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      • William York of the music database Allmusic gave the album four and a half stars out of five noting that "On one hand, this is great heavy metal, and on the other, it's genuinely twisted experimental / psychedelic music. An amazing, weird album, and also the best place for newcomers to start with this band."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_Sonicscape
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  2. Mar 9, 2024 · Experimental music enthusiasts invented this rating system to describe albums resembling Captain Beefheart. A ten on in the rating system means: “Hot damn, that’s weird!” And a one: “Is that...

  3. Imaginary Sonicscape is the fifth studio album by Japanese black metal band Sigh, released on July 4, 2001. Produced by Sigh, it was the band's first record released on Century Media Records.

  4. Very similar to prog, Imaginary Sonicscape adds in a variety of different song structures, textures, and moods from song to song, which also adds to the theatrical aspect of the album. The best part is you never know what the hell to expect.

  5. May 13, 2011 · A band that has wandered through a different style with seemingly each new album they release nowadays, Sigh finds a unique and quirky sound on 'Imaginary Sonicscape', staying true to any avant-garde label while being infectiously catchy and fun.

  6. Imaginary Sonicscape is truly the best produced album I have ever heard; nothing else even comes close. It would be a expectation worthy of enormous ridicule to expect this album to mean something on the first listen.

  7. Jan 16, 2016 · Music Reviews: Imaginary Sonicscape by Sigh released in 2001. Genre: Avant-Garde Metal.

  8. The main element that make Imaginary Sonicscape is the diversity of its sound. The maturity that the trio achieved through the recording is simply astounding. From jazz overtones to classical, baroque and fusion, Mirai and company are monsters of experimentation and their vision would never be as grand as it was here.