Coma Ecliptic

Coma Ecliptic is the seventh studio album by American progressive metal band Between the Buried and Me, released on July 10, 2015 through Metal Blade Records.[7] The band first announced the album through Twitter on September 8, 2014 saying "It has begun! #rockopera".[8] Similar to previous releases by the band, Coma Ecliptic is a concept album. The first single, "Memory Palace" was released on April 3, 2015.[7]

Coma Ecliptic
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 10, 2015
Genre
Length68:31
LabelMetal Blade
ProducerJamie King
Between the Buried and Me chronology
The Parallax II: Future Sequence
(2012)
Coma Ecliptic
(2015)
Automata I
(2018)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic73/100[1]
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
Alternative Press[1]
Consequence of SoundC-[3]
Exclaim!8/10[4]
The Guardian[5]
Kerrang![1]
PopMatters[6]

Overview

The band has stated that the concept of Coma Ecliptic involves a man stuck in a coma, journeying through his past lives. It was added that the man faces a choice to either stay or move on to something better. Each song is its own episode in a fashion similar to "The Twilight Zone".[7]

Coma Ecliptic is notably the first album since 2005's Alaska to feature no songs over 10 minutes in length, and also the first album to have a smaller emphasis on growling compared to previous albums. Vocalist Tommy Rogers decided to use clean vocals more frequently, as he felt they better fit the tone of the songs being written.

Reception

The album received generally positive reviews from professional critics. Review aggregator Metacritic scored the album a 73 out of 100 based on 7 music critics, citing 'generally favorable reviews'.[1] Thom Jurek of Allmusic gave the album a positive review saying, "Coma Ecliptic holds together as an album. Despite, and perhaps because of, its relative accessibility it is exceptionally creative. Ultimately, Between the Buried & Me, despite employing many tropes and influences, come off sounding like no one but themselves." Calum Slingerland of Exclaim! opined, "While the noticeable shift away from death metal may discourage some, Coma Ecliptic succeeds in pushing Between the Buried and Me's creativity in a new direction, avoiding a simple rehash of their winning formula."

Dom Lawson from The Guardian gave the album a perfect rating calling it "ingenious, sprawling prog-metal" and saying "From the rock opera crescendos of the opening "Node" onwards, the album dares to be both a quintessentially prog-rock experience and a timely act of modern metal derring-do." Chris Cope of Prog added that "at its best, Coma Ecliptic holds some of this band’s most impressive moments to date."[9]

Some opinions were generally mixed on the band's shift away from technical death metal on Coma Ecliptic. Jon Hadusek of Consequence of Sound gave the album a rating of C-, saying, "Coma Ecliptic clocks in at over an hour, but most discouraging is the band’s failure to translate the album’s conceptual themes to the listener in that timespan." Kerrang! received the album negatively: "They're suspended in an airy updraft of synths and clean guitar lines that are so '70s prog-rock they should be wearing a Rick Wakeman from Yes-styled cape."

Appearances

The second track "The Coma Machine" is featured and available as downloadable content in the game Rock Band 4.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Between the Buried and Me.

No.TitleLength
1."Node"3:31
2."The Coma Machine"7:35
3."Dim Ignition"2:16
4."Famine Wolf"6:50
5."King Redeem/Queen Serene"6:58
6."Turn on the Darkness"8:26
7."The Ectopic Stroll"7:02
8."Rapid Calm"7:59
9."Memory Palace"9:54
10."Option Oblivion"4:22
11."Life in Velvet"3:38
Total length:68:31

Personnel

Between the Buried and Me

Additional personnel

Charts

Chart (2015) Peak
position
UK Albums (OCC)[10] 74
US Billboard 200[11] 12
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[12] 17
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[13] 205
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[14] 1
US Top Hard Rock Albums (Billboard)[15] 1
US Top Tastemaker Albums (Billboard)[16] 1
US Independent Albums (Billboard)[17] 2

References

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