Anacrusis - Manic Impressions

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Album Details

Title: Manic Impressions
Artist: Anacrusis
Release Date: 1991
Re-Released On: 1/0/1991
Label: Metal Blade
Duration: 52:44
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 039841426625, 075992661645
Genre: Rock
Styles: Heavy Metal, Speed Metal, Progressive Metal
Moods: Aggressive, Gritty, Harsh, Malevolent, Nihilistic, Ominous, Raucous, Rousing, Rowdy, Volatile
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Paint a Picture
  2. I Love the World
  3. Something Real
  4. Dream Again
  5. Explained Away
  6. Still Black
  7. What You Became
  8. Our Reunion
  9. Idle Hours
  10. Far Too Long

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1991CDMetal Blade2-26616

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Manic Impressions is a significant step forward from Anacrusis' first two albums, tightening and focusing the songwriting and honing their instrumental work to a razor-sharp edge. That alone would be enough to make them stand out in the progressive metal subgenre -- often criticized for the same excesses as '70s progressive rock, substituting technical flash and aimless "extended" structures for substance and songcraft -- but what's even more impressive is the emotional depth of the album. Manic Impressions is a study in depression and mental instability, its bleak lyrical worldview grounded in everyday reality and enhanced by the icily clear production and the mechanical precision of the complex compositions. Vocalist Kenn Nardi's ability to leap between growling rage and ethereal melodicism -- sometimes in the same lyric line -- is complemented by the band's new-found grasp of dynamic shifts, which heighten the songs' dramatic impact. And, on top of all that, nearly every song has at least one memorable vocal melody to go along with the killer riffs -- Anacrusis has a unique melodic sensibility, taking unpredictable directions but always seeming elegantly constructed and evocatively melancholy. The closest comparison is Voivod (without the sci-fi obsession), but the closer one listens, the more it becomes apparent that Anacrusis' sound is really all its own. Vastly underappreciated upon its initial release, Manic Impressions (like its follow-up, Screams and Whispers) is essential listening for fans of both thrash and progressive metal. [In 1999, Manic Impressions was remastered and reissued.] ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
AnacrusisCover Art Concept, Design
Bill FrantzPhotography
Chad SmithDrums
Eddy SchreyerMastering
Fuzzy DvirnakMixing Engineer
John EmeryBass
Kenn NardiVocals, Guitar, Producer
Kevin HeidbrederGuitar
Sean McMahonTrack Engineer, Engineer