Rex_Rocker
Well-known member
In Flames had solos (before they sold out). Probably not Yngwie or even COB-ish solos. But they had some cool leads here and there.Tbh honest I'm not much of a Melodeath fan at all. I don't think I've even heard an album by In Flames . What always put me off was the lack of actual guitar solo's (as opposed to Maiden-ish melody lines) The only band I really liked was Arch Enemy...cuz ..solo's (and a few stray others' I could count on one hand). My thing was Old-school Swedish death metal & I actually preferred Finnish bands like early Sentenced (North From here) and Amorphis (First two only) for anything more melodic. As for Nordstrom I guess I was referencing his work w/ power metal bands (which I am a HUGE fan of..cuz..among oher things....solo's). Anyway in general I think Nordstrom leans more towards stronger mids in his productions for the most part & Sneap leans towards more scooped mids.
I know you're into shred, but there's definitely some neoclassical BWOHM vibes in there in old In Flames.
I don't agree with Nordstrom going for stronger mids. That's kind of oversimplifying. Burning Bridges also has the 90's Metal scooped vibed to me as well. Maybe not as much as Pantera, but certainly no honk in there.
I do think his mixes are (or at least, used to be) "rawer" and rougher around the edges. That sometimes works. Sometimes it doesn't. He did Rise fo the Tyrant for Arch Enemy. The mix on that record SUCKS compared to their previous and following record, which were both mixed by Andy Sneap. IMO, of course.
IMO, his "masterpiece" was Clayman and his breakthrough was Slaughter of the Soul. I love Slaughter. It's probably my favorite album ever, but I don't think the mix holds up by today's standards.
Overall, I just like Sneap better than Fredman in the 2000's. But in the 90's, Sneap was still in his diapers getting Colin Richardson his coffee, LOL.
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