Rapture - _Songs for the Withering_
(Spinefarm, 2002)
by: Pedro Azevedo (7.5 out of 10)
_Songs for the Withering_ proves once again that a surprisingly good
debut does not guarantee a great second album. Rapture's debut
_Futile_ really hit the spot when it came out, its revival of
Katatonia's _Brave Murder Day_ infused with a bleak character of its
very own. As a result, it kept visiting my CD player with remarkable
frequency for an unusually long period of time, and I would have
happily given it a 9 out of 10. _Songs for the Withering_ is the
disappointment that follows the pleasant surprise -- but truth be
told, its first 1:15 left me so gutted that everything that followed
was an improvement. My disappointment was caused by Rapture losing
some of the emotional qualities of the depressive and bleak _Futile_.
They have tried too hard to make a lot of songs on _SftW_ catchy, at
the same time as they went for more chorus-based song structures (the
last track, "Farewell", is basically the only exception). This plays a
considerable part in wrecking some of the emotional qualities the
album might have had, but Katatonia's _Discouraged Ones_ proved years
ago that chorus-based structures do not necessarily have that effect
every time. In fact, what contributed most to my disappointment with
_Songs for the Withering_ was that so many of Rapture's excellent,
emotional guitar leads have been replaced by simple, dull riffs. A lot
more clean vocals can be found on the album, as Petri Eskelainen no
longer does the harsh vox. A new vocalist was brought in for that
purpose, and his performance is acceptable, apart from the mediocre
blackened vocals. I still prefer the more subdued clean vocal approach
on _Rapture_ to the hit-and-miss affair on this one (which can be
heard in tracks like "The Great Distance"), but this isn't a major
gripe. There are still some excellent passages on this album, but as
usual in these cases they seem to make the rest all the more difficult
to endure. For instance, there are some great bits on "Transfixion",
but then there's the song's irritating chorus; similarly, the fine
main guitar lead on "Enveloped" is practically wasted because of other
sections on the song; and "Farewell" is a closing track that leaves
you wishing more of the album had been like it. _Songs for the
Withering_ is a good album nonetheless, and I am probably making it
seem worse than it is for those who don't know Rapture; but it
ultimately leaves the listener who does know _Futile_ with a feeling
that so much more could have been accomplished and the album could
have -meant- a whole lot more. These Finns do have immense talent, but it only occasionally shines through as brightly as it should on _Songs for the Withering_; but if they can find a consistent direction again, there will surely be an excellent third album.
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