Product Details
Embrace the Silence

Embrace the Silence
Vanishing Point

Price: $10.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

20 new or used available from $7.49

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Hollow
  2. My Virtue
  3. If Only I
  4. Live to Live
  5. Embraced
  6. Season of Sundays
  7. Once a Believer
  8. Reason
  9. Breathe
  10. Somebody Save Me
  11. Insight
  12. Life Less
  13. As I Reflect

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #281170 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-08-14
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .20 pounds

Customer Reviews

Worth waiting for!5
I discovered Vanishing Point in 2000 with their excellent second album Tangled in Dream, and was immediately hooked on the Australian band's highly melodic brand of progressive metal. They have this Vanden Plas meets Nightingale sound with some of the best midrange vocals you could ever hope to hear. I tracked down their debut - In Thought - shortly afterwards, and found it to be enjoyable as well. At that point I started to wait for the band's next release. Little did I know that it would take five freaking years! Needless to say, Embrace the Silence had a lot to live up to.

How did the band do? Really really really well. Embrace the Silence is a big step forward for the band, and when you consider how good Tangled in Dream was, you can see that the bar is set pretty high. This album is an improvement in terms of production, performance, songwriting, and overall maturity. Embrace the Silence is a very melodic progressive metal album that achieves the perfect balance between the two elements. It's not so melodic that it doesn't flat out rock, and it's not so progressive that those elements come at the expense of the actual songs. The songs on Embrace the Silence run from 5-7 minutes each, so you're not going to be put to sleep with 10-minute instrumental passages. And the band definitely gives you your money's worth, with the album clocking in at just under 80 minutes and taking up nearly every available second on the disc.

While I didn't enjoy waiting so long for this album, it was certainly worth the wait. It's an excellent addition to Vanishing Point's catalog, and is sure to appeal to anyone who enjoys progressive and/or power metal.

NOTE: I can only hope that Vanishing Point gets picked up by a "major" label like Inside Out or Nuclear Blast, so their albums can receive the attention they truly deserve. That this band remains relatively unknown while others thrive is just sad.