Opeth
My Arms, Your Hearse


4.5
superb

Review

by Brendan Schroer STAFF
June 2nd, 2017 | 89 replies


Release Date: 1998 | Tracklist

Review Summary: You have nothing more to find... you have nothing more to lose

The sky is dark and dismal, rain plummeting as if to cover every surrounding inch of earth. Soon, a lone piano enters to fully flesh out the mood. A few melancholic chords are played, and the scene is set. From the distance, a crescendo of cappella vocals gets stronger… stronger… stronger…

...and from this point forward, Opeth would rewrite the blueprints of progressive metal for the next decade.

My Arms, Your Hearse was a turning point for the Swedish metal act. It’s the very reason we were able to have masterpieces like Still Life and Ghost Reveries in the first place, as it’s the opus that cemented Opeth’s standing as one of extreme metal’s titans and foremost innovators. But beyond just its legacy, My Arms, Your Hearse still stands strong as its own powerful creation because of its near-seamless blend of death metal, black metal, progressive rock, folk, jazz, and blues into one cohesive offering. The twin guitar attack exhibited by Mikael Akerfeldt and Peter Lindgren got more fluid, and while Johan De Farfalla was sadly absent from this point onward, Akerfeldt himself filled in the cracks nicely on bass. On top of that, we also got a new longtime addition to the group with drummer Martin Lopez, whose musical chemistry with the rest of the band is staggering on this release (and most subsequent releases, I might add).

Whereas predecessors Morningrise and Orchid often seemed like a bunch of great ideas strung together in an arbitrary fashion, My Arms, Your Hearse builds upon much more conceptual and coherent groundwork. Because of this, the songwriting is often incredibly flowing and focused, with each idea progressing into the next in a logical way. This also makes for a lot of emotional peaks and valleys, especially when the band sways between death metal savagery and folk-like contemplations. Some of the quartet’s finest moments of melancholy and sheer melodic catharsis are on display here, such as the mindblowing finales of “When” and “Demon of the Fall.” But the reason these moments work so well is the balance of moods and dynamics on offer. For instance, the decision to have the reflective acoustic folk ballad “Credence” after “Demon of the Fall” provides a contrast that’s as beautiful as it is stark. The way it calmly rests as a lonesome trench between two of the album’s heaviest tracks provides a nice moment to sit back and rest before the brutality comes back. And even the brutality is multi-faceted in its own unique way, right from the jazzy a cappella chord that kicks off “April Ethereal” to the densely layered guitar chords in the doom metal portion of “The Amen Corner.”

Speaking of layering, the production values are spectacular. Frederik Nordstrom captured the essence of a raw extreme metal recording while letting each instrument move and breathe as if having a life of its own. The “clear-meets-murky” approach was a great choice, retaining just the right amount of melodicism and accessibility while still letting the sheer intensity of the heavy moments shine through. Case in point: during the chugging one-note riff in “April Ethereal,” check out how those lead guitars are playing at two separate octaves above the simple riff. The combination of the eerie leads and the crushing nature of the breakdown is exquisite, and the same goes for the complex riff patterns that cover a good chunk of “Demon of the Fall.” The harmonies are bleak and depressing, a good fit for the relentless guttural vocals and the aggressive rhythm guitar assault. There’s even some jazz influence in the guitar chords during its finale! Really, the only criticism I’d level at the record is that “Karma” and “Epilogue” weren’t quite the best pieces to end on. “Epilogue” feels like it could have been cut in half, and “Karma”’s death metal sections get a bit overlong and bland, particularly during its ending.

It’s fascinating to think we’d eventually (arguably) get an even more brilliant album with Still Life, but I like to consider My Arms, Your Hearse the album that made it possible in the first place. This was the true stepping stone, the record that brought Opeth to a new level in both their music and their acclaim as one of Sweden’s most promising metal acts at the time. My Arms, Your Hearse is a masterwork steeped in brutality and despair, and it hasn’t aged one bit with time.



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user ratings (3246)
4.2
excellent
other reviews of this album
1 of


Comments:Add a Comment 
Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

sup

MO
June 2nd 2017


24016 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

Fucking ehhhhhhh m/ opeths best easily

Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

It's in my top 3 :]

Dedes
Contributing Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


9976 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I've only heard this album once but I've heard both Blackwater Park and Ghost Reveries like twenty times

Dedes
Contributing Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


9976 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I really gotta relisten because I'd probably dig this more than I once did tbh

rodrigo90
June 2nd 2017


7387 Comments


The album cover is so tricky

tomayw
June 2nd 2017


8 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Great album ever !

DungeonBoy
June 2nd 2017


9696 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Top tier Opeth. Awesome review man. It reminds me of how much I miss Lindgren and Lopez.

Evreaia
June 2nd 2017


5405 Comments


Morningrise is best Opeth, but this comes close.

DungeonBoy
June 2nd 2017


9696 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

[2]

Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

"The album cover is so tricky"



I know, it took me ages to realize it was even a forest

Ocean of Noise
June 2nd 2017


10970 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

2nd best Opeth so hard

Davil667
June 2nd 2017


4046 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Hard pos Brendan, great review. Reflects and captures the special atmosphere of this dark beauty. Best Opeth for me, on par with Ghost Reveries.

rodrigo90
June 2nd 2017


7387 Comments


I think that I already commented the same in another review of this album but the picture makes you think that it's an average black metal album while in fact it's the opposite.

Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

The ending of When still gives me so many goosebumps, especially when that lead guitar comes in on the low end while Mikael's doing his clean singing :]

Davil667
June 2nd 2017


4046 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

The ending of April Ethereal is equally awesome imo. Those harmonies in combination with Mikael's growling is so intense. Hits me every time with full force.

Voivod
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


10703 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

THE COOOOOOLD SEASOOOOOOOOON

Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

DRIFTS OVER THE LAND

FullOfSounds
June 2nd 2017


15821 Comments


Wait what's the album cover supposed to be?

Koris
Staff Reviewer
June 2nd 2017


21117 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

"Wait what's the album cover supposed to be?"



A forest



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