Evanescence at SBEC 5/14

Evanescence SBEC 5-14

Evanescence is coming to the Sands Bethlehem Event Center on Tues May 14th! Tickets go on sale Friday Feb 8th at 10am at SandsEventCenter.com and Sands Event Center Box Office !

Artist Info

“We stand undefined, can’t be drawn with a straight line/this will not be our ending, we are alive.” -“Imperfection”

ForEVANESCENCE’ssinger/songwriter and frontwomanAMY LEE, most of her best creative ideas are inspired by dreams, and withSYNTHESIS(BMG), the band’s long-awaited fourth studio album (and first since 2011’s self-titled release), it was a case of turning a long-held vision into reality.

Not simply a “greatest hits” album,SYNTHESIStakes a selection ofEVANESCENCE’sthree previous studio releases alongwith two new songs, and reimagines them with brand-new recordings.SYNTHESISis an amalgamation ofLEE’smasterful singing and piano playing, supported by her band, a full symphony orchestra performing arrangements by long-time collaboratorDavid Campbellas well as an array of electronic music programming and effects engineered by co-producerWill Hunt–not to be confused with the band’s drummer, of the same name–and mixerDamian Taylor (Björk, The Killers, Arcade Fire)who also collaborated with the band on the album.

Living up to its name,SYNTHESISis a combination of organic and synthesized sounds, classical and rock, old and new, reinterpreting the past while giving a glimpse into the future, an old-fashioned concept narrative that takes the listener on a journey from darkness into light, offeringAMYLEE’sclassic inkling of hope in the midst of despair.

“I tend to dream very big,” saysAMY LEEabout the project. “The whole idea came from thinking about how cool it would be to do new versions of songs with strings and programming, and it just evolved from there. With the skill and experience we’ve developed over the years, plus all of the great minds who came to be involved in the project, it snowballed into something very big, very quickly.”

As their evolution continues, the band will embark on the“Synthesis Live” tour, performing the record start-to-finish with a live orchestra and electronic programming in each city.“The recording is very much tied to the live experience we want to create,”saysAMY. “I’m anxiously excited to play some much more involved, challenging piano for the show, and to focus on singing live more like the way I do in the studio.” Members of the band won’t just be accompanied by the orchestra, but will beembedded in the joined ensemble as a single unit, a presentation that marks the performance as a true theatrical event, again synthesizing the experience of seeing a classic orchestra in a theatre and a band.

The first track to be released fromSYNTHESISwas a surprising reinvention ofEVANESCENCE’sbiggest hit, theGrammy-winning “Bring Me to Life,”which eliminates the original rap interlude sung by 12 Stones’ Paul McCoy, substituting an epic wide-screen full-color classical take that proves howAMY LEE’svoicehas grown into aworld-class instrumentfar removed from the tentative 20-year-old who originally sang on the demo.

“This offered a great opportunity to do the song in the way it was originally intended in some ways,” she says. With vocals recorded at co-producerWill Hunt’s Spaceway Productionsstudio in Fort Worth, TX, and thefull orchestraatOcean Wayin Nashville,SYNTHESISisn’t so much an abrupt stylistic departure, as it is a flowering ofEVANESCENCE’soriginal approach as a band, which can be heard as far back asFallen’s“My Immortal,”The Open Door’s“Lacrymosa”(based on Mozart’s “Requiem”),and, from the band’s most recent self-titled album,Evanescence,“My Heart Is Broken”and“The End of the Dream”–which all featuredDavid Campbell’s string arrangements now supplemented with a full orchestra.

AddsLEE, “These songs all have a life beyond the initial studio recordings, so it was really satisfying to go back and sing them as a 35-year-old as opposed to a 20-year-old (some of them). To be able to incorporate some of those elements that have developed over years of playing them live, and to show ways I’ve grown as well was a beautiful opportunity. I had to not only make each these new versions better in some way, but also preserve the core of what made the initial performance so great. I really challenged myself.”

With those patented distorted grunge-era guitars and acoustic drums now replaced with a full symphony orchestra and various triggered programming effects,SYNTHESISnow spotlightsAMY LEE’s incredible voice, truly one of the most distinctive in all of rock, in a way they’ve never been before.

“There’s something beautiful about the intimacy of vocals on this album,”she admits. “The arrangements now make room for those bigger emotions. I used to be afraid to put my singing too far out front, always preferred it pretty deep in the mix. I was a kid when we started, with a lot of insecurities. I never felt I was good enough, but I’ve really become comfortable with my voice. I wanted to try to see how intimate and up-in-your-ear I could get. It’s a challenge not to hide behind anything, but I welcome that. I really look forward to doing the album live.”

As for the rest of the band–guitarists JEN MAJURA,TROY MCLAWHORNand TIM MCCORDand drummerWILL HUNT–each had to fit their own skills into the final product, withMAJURAtaking up the theremin,MCLAWHORNandMCCORDexperimenting with different sounds, andHUNTtriggering a collection of synthesized sounds through an electronic kit.

“This wouldn’t be an Evanescence album without my amazing band,” saysLEE.“They’re all extremely versatile, talented, open-minded artists. It was up to them to figure out how they melded, blended and created their home in this new world. What can your instrument do that you didn’t realize it could?”

SYNTHESISis not just about updating the past, but offers plenty of future possibilities. Thealbum includes three, newly created interstitial instrumentalsas well asa pair of new tracksin the previously unreleased“Hi Lo”–a decade-old song that was the very first collaboration betweenLEEand producerWILL HUNT–and the single,“Imperfection,”an EDM-infused funk/hip-hop track that representsEVANESCENCE’sfuture.

“’Imperfection’ is the most important song on the album for me,”saysLEE. “The song had to fit into our body of work, but at the same time, be a classic in its own right. When the lyrics started pouring out of me, I realized it was speaking to all those people we’ve been losing through depression and suicide. I sang it from the perspective of the person left behind.It’s a plea to fight for your life, and that we all need each other as humans. We’re all imperfect, and it’s precisely those imperfections that make us who we are, and we have to embrace them because there’s beauty in those differences.”

SYNTHESIStraces the common thread inEVANESCENCE’scatalog, asAMYputs it, “Even in our darkest moment, when we simply say, ‘I hurt,’ hope always exists. It’s about not accepting defeat. Never give-up, never stop fighting for your life.”

As she sings on“Imperfection,”“Don’t you dare surrender/I’m still right beside you/And I could never replace your perfect imperfection.”

WithSYNTHESIS,AMY LEEandEVANESCENCEhave gone Back to the Future in a way only they can.


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