Spiritual Black Dimensions

Spiritual Black Dimensions is the fourth studio album by Norwegian symphonic black metal band Dimmu Borgir. It was released in 1999 by Nuclear Blast Records. A deluxe edition was released in 2004 with bonus material. There is also a digipak edition of this album which contains no bonus tracks. The digipak has reflective/holographic cover art. This release featured keyboardist Mustis and the clean vocals of ICS Vortex, as well as the departure of long-time drummer Tjodalv, guitarist Astennu, and bassist Nagash.

Spiritual Black Dimensions
Studio album by
Released2 March 1999
RecordedAugust–October 1998 at Abyss Studio
GenreSymphonic black metal
Length49:14
LabelNuclear Blast
ProducerDimmu Borgir, Peter Tägtgren
Dimmu Borgir chronology
Godless Savage Garden
(1998)
Spiritual Black Dimensions
(1999)
Puritanical Euphoric Misanthropia
(2001)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The album cover was part of the top 10 of Greatest Heavy Metal Album Covers by Blender magazine in 2006.[2] It was inspired by The Wounded Angel, a painting by Finnish artist Hugo Simberg.

Track listing edit

No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."Reptile"Silenoz 5:17
2."Behind the Curtains of Night - Phantasmagoria"Silenoz 3:21
3."Dreamside Dominions"Silenoz 5:14
4."United in Unhallowed Grace"Nagash 4:22
5."The Promised Future Aeons"Nagash 6:52
6."The Blazing Monoliths of Defiance"NagashShagrath4:38
7."The Insight and the Catharsis"SilenozShagrath7:17
8."Grotesquery Conceiled (Within Measureless Magic)"Silenoz 5:10
9."Arcane Lifeforce Mysteria"Silenoz, Nagash, Shagrath 7:03
Japanese Edition bonus track
No.TitleLength
10."Masses for the New Messiah"5:11

Reception edit

Steve Huey of AllMusic stated that "Dimmu Borgir's arrangements continue to increase in complexity and sophistication on Spiritual Black Dimensions, improving on its predecessors and illustrating the band's musical progression".[1] In Slayer no. 13, Jon 'Metalion' Kristiansen called Spiritual Black Dimensions "a fine case of melodic, over-produced, symphonic metal. If you like this melodic style I can't really think of anyone doing it better […]. No, I wouldn't call this black metal. Read the interview with Funeral Mist for the right definition of black metal".[3]

Personnel edit

Dimmu Borgir
Guests
  • ICS Vortex – clean vocals on tracks 1, 3, 7 and 9
Technical staff

References edit

  1. ^ a b Steve Huey: Spiritual Black Dimensions - Dimmu Borgir.
  2. ^ [1] Archived May 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ The Great Rock & Roll Swindle!. In: Jon Kristiansen: Metalion: The Slayer Mag Diaries. Brooklyn, NY: Bazillion Points Books 2011, p. 419.