With rumours that Rick Fisher may be resurrecting his progressive instrumental side project
Sisyphean, the Black Gates main man, along with fellow member Jack Barrett have decided to re-issue the four albums released to a global audience. The band never acheived world wide exposure but remained a cult figure in the United Kingdom, Australia and the United States. For those not in the loop,
Sisyphean was the logical conclusion for
The Black Gates more eclectic, adventurous musical forays that strayed from their technical path and it allowed Rick Fisher to explore ideas well outside TBG's vision.
The band primarily featured the aforementioned Fisher and Barrett, with fellow TBG band mate Paul Smith on percussion, Waterleile's one time touring bassist/Chapman stick virtuoso Roland Meilland and former Dies Irae keys man Tomi Kosari. They recruited some big names to the venture, with
Infernal Tribute's Chuck and Miguel featuring often, along with The Lamb, Harry Lathien and Baph Crowsley of the
Theosophical Society, Roger from
Froogley and ex
SuperHighwayTechnoBuddah member turned hip hop artist Jazzy Beat all lending their considerable musical skills.
Sonically the band employed a huge range of influences and sounds, taking in such stylings from traditional Oriental string arrangements to mix with avant garde black metal, traditional tribal music from Tonga and the Aboriginal people of Australia, through to heavy dub, post metal, jazz fusion, ambient, drone, stoner, insanely technical and proggy metal and more
First re-release is
Struggle With Life. It contains a summary of Albert Camus'
Myth of Sisyphus, a short description about each song and where they stand within the legend, studio footage and interveiws with the lesser known members of the band.
1.Struggle With Life
2. Gifted With Eternity
3. Absurdity
4. Deeds Undone
5. Ancient Metaphor
6. Finding Meaning Where It Doesn't Exist
7. Understanding Irrationality
8. A Difficult Embrace
9. Personal Victory
10. Freedom Recorded at Malevolent Creations Studios, Corby, UK
All arrangements by Rick Fisher and Jack Barrett
Studio members- Paul Smith (percussion), Adam Jones (violin), Roland Meilland (Chapman Stick/bass), David Crowley (samples/programming), Tomi Kosari (keys).
Sound wise, it is as far as from metal as you could get. There was almost no traditional metal guitars, only acoustic and though the album had a weighty subject matter attached to it (the legend of Sisyphus and his task of rolling a boulder up hill) it was a brazen and pompous (to some) blend of jazz fusion, folk and dark ambience. This album for the most part is Rick Fisher flexing his muscles in regards to non metal ideas but there are the odd forays into The Black Gates epic acoustic compositions with the dark, searing ambience of 'Absurdity' and the winding, almost orchestral melody of 'Personal Victory' which is essentially the albums more lighter moments.
'I knew I wanted to do something out of the ordinary with Sisyphean but I wasn't sure where it would end up musically so this album was basically testing the waters so I could get a handle on the project. What your hearing is a little raw and rough around the edges but if you listen carefully you can see the direction that I was trying to push towards. On a whole it doesn't care to the other albums well but its special because it was the beginning of something special.Rick Fisher explains about the album...
'I am sure everyone knows of poor old Sisyphus and his task of rolling his boulder up a hill and nearly making the summit only for the boulder to roll back down and him having to start again. Sisyphus was a deceitful and cunning man who tried to trick Zeus upon his death and was condemned to roll that boulder up a hill for all eternity. So that is were Sisyphus comes into it and how the band name came about.
I had read, purely by chance, the works of Albert Camus, who proposed that the legend represented the absurdity of life and man’s constant search for meaning in everything. Really, this ancient story can be taken as a modern metaphor for life where people do the same thing day in day out, going to the same job and same surrounds and coming to a point where it reaches the consciousness and bitter realization sets in. It is then overcome by acceptance of this and the absurdity of life and man can obtain some sort of freedom within. The subject had me hooked and I thought that this had to be put to a musical score. Having said that, I am no philosopher'.Edited by user 07 July 2010 00:11:30(UTC)
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