Prison_of_Desire

<i>Prison of Desire</i>

Prison of Desire

2000 studio album by After Forever


Prison of Desire is the debut album by Dutch symphonic metal band After Forever. It was released on 21 April 2000 by Transmission Records. The album contains the first four installments (three parts and a prologue) of The Embrace That Smothers, a collection of songs by Mark Jansen which deals with the influence and distortion of religion in human society. This theme was carried over to the Epica albums The Phantom Agony and The Divine Conspiracy.

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The final track, "Beyond Me", features a guest appearance of Sharon den Adel, lead singer in Within Temptation.

The album was reissued in June 2008 by the re-financed Transmission Records, as a two-disc set containing previously unreleased studio sessions, instrumental/a cappella tracks, and a handful of demo recordings.[3] Guitarist Sander Gommans has urged fans not to buy this re-release through the band's official forum.[4]

In 2021, it was elected by Metal Hammer as the 6th best symphonic metal album of all time.[5]

Track listing

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All music is composed by Mark Jansen, Sander Gommans and Floor Jansen, except "Mea Culpa" by M. Jansen

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Personnel

After Forever

Additional musician

Choir

  • Hans Cassa, Caspar de Jonge, Yvonne Rooda and Melissa 't Hart

Production

  • Hans Pieters – engineering
  • Dennis Leidelmeijer – engineering
  • Oscar Holleman – choir producer, engineering, mixing
  • Hans van Vuuren – executive producer, coordination and research
  • Peter van 't Riet – mastering

References

  1. Rivadavia, Eduardo. "After Forever Prison of Desire review". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  2. Flaaten, Chris (12 August 2000). "After Forever - Prison of Desire". Chronicles of Chaos. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  3. "Official Forum". After Forever. Archived from the original on 6 June 2008. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  4. Davies, Hywel; Dome, Malcolm; Goodman, Eleanor; Chantler, Chris; Gordon, Connie; Grady, Spencer; Rees, Adam; Selzer, Jonathan (17 November 2021). "The 25 best symphonic metal albums". Metal Hammer. Future plc. Retrieved 2 January 2022.




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