"Angry no more
the legendary
metal magician returns from his latest trip to the Otherworld
with spellbinding new album!"
The incomparable Ronnie James Dio, at long
last, makes his latest descent to the material world with his
first new studio work in nearly four years entitled "Magica."
The new record is a resounding return to form for the band as
well as a first time exploration into previously uncharted conceptual
territory that surprisingly only materialized during the last
year. Considering the past track record of Dio who've long established
a standard for weaving magical imagery and mysticism to music,
one would've thought this idea for a concept would have been
envisioned long ago.
RJD picks it up on the idea of designing
something new for the band by returning back toward the band's
glory days: "I wanted a reason to harken back to what we
did before-I wanted this album to be more like Rainbow/Dio-more
of what people expected from us. I think we got a bit confusing
for a while with "Angry Machines"(1996) and so this
concept was something I knew I had to do
but it wasn't
anything we had been looking forward to doing for a long time."
The Rainbow similarities as well as those to the earliest Dio
albums prevail throughout "Magica" as he has indeed
veered slightly away from the recent Sabbath/Dio formula, successfully
filling in the many dark spaces of the past with vibrancy and
color to add a new dimension of atmosphere to music.
RJD describes how the band first moved
away from and subsequently returned home: "Well I think
it's because when we did the "Dehumanizer" album, the
reunion thing with Sabbath, that really just got to be such a
stark thing for me to write with no fantasy involved-no mentions
of magic of any kind at all. So I carried that same kind of attitude
onto "Strange Highways" (1994). We had a guitar player
as well who wasn't that prototypical Ritchie Blackmore kind of
player or Vivian Campbell or Craig Goldy kind of player. And
so the album's started to become that way. I think purposely
to become maybe a bit more modern, trying to compete with something
we shouldn't have competed with. And people on the streets would
tell me we should do an album like "Holy Diver" again
and so I listened to them, they were right!"
The lineup featured on "Magica"
finds the return of some old friends who've undoubtedly helped
shape the new sound based on the blueprints of the earlier classics:
Craig Goldy, who first played with the band on '87's "Dream
Evil," veteran bassist Jimmy Bain and drummer Simon Wright.
Familiar names that have remained in relative obscurity in recent
years, with the exception of Goldy who's remained busy with session
work along with several projects of his own, "Ritual,"
and "Insufficient Therapy."
RJD discusses their recent whereabouts
and how he hooked up with them for the making of "Magica":
I first contacted Craig to have him be the second guitar player
in the band. Tracy didn't feel he could pull it off with the
addition of another guitarist, which I understood, and so it
just basically left Craig which I preferred at that point because
he was going to give me back what I needed from this kind of
concept angle. Jimmy had fought his way back from a substance
abuse problem and luckily for him and us, he got himself sorted
out and so he's been clean and sober now for two years
he's doing great. He had called around the time the album was
already written and shortly thereafter that was it-Jimmy was
in place. Simon had been with me now for 3 ½ years anyway.
He'd taken Vinny (Appice's) place when Vinny went to back up
Bill Ward on the Sabbath reunion and Simon remained and stayed.
So it was real easy how it all came about. "
Goldy, who might not necessarily possess
the slickest or flashiest playing style, does lend a certain
degree of heaviness to go along with the melody he delivers and
according to RJD, he brings with him much more to the mix than
just stunning guitar solos: "I could never have written
this album without Craig. He brings to the table this musical
ability, musical ideas and sidetracks. I always write lyrics
and the melodies for everything that I do and he's there with
these chord changes
but we do this together. It was a very
good partnership-he knew his place, I knew my place, but we did
it with a lot of joy
everything just flowed." Going
down the list of songs on "Magica," listeners will
enjoy the traditional heaviness that solidified the earliest
Dio moments into the true metal classics they are today as well
as the highly imaginative storybook lyrics that tell a unique
story within the context of each song while staying within the
boundaries of the overall concept. RJD goes into a brief shakedown
of how much of "Magica" was brought to existence: "I
think this is an album that really really worked. The 'Magica'
theme was what I wanted it to be-to tie the whole piece up-I
wanted to do the theme first, vocal at the end. "Lord of
the Last Day" is taken from the standpoint of 'Shadowcast'
who is the character you see on the front cover. That was his
opening to it all, telling how bad he was, ('I love the night
So many shadows
Unholy light
Putting out the spark
.
Leave 'em in the dark... Forever) how evil he was. "Turn
to Stone" is really one of the cruxes of the whole thing-they
turn people to stone and send the spirits down to other worlds.
All these songs follow so easily, the pattern of the story. Usually
you deal with tempos, now I was dealing with actual realities
I had to write to make these songs come alive. The point was
always to make them removable from the concept so they could
be viewed as single songs."Feed My Head" is a song
we probably wrote more with the European audience in mind, because
it's one of those kinds of things you can do together-but again,
an important song from the point of the evil guy who's taking
all the spirits and putting them in one place and using that
energy to be able to keep the good people at bay forever. "Ariel"
was written with Jimmy in mind-he's a master of (begins emulating
bass-beats in a manner of "Holy Diver," "Last
in Line"). "Challis" is probably most like something
from "Holy Diver" I thought, maybe a little bit more
like "Rainbow"
because of the drum hits and all,
but a song about a rebellious part of the thing-about a young
guy who's like, 'give me a break
' and "Ariel"
of course shows him the way and we find out later on that he's
Ariel's son. "Losing My Insanity" is one where I just
wanted to write something that really had a medieval nature to
it, which the beginning does with the little pan flute and guitar."
"Magica" is not an album that
boasts any broad message or play the role of superhero in a world
shuddered by darkness. There was no hidden agenda within the
writing of the material with a goal toward enlightenment or good
presiding over evil or lessons in right and wrong: "I didn't
plan it to be a message, I just wrote a story that addresses
that there is good and there is evil
this is Heaven and
this is earth and good and evil reside in each one of us. At
the end of the day, evil never goes away. Anyone who thinks that
at the end of the story good triumphs, well it didn't because
evil still exists and there are more battles to be fought as
they say at the end. That's the whole point of "Magica."
Humanity is good and humanity is evil. There is no separating
the two no matter what Pat Robertson tells us or what Jerry Fallwell
says. I just wanted to write an interesting story and I did it
from the perspective of this book of "Magica" and from
the evil man "Shadowcast" and the fact that good seemed
to conquer
but it didn't really."
With all of the imaginative twists and
turns the story of "Magica" takes, this is only where
the journey begins as RJD addresses the open-ended conclusion
to the album and what direction is taken from there: "I
left it open but not because I want to do another 'Magica' album.
I want to write a trilogy-a proper literary trilogy. This will
be book one, which you read here, of course in a much broader
perspective. Then it will go to Ariel as a young man in the second
one, and then it will go from 'Challis' as the order of the high
lord, to what happens to him with these other battles that I
suggest here."
Listen to the album, stay tuned for the
final narration in the "Magica Story" and definitely
read the inner booklet which goes into full detail of how the
tale begins-it's as wondrous and stunning as you might expect.
Future plans also include developing an animated film to go along
with the entire concept. Building off that, RJD discussed the
possibilities of interpreting the grandeur of "Magica"
in front of a live audience and how all of the images from the
storyline would translate to the stage and bringing the whole
concept to life as some of his past productions had been famous
for: "My aim is to make people be able to escape for a little
while. Let 'em go to see "Dio-land" as opposed to Disneyland.
That was always my way of paying back the fans to thank them
for putting me here. That was important to me and still is, but
we don't make the kind of money these days. If this album should
be as successful as I hope it will be, then I'll pour that money
back in and you'll see a stage show like how we used to do. I'd
love to be able to do it
this album screams to come alive
with a stage set, but again, in the socioeconomic times we live
in, I'm not sure if it could happen right now."
Indeed, the big elaborate stage designs
have for the most part remained a thing of the past. Although
there is some promise that the big live productions are again
primed to make the rounds as the return of Kiss has made clear
and the upcoming plans surrounding the likes of fellow veteran
performers like Maiden and Priest. There is an interesting alternate
plan however as RJD explains: "Hopefully it'll happen for
us too but if it doesn't happen that way, then my plans are to
take it into a smaller theater like maybe 2500 - 3500 seats and
do a big production and film it for a video release. Fans can
see it anytime they want, with a live audience and the band playing
live
so if it doesn't work one way, believe me, I'll get
it to work another way."
Would a video still be a consideration
aside from these circumstances? "We're doing a video for
"Fever Dreams" and probably one for "Challis"
as well. And we're doing it in DVD. It'll have footage that people
probably haven't seen before. In fact I've just gotten my hands
on some old Elf footage that no one has ever seen! So anything
we can put on the DVD to make it more interesting or entertaining
is what we'll do. We've also got footage from Dio shows that
have never been seen before-with Craig, with Vivian, with Rowan
(Robertson). So there are a lot of things we'll be doing and
we're not just going to sit down and do nothing
we'll give
a lot back."
With such a vast array of material accumulated
throughout his years with Rainbow and of course Sabbath as well
as Dio, where would "Magica" fall within the live performance
with so much to choose from and considering that it's an album
that works really well when played in succession. RJD concludes:
"We'll do almost the entire album. There's some things we're
gonna have to cut back because having such a long career there
are things we have to do
and I can't be onstage for four
hours! The show will be too intense certainly from a vocal standpoint.
So we'll cut it back a little bit
it won't be the Reader's
Digest version, but it will be cut back somewhat yet it'll be
broad enough to tell the tale as it needs to be told. And then
again, if things go well, we can probably do the entire thing
from beginning to end and not have to rely so much on the classic
material. But you've got to do what the people want to hear.
And, we'll do songs from Dio that we haven't done in fifteen
years: "Invisible," "All the Fools Sailed Away,"
"Gypsy." The type of songs that no one has heard for
such a long time but have always requested. So it's gonna be
a different show-most of this whole album plus things we haven't
dug up for a long time!" |