Epica

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Originally calling themselves Sahara Dust, Holland’s Epica formed in 2002 when After Forever guitarist Mark Jansen decided to break away from the group he’d helped found in order to start an operatic metal project all his own. After drafting teenage mezzo-soprano Simone Simons, guitarist Ad Sluijter, keyboardist Coen Janssen, bassist Yves Huts, and drummer Jeroen Simons, Epica entered Wolfsburg, Germany’s Gate Studio with a classically trained choir and string section to lay down their ambitious debut, The Phantom Agony. Released by Transmission Records in late 2003, the album spawned a number of singles.
The band’s early success paved the way for 2005′s sophomore LP, Consign to Oblivion, which also charted well in the Netherlands. A move to metal powerhouse Nuclear Blast and the addition of Ariën van Weesenbeek on drums was followed by Epica’s first conceptual album, The Divine Conspiracy, released in 2007. It charted across Europe, as did 2009′s Design Your Universe, which equaled their best Dutch chart showing at number eight; Design Your Universe also featured a new member, with Isaac Delahaye taking over guitar duties.
Epica’s fifth studio album, Requiem for the Indifferent, appeared in 2012. It was the first to chart in the U.K. and U.S., after which another lineup shift found Huts giving way to Rob van der Loo on bass. The band celebrated its tenth anniversary in March 2013 with a special show in Eindhoven, titled and later released as Retrospect, which even featured former members Sluijter, Simons, and Huts. Just a year later, the band issued The Quantum Enigma, its first studio album with Rob van der Loo. Epica’s next full-length outing, 2016′s Holographic Principle, was described by Simons in an interview with Spark TV as their “most ambitious offering to date.” A year later, the band issued its first EP, The Solace System, which coincided with a North American trek with Lacuna Coil. The group returned in 2020 to announce the release of their eighth studio album, Omega, but due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the project was delayed, and eventually released in early 2021. Their tour plans stymied by lockdown, the band decided to record an exciting, epic, audience-free live show for internet streaming, featuring masses of visual effects, backup dancers, and pyrotechnics; it was later released as an audio-visual package Omega Alive at the end of the same year. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia