:50
14."Lucy Forever"King Diamond, Andy LaRocque4:56

Credits

gollark: The education system as currently extant doesn't really teach critical thinking though.
gollark: It selects for it because it's a working strategy, and politicians who say vague meaningless emotive things do better than hypothetical ones who try and just say facts.
gollark: Politicians can just go around spouting meaningless slogans and people vote for them. The system selects for it.
gollark: I spent a while rephrasing this, but whatever: ultimately, the stupid persuasive things politicians go around doing to get votes *do work* on people.
gollark: I mean, this looks like partly blaming issues with democracy on markets on the somewhat-biased-media thing.

References

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