Jag Panzer News

Tracklisting

Jag Panzer's Thane To The Thone


Artwork by: Steve Barkus & Travis Smith

Track Title
Duration

Thane of Cawdor

04:50
King at a Price
03:50
Bloody Crime
05:34
The Premonitions
00:28
Treachery's Stain
04:11
Spectres of the Past
03:47
Banquo's Final Rest
00:21
Three Voices of Fate
05:14
Hell to Pay
04:31
The Prophecies (Fugue in D Minor)
01:44
Insanity's Mind
05:25
Requiem for Lady Macbeth
00:24
Face of Fear
03:21
Fall of Dunsinane
05:17
Fate's Triumph
04:38
The Downward Fall
02:49
The Tragedy Of Macbeth
08:19

Total Running Time:
01:04

Lyrics: Thane to the Throne


Tracklisting
Release Date:
May 9th, 2000 (U.S)
June 22nd, 2000 (All Other)
Label:
Century Media
Formats:
Available on CD, Digi-Pak, Vinyl
Producer:
Jim Morris
Engineer:
Jim Morris
Additional Engineering:
Mark Briody & Rob Valdez
Photography:
Charles Mulhall
Additional
Musicians:

Todd Ehle - Violin
Kimberly Kendall - Choir
M. Wayne Jones - Choir
Jim Morris - Choir
The Moscow String Quartet - Strings on 'The Prophecies (Fugue in Dm)'
Mike Rice - Marching Snares
Steve Yates - Marching Snares
Jeff Gust - Marching Snares

Mike Rice appears courtesy of Metal Blade Records

Harry Conklin - Vocals
Mark Briody - Guitar
Chris Broderick - Guitar
John Tetley - Bass
Rikard Stjernquist - Drums

Tracklisting

Jag Panzer had no fear of any Y2K bugs, the first recording session for 'Thane to the Throne' was on the
morning of January 1,2000.

'Thane to the Throne' is the first Jag Panzer album which guitarist Mark Briody did not sing on (he had a cold).

'Thane to the Throne' is the first Jag Panzer album to feature the same lineup as the previous album.

Many of the short interludes musicial pieces are actually themes from other songs on the album.

Vocal tracks for 'Thane to the Throne' were recorded in album sequence order. The album was mixed in this
order also.

The Jag Panzer insignia, the JP sicle, appears somewhere on the album.

'Thane to the Throne' features the only Jag Panzer song where no members of Jag Panzer actually play on it (although it's written by Chris Broderick). Can you pick out this piece of classical music?