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History
Part 1: With Christ 0 Vanden Plas connect with their great
epic Beyond Daylight from 2002. Frontman Andy Kuntz & Co. prove
themselves to be more hymnic, more courageous, and more mature than
ever. After enjoying their ten new songs you can only come to one
conclusion: Germanys best and most important prog metal band has reached
its temporary creative peak.
After a break which in fact wasnt a break, and which also gave the
musicians important new inspirations, Vanden Plas are presenting their
new album with Christ 0 which reflects many experiences of the past four
years. After the great Beyond Daylight (2002), singer Andy Kuntz solo
album Abydos (2004) and many theater engagements of the five musicians
regarding to, for instance, the Nostradamus performances at
Kaiserslautern and Hof where the whole group was involved Christ 0 shows
a distinctively matured band which is working more courageously and more
variedly than ever before. Of course, Christ 0 is influenced by our
theater work, Andy Kuntz likes to admit. When hearing the new songs you
are sensing that we often worked with big orchestras. Guitarist Stephan
Lill, apart from Kuntz and keyboardist Gnter Werno one of the three main
songwriters in Vanden Plas, adds: We had the courage to do more things.
The down tuned guitars are more present, the ballads more touching, the
orchestral arrangements more thorough, and the compositions more vivid.
The new songs offer a spectacular feat reaching out to the entire
universe of contemporary prog metal. Already the title track is typical
for Christ 0: The opener immediately shows you what you may have to
expect from the rest of the songs of this album, Lill explains. Hard
guitars, polished arrangements, orchestral parts, and catchy melodies,
trademarks of Vanden Plas which show no stagnation here but moreover a
consistent progress of our typical sound. To this category also belongs
Wish You Were Here, and the cleverly orchestrated January Sun. And on
Christ 0 the 40-piece classical choir of the Pfalztheater in
Kaiserslautern plays a not insignificant role.
But there is also how may one put it? the new side of Vanden Plas. So
violent, dynamic, and heavy the musicians have rarely before presented
themselves as in Somewhere Alone in the Dark or Postcard to God. Modern
guitar riffing, plus drum parts with a great punch and virtuoso soli
turn both songs into gripping metal tunes which distinguishes Vanden
Plas as a modern formation. In direct contrast there is the deeply
moving number Fireroses Dance with its emotional intro and Middle
Eastern touch. And the wonderfully melancholic ballad Lost In Silence
again reminds of the 1997 acoustic album AcCult and documents Andy Kuntz
fantastic vocal performance on Christ 0 in a very special way.
Important to notice is -- apart from the straight rock track Shadow I Am
(Lill: This number would have also found its place on The God Thing or
Far Off Grace.) -- the composition Silently, which Vanden Plas calls an
artistic song and which, at the beginning, captivates the listener
because of its tender and fragile seeming chorus developing into a
mighty up-beat chorus. Christ 0 ends with Gethsemane from the musical
Jesus Christ Superstar, composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber and inimitably
interpreted here. How much fitting for an album based on the story of
the count of Monte Christo that however received a new contemporary
symbolism and deals with the phenomena of schizophrenia thanks to the
personal treatment by Andy Kuntz. When you imagine a mixture of the
movie classics Angel Heart and Silence of the Lambs put to music you
will get the idea on which adventurous journey Vanden Plas is taking its
audience on Christ 0.
Vanden Plas have produced the album in cooperation with sound engineer
Markus Teske (Saga, Spocks Beard, Symphony X). The cover artwork is
based on an idea by Andy Kuntz; it perfectly symbolises the thrilling
psychological pattern of the Christ 0 song lyrics. Apropos Andy Kuntz:
on February 25th, Kuntz musical Abydos premieres at the Pfalztheater in
Kaiserlslautern; starring Kuntz it will be staged there for thirteen
performances.
History Part 2: If
you want to do justice to the significance of prog metal act Vanden Plas
from Kaiserslautern, it doesn’t really make sense to restrict yourself
to their accomplishments in Germany alone. The band surrounding vocalist
Andreas Kuntz have succeeded in making a name for themselves on an
international level, enjoy almost cult status in France, have been
touring all over Europe with established acts like Theater, Savatage or
Angra and can point to a number of impressive releases, among them three
studio albums, a live cut, an unplugged recording, and several EPs. With
their latest offering, Beyond Daylight, Vanden Plas once again emphasise
their leading position on the international prog scene, opening an
exciting new chapter in their band history. Beyond Daylight contains
nine brand-new prog metal tracks which stand out with their brilliant
melodies, exquisite instrumental passages and intelligent arrangements,
and the powerful rock ballad ‘The Healing Tree’ mirrors perfectly
the fascination that this band has in the line: ”Where we go around
from here? Will we share another tear? Like the seasons we are leaving
to return again.” Be it the juxtaposition of a habit-forming chorus
and technically virtuoso passages, as in ‘Scarlett Flowerfields’,
anthemnic structures like the opener ‘Nightwalker’, or progressive
tracks like ‘Cold Wind’: Vanden Plas never cease to delight and at
the same time surprise their audience.
”The new album has an even wider stylistic range than our previous
releases,” elaborates Kuntz on the difference compared to older Vanden
Plas material. ”A while ago, we would have been sceptical as to
whether a shout-along number like ‘Free The Fire’ actually suits
Vanden Plas. These days we don’t worry too much about things like
that. What matters is the quality of a song; a ballad like ‘Can You
Hear Me?’ could in this or a similar form easily have been penned by
Sting, but it happens to suit Beyond Daylight perfectly. The mood of the
songs, the entire album is more open-minded, atmospherically broader
and, in a very positive sense, more commercial.” The first edition of
the album is rounded off by a cover version of the Kansas classic
‘Point Of No Return’. Markus Teske produced the album at the
Bazement Studio, making sure in the process that the material, despite
its various rhythmical and stylistic refinements, remains transparent at
all times. Teske, who has been a known quantity on the scene since his
work for Weissglut and Symphony X, also helped Vanden Plas with the
final mix of their Spirit Of Live album, which was cut at a show in
Paris and came out in September 2000, and, if this record is anything to
go by, the cooperation between Vanden Plas and Teske continues to be
highly harmonic.
A new development is the continuous theme that runs through the
material. Like a puzzle, song following song, lyric following lyric, it
leads up to the lyrical context of the final, over 10 minute title
track, a monumental song with the all-encompassing line ”Sooner or
later follow me into my world”, countless rhythmic facets and long
instrumental passages. ”I’m not really a great friend of your
typical concept album,” Kuntz confesses, ”and we didn’t intend for
Beyond Daylight to turn into one, that’s just something that happened
right at the end, once I had finished all the lyrics and noticed that
different aspects of a continuous thought seem to be running through all
the tracks. Each of the songs could stand by itself, but at the end of
the album you realise that everything is somehow connected.”. Since
the late Eighties, when the band first got together, Vanden Plas never
lost sight of their ambitious goal: expressive music with emotional
depth and a melancholy prog metal corset. Starting off with their debut
album Colour Temple, the band continued to gather an ever-increasing
following with their versatile, intuitive and always unbridled lust for
playing. Two years later, in 1997, Vanden Plas brought out their epic
bombast successor The God Thing, which was praised by renowned magazines
like Metal Hammer, Rock Hard, Burrn!, Aardschock and Flash. A six week
tour with Dream Theater followed, like a sort of knighthood conferred on
the highest level. The group went on to bring out the unplugged EP
AcCult, on which the fascinating aspects of their compositions came to
fruition in all their purity.
Each Vanden Plas release shows the great musical diversity of the five
band members, who have all repeatedly been involved in theatre projects
and rock musicals like ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’, ‘The Rocky Horror
Picture Show’, ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ or ‘Evita’. In
September 1999, Vanden Plas returned to the limelight with Far Off
Grace, which had been recorded by Pink Cream 69 bassist/producer Dennis
Ward at the House Of Audio. The band presented themselves in an even
more compact and determined style, remaining melodic and innovative at
the same time. In 1991, the musicians proved that they were still able
to see beyond the end of their own noses when they recorded the anthem
‘Keep On Running’ for national league club, 1. FC Kaiserslautern,
repeating their feat three years later with the fan track ‘Das ist
für Euch’ (This is for you). Spring 2000 saw Vanden Plas recording a
concert in front of enthusiastic fans at the Elysée Montmartre in
Paris, releasing the cuts on their Spirit of Live album, which also
featured a duet by vocalist Andy Kuntz and Don Dokken on the Dokken
cover ‘Kiss Of Death’, and a breathtaking duel between guitarist
Stephan Lill and his French colleague Patrick Rondat – over 73 minutes
of intense live atmosphere which speak of the band’s unbridled
enthusiasm for their music. The same enthusiasm comes across on Beyond
Daylight, combined with a determination to link past, present and
future!! Want to know more about Vanden Plas?
Ask Them Here
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