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Troglodyte Dawn : Troglodyte Dawn
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Sabbath inspired Ambient Doom/Stoner Metal that sounds like a rusty sunrise after the long dark night of the soul.
Genre: Metal/Punk: Doom/Stoner Metal
Release Date: 2003
Troglodyte Dawn Record Label: Stone Groove
  • Buy CD - $12.97
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
667 1:41 $0.99
Fallen World (Including 'Human Race') 9:28 $0.99
Redeemed 3:26 $0.99
Longing 3:58 $0.99
Forever After 5:55 $0.99
Flower 6:05 $0.99
Dood 1:55 $0.99
Lust (Including 'Testimony' and 'Droon') 10:34 $0.99
Look On the Cross 4:21 $0.99
Dawn 5:10 $0.99
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Album Notes

THE CAVE:

Imagine some people living in a large cave where, from childhood, they have been chained by the leg and the neck so they cannot move. Because they cannot even turn their heads, they can only see what is in front of them. Behind them is an elevation which rises abruptly from the level where the prisoners are seated. On this elevation there are other persons walking back and forth carrying artifical objects, including the figures of animals and human beings made out of various materials. Behind these walking persons is a fire, and farther back still is the entrance to the cave. The chained prisoners can only look forward against the wall at the end of the cave and can see neither each other, nor the moving persons, nor the fire behind them. All that the prisoners can ever see is the shadows on the wall in front of them, which are projected as persons walking in front of the fire. They never see the objects or the men carrying them, nor are they aware that the shadows are shadows of other things. When they see a shadow and hear a person's voice echo from the wall, they assume the sound is coming from the shadow, since they are not aware of the existence of anything else. These prisoners, then, recognize as reality only the shadows formed on the wall.

What would happen if one of these prisoners was released from his chains, compelled to stand up, turn around, and walk with eyes lifted up towards the light of the fire? Suppose he was forced to look at the objects being carried, the shadows of which he had become accustomed to seeing on the wall. Would he not find these actual objects less pleasing to his eyes, and less meaningful, than the shadows? And would not his eyes ache if he looked straight at the light of the fire itself? At this point, he would undoubtedly try to escape from his liberator and turn back to the things he could see with clarity, being convinced that the shadows were clearer than the objects he was forced to look at in the firelight.

Suppose this prisoner could not turn back, but was instead compelled to trudge up the steep and rough passage to the mouth of the cave and released only after he had been brought out into the light of the Son. The impact of the radiance of the Son upon his eyes would be so brilliant that he would not be able to see any of the things that he was now told were real. It would take some time before his eyes became accustomed to the world outside the cave. He would first of all recognize some shadows and would feel at home with them. Next, he would see the reflection of men and things in the water, and this would represent a major advance in his knowledge, for what he once knew as only a solid dark blur would now be seen in more precise detail of line and color. A flower makes a shadow, which gives very little, if any, indication of what a flower really looks like, but its image as reflected in the water provides the eyes with a clearer vision of each petal and its various colors. In time, he would see the flower itself. As he lifted his eyes skyward, he would find it easier at first to look at the heavenly bodies at night, looking at the moon and the stars instead of the Son in daytime. Finally, he would look right at the Son in His natural position and not His reflection from or through anything else.

- PLATO

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REVIEWS

Ambient Doom
author: Angelic Warlord
The ambient doom project Troglodyte Dawn is the brainchild of Randy Michaud, a talented vocalist and multi-instrumental virtuoso who previously fronted the eighties heavy metal band D.T. Seizure and recently the Phoenix, Arizona based Christian metal outfit Tykküs. Randy developed the vision for Troglodyte Dawn as a “one God/one man” project in the summer of 1995 while living in Spokane, Washington, spending the next seven years in the songwriting and recording process before completing the project in 2002 following a move to the Phoenix area. Independently released in 2003, the self-titled debut of Troglodyte Dawn best reflects the influences of Black Sabbath, Saint Vitus, Last Chapter and Place Of Skulls on the two progressive doom masterpieces "Fallen World (including “Human Race”)” and "Lust (including “Testimony” & “Droon”)" in addition to the re-worked cover of the Sabbath classic “After Forever” (under the new titled “Forever After”). But placing a label of “doom” on Troglodyte Dawn, on the other hand, would only be telling part of the story. The album, for example, delivers several ambient instrumental pieces in “667”, “Longing” and “Dawn”, while the worshipful “Redeemed” moves in a direction I might describe as commercial hard rock. “Flower” and “Look On The Cross”, two quieter and more acoustic based numbers, almost tread the water of ballad territory.
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Great album from an extremely talented artist
author: Wake
This is a great cd full of doom, classic rock, experimental and ambient sounds. You will want to listen to this over and over again. Randy has done a great job producing this cd himself. Pick up this underground classic!
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Great Doomage!
author: Staybrite
Great doom album with ambient influences. The lyrics and mucisianship are fantastic. Pick it up, you won't be disappointed
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