The Perfect Element, Part I

The Perfect Element, Part I is Pain of Salvation's third studio album, released in October 2000. It is a concept album that focuses on the forming of the individual, particularly on the events from one's childhood and adolescence. It is the first segment of a planned three-part concept. The Perfect Element, Part II was released in 2007 under the title Scarsick.

The Perfect Element, Part I
Studio album by
Released31 October 2000
RecordedRoasting House Recording Studio; Malmö, Sweden, March–July 2000
GenreProgressive metal
Length72:44
LabelInsideOut Music
ProducerDaniel Gildenlöw, Anders "Theo" Theander and Pain of Salvation
Pain of Salvation chronology
One Hour by the Concrete Lake
(1998)
The Perfect Element, Part I
(2000)
Remedy Lane
(2002)
Singles from The Perfect Element, Part I
  1. "Ashes"
    Released: 2000
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Overview

"The album is in a way a blend of the two earlier albums, with the groove and originality of Entropia and the focus, thoroughness and production of One Hour by the Concrete Lake. However, it will be quite unique as an album."

Analysis

The Perfect Element, Part I is the first part of a planned, two-piece concept, and is divided into three chapters, each containing four tracks.

Part one of the concept is a story human development, which focuses specifically on the progression from childhood to adolescence. It contains many themes within its context; which include but are not limited to:

  • Child abuse (sexual and physical)
  • Sexuality
  • Tragedy
  • Drug abuse
  • Love
  • Pain
  • Anger
  • Loss (of life and innocence, among other things)
  • Shame
  • Regret
  • Despair
  • Inner struggles

All these themes are dealt with as the story explores the lives of two characters, one male and one female (known commonly as "He" and "She") who are broken, dysfunctional people. They meet in the events of the song "Ashes" after the first two songs of the album present us with a depiction of their troubled pasts ("Used" for "He" and in "In the Flesh" for "She"). After that introduction, the concept focuses on the inner struggles and feelings of the characters after the events on "Ashes", and we also have some memory flashes, telling us more about their pasts and revealing what events in their lives caused them to become what they are, finally ending with the "falling" of He on the last song, "The Perfect Element".

Track listing

All lyrics by Daniel Gildenlöw. All music and arrangements by Daniel Gildenlöw except the middle part of "Her Voices" by Daniel Gildenlöw and Fredrik Hermansson, and the "Once..." part of "The Perfect Element" by Daniel Gildenlöw and Johan Langell. String arrangements by Daniel Gildenlöw and Fredrik Hermansson.

Chapter I: As These Two Desolate Worlds Collide
No.TitleLength
1."Used"5:23
2."In the Flesh"8:36
3."Ashes"4:28
4."Morning on Earth"4:34
Chapter II: It All Catches Up on You When You Slow Down
No.TitleLength
5."Idioglossia"8:29
6."Her Voices"7:56
7."Dedication"4:00
8."King of Loss"9:46
Chapter III: Far Beyond the Point of No Return
No.TitleLength
9."Reconciliation"4:24
10."Song for the Innocent"3:02
11."Falling"1:50
12."The Perfect Element"10:09
13."Epilogue" (Japanese bonus track)3:14

Concept, lyrics and artwork by Daniel Gildenlöw.

A Limited Edition has been also released with an extra cd including bonus tracks and multimedia application containing videos ("Ashes", "Exclamation") and additional material/information.

Extra CD:

1. "Beyond the Mirror" - 8:20
2. "Never Learn to Fly" - 5:10
3. "Time Weaver’s Tale" - 6:19
4. (PC multimedia track with videos, photos, interview, additional information/material and hidden area)

Personnel

Additional personnel
  • Ander "Theo" Theander – producer, engineering
  • Pontus Lindmark – engineering
  • Mihai Cucu – strings
  • Camilla Andersson – strings
  • Petter Axelsson – strings
  • Gretel Gradén – strings
  • Johnny Björk – strings
  • Daniel Gildenlöw/Gildenlöw MultiMedia – artwork
  • Elin Iggsten – photos
  • Johanna Iggsten – photos
  • Fredrik Hallgren – photos
gollark: If you put a pre-most-bad-things Hitler in Philadelphia, and he did not go around doing *any* genocides or particularly bad things, how would he have been bad?
gollark: It seems problematic to go around actually blaming said soldiers when, had they magically been in a different environment somehow, they could have been fine.
gollark: Both, really.
gollark: Yes. It would be preferable if they did *not* do such things. But I don't think the average random soldier can be reasonably expected not to.
gollark: If everyone around you seems to be fine with it and you fear that if you seem *not* fine with it you'll be punished in some way, you'll just rationalize all the way to beeland.

References

  1. Astarita, Glenn (2011). "The Perfect Element I - Pain of Salvation | AllMusic". allmusic.com. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.