When the King is away, the kids will play. This vocal is comprised of the top tier of King Diamond's band members. Pete Blakk and Andy LaRocque on guitars is worth the price of admission alone. But wait, there is more. Mikkey Dee took a break from the Scorpions to play on this album. Hal Pinto is covering the bass duties as well. Pagan's Mind vocalist Nils K LaRue joins the Swedes, bringing some Norse vocal power to things. His power metal style of vocals works well over things; there is clearly a King Diamond influence on what he is doing as he leaps up into falsetto.
The opening track hooks me in more than the second song; some of this is due to LaRue's vocals defaulting to the more expected power metal style, though things are still a little darker. But not darker than King Diamond, I like 'When the Stars Align' more than "' The Resurrected' as power metal can come close to hair metal with song of the anthemic touches, and they work better when they stay on the more metal side of the equation. Even when the singer steers them in a more cock rock direction, at least the riffs are still there. I don't think I am being too picky in this regard, as I love Queensryche, which navigates this well. I think dropping some ofthe vocal layers might be the key here.
I had to go back after my first listen to this album and start again at "Dreams of Darkness" as that is where things began to run together for me. Perhaps it's the way the tempo picked up. Though the chorus on that one worked pretty well. There is a "Them" feel to " Saviours". It works well, has enough darkness to balance things out. "Life Eternal" has a more straightforward chug. They certainly know who they are writing for. The instrumental outro works well. It would take these guys to come close to anything King Diamond does, which is a tall order, making this album worth a 9.5.

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