Triptych | ||||
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Studio album by The Tea Party | ||||
Released | June 8, 1999 | |||
Recorded | October 10, 1998 – March 3, 1999, at Alkemical Studios, Montreal, Studio Morin Heights, Morin-Heights, Quebec, and Metalworks Studios, Mississauga, ON | |||
Genre | Hard rock, Progressive rock, Alternative rock | |||
Length | 51:25 | |||
Label | EMI Music Canada | |||
Producer | Jeff Martin | |||
The Tea Party chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Rock Hard (de) | 9/10 |
Triptych (1999) is The Tea Party's fifth album. It has the trio blending the major influences found on their previous albums: the earthy rock of Splendor Solis, the world music inspired arrangements of The Edges of Twilight, and the industrial edge of Transmission.
Triptych showed a band with a new confidence in songwriting. After the gloom of Transmission, which relied heavily on sampling and electronica, for Triptych the band wrote with both melody and content, while using electronica subtlety. This is evidenced by the Juno Award nominated single "Heaven Coming Down", the band's first number one single in Canada. The album itself reached #4 on the Canadian album chart, and received a Juno nomination for "Best Rock Album", before achieving double platinum sales in Canada.
In June 2000, the EMI labels in Europe released Triptych Special Tour Edition 2000, which included a bonus disc of eight unreleased songs.
In 2005, Triptych was ranked number 435 in Rock Hard magazine's book of The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.
The unlisted 13th track is the sound of a clock chiming.