The Missing Piece(ft. Lizzie Huffman of Man In The Blue Man)
Life Is Looking Up
The Spider And The Lamps(ft. Max Bemis of Say Anything)
Toba The Tura(ft. Chris Conley of Saves The Day)
The Oracle(ft. Danny Stevens of The Audition)
A Thousand Year, Minute-Long Intermission
The Exit(ft. Brendon Urie of Panic At the Disco, Dan Young of This Providence)
It's True Love(ft. Greta Salpeter of The Hush Sound)
Meet The King(ft. Greta Salpeter of The Hush Sound, Nic Newsham of Gatsbys American Dream)
Holy The Sea(ft. John Gourley of Portugal. The Man, Kris Anaya of An Angle)
Doctor Doctor(ft. Shawn Harris of The Matches)
The Apex(ft. Greta Salpeter of The Hush Sound, Brendon Urie of Panic At the Disco)
Razia's Shadow: A Musical is the 2008 album from Forgive Durden. It is a musical featuring members of popular bands such as Say Anything, Saves The Day, The Dear Hunter, The Matches, The Hush Sound and Panic at the Disco, ... more »among others. The album will be released on Fueled By Ramen.The album was conceived by Thomas Dutton and co-written by his brother Paul. The album also features Rudy Gajadhar of Gatsbys American Dream on drums.« less
Razia's Shadow: A Musical is the 2008 album from Forgive Durden. It is a musical featuring members of popular bands such as Say Anything, Saves The Day, The Dear Hunter, The Matches, The Hush Sound and Panic at the Disco, among others. The album will be released on Fueled By Ramen.The album was conceived by Thomas Dutton and co-written by his brother Paul. The album also features Rudy Gajadhar of Gatsbys American Dream on drums.
"I had bought this album off ITunes the first week it was out. In an age where most of the cd's i buy with high hopes leave my cd player within days, this album is still rotating in my cd player. I admit I was not a fan of Forgive Durden's first album, but with "Razia's Shadow" Thomas Dutton has thoroughly impressed me.
Before diving into the story, the vast musical composition of this album grabbed me. Every track on this album is a calculated ping pong between strings and horns and piano and guitar/bass. Theres a great balance between all these instruments where they sound large and passionate, but you can also make out every instrument being played. The vocals are also very well recorded/produced. Lizzie Huffman impresses the hell out of me with her soulful croon on "The Missing Piece" as Nidria. Being a Say Anything fan I really dig how Max Bemis drops the line "i'm the spider/ crawl inside her" in "The Spider and The Lamps".
Besides from the music and vocals, you get very caught up in the story. A man with conflict towards the place he grew up, following nothing but what he feels is his born destiny, following his heart towards love and loss. The vocalist from mewithoutyou does a wonderful job narrating the tale. Leaving listeners with the moral "never surrender".
I've gained so much respect towards Dutton and co. for composing such a fantastic piece of music. If they ever decide to bring this tale to stage (which i think would be incredible) i will be first in line for tickets."
What's going on?
Jason Dettman | rochester, ny usa | 11/21/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"i love the whole idea surrounding this work. there are so many different artists involved which is cool because it might open up some new doors for listeners who are looking for good music. personal highlights on this album would have to be the narration done by Aaron Weiss from mewithoutYou and guest vocals from John Gourley courtesy of Portugal. The Man on "Holy The Sea". two amazing bands which if you have not heard of them you must check them out. i just wonder how all of this will be performed live.
i'm not really into musicals, because they usually leave me crying hysterically in a corner somewhere after being repeatedly screamed at by the people around me for asking so many questions because i have trouble following along. anyways, after listening to Razia's Shadow i can honestly say that i still don't really know what's going on story wise but it sounds good. if anyone reads this please tell my family i miss them and i'm really sorry for causing them so much anger with all my questions and i hope they will explain it to me someday...."
Amazing. Absolutley Amazing.
dtm | the city of constellations | 01/10/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Only a few times a decade do albums come out that accomplish something grand. This album does that in so many ways. I enjoyed what I heard within the first minute. The first couple of tracks are very catchy. As the album progresses it develops a story that keeps you listening.
Favorite tracks:
The Missing Piece
Life is looking up
The Oracle"
The musical you weren't expecting
volatile | Australia | 01/08/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"If the subtitle 'A Musical' doesn't pique your interest, perhaps the guest stars will - Forgive Durden's Thomas Dutton has assembled a veritable who's who of the contemporary emo/punk scene to flesh out the cast of his ambitious musical. Although the line-up is weighed down by scene-famous names like Max Bemis (Say Anything), Chris Conley (Saves the Day), Brendon Urie (Panic at the Disco) and Shawn Harris (The Matches) amongst others, they all complement rather than overwhelm Dutton's fairytale vision of a struggle between light and darkness.
This is not your conventional album: as much as he can within the restraints of the album format, Dutton's created a virtual soundtrack to a musical that never was. Dutton naturally plays the lead roles, first as the fallen angel Ahrima whose ambition nearly causes the destruction of the world he helped create; and then as Adakias, the young prince who falls in Romeo-and-Juliet-esque love for the princess Anhura (The Hush Sound's Greta Salpeter, in beautiful form).
Aided by producer Casey Bates and brother Paul Dutton, Dutton's created the real sound of a stage musical complete with lush strings and orchestration, underscored by Rudy Gajadhar's (Gatsby's American Dream) drums.
Stand-out tracks include the urgent, uptempo 'Life is Looking Up'; the slow build of 'Toba the Tura' (ft. Chris Conley); and 'The Exit' (ft. Brendon Urie and This Providence's Dan Young) which succeeds wonderfully in creating a sense of character interaction and storyline. Special mention must also go out to Max Bemis as the Spider on 'The Spider and the Lamps' and Shawn Harris on 'Doctor, Doctor' for throwing themselves so whole-heartedly into creating such distinctive, sinister and memorable characters.
There are moments when the narrative falters - especially towards the somewhat rushed climax - and on first listen the unabashed theatricality (or cheesiness, depending on your stance on musicals) of tracks like 'Doctor, Doctor' or 'Meet the King' may take you aback. As a general criticism, I also really wish there had been more for the two female characters (Lizzie Huffman and Salpeter) to do apart from act as foils to Dutton's leads.
Overall, however, it's an album and a story that stands up to repeat listens. It's the strength of Dutton's melodies and lyrics that make this album as good as it is, and strong enough to persuade me overlook any minor shortfalls between ambition and achievement. This probably isn't the album anyone was expecting - an emo fantasy musical? come on! - but in many ways it seems like the an appropriate culmination of the literary ambitions always displayed in Forgive Durden's earlier and more easily categorised (though no less interesting and challenging) work. Highly recommended."