Anathema – We’re Here Because We’re Here (2010)

Album Review

Anathema are one of the select few bands that actually progress with each album, honing their songwriting skills to provide a better means for their musical message — but a six-year gap in the recording schedule that preceded We’re Here Because We’re Here still left many fans wondering, where do they go from here? Turns out, it was in the right direction. The most easily recognized change is the increased emphasis on piano, which is the leading instrument on most songs, but if this description brings the likes of Coldplay and Fray to mind, the music does not, for the simple reason that Chris Martin, let alone the horde of his mainstream rock imitators, can never rival the immense emotional charge of Anathema’s music. The cathartic effect is further amplified by the music’s elaborate but clear… Read more on allmusic.com

About the Band

While Paradise Lost and My Dying Bride got more attention from underground doom metal fans, Liverpool natives Anathema were just as important in creating a new strain of doom (sometimes referred to as doom/death) that drew heavily from atmospheric goth metal and, in the early days, featured gruff death-style vocals. Guitar-playing brothers Vincent and Danny Cavanagh formed Anathema in 1990 with vocalist Darren White, bassist Duncan Patterson, and drummer John Douglas, and originally called themselves Pagan Angel. As Anathema, the band recorded a… Read more on allmusic.com

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