When prog-rock first reared its head in the early '70s, it contained elements of hard rock, but few groups crossed the line into heavy metal. This all changed during the '80s, when bands such as
Dream Theater,
Queensrÿche,
Watchtower, and
Fates Warning merged their love of
Yes and
Rush with their admiration for
Iron Maiden and
Judas Priest. As pioneers of the progressive metal movement,
Fates Warning achieved international success in the '80s and '90s via career-making albums like
Awaken the Guardian,
No Exit,
Perfect Symmetry, and
Parallels. Despite enduring numerous lineup changes -- guitarist/songwriter
Jim Matheos is the only original member still active -- and a substantial recording hiatus that began in 2004 and ended in 2013, the group's penchant for pairing innovation and might hasn't wavered throughout the decades; later releases like
Darkness in a Different Light and
Long Day Good Night continue to push the boundaries of both heavy metal and progressive rock.
Formed in Hartford, Connecticut in 1983,
Fates Warning started off as a straight-ahead metal band (their progressive side didn't show up until a few years later) and built up a regional following, which soon led to a recording contract with Metal Blade. With vocals being handled by
John Arch, the group issued such titles as 1984's
Night on Brocken, 1985's
The Spectre Within, and 1986's
Awaken the Guardian, the latter of which became the first record from the group to appear on the Billboard album charts.
Wanting to break out of a somewhat one-dimensional metal sound, the band dismissed
Arch in 1987 and replaced him with
Ray Alder. The move immediately paid off for
Fates Warning, as their music (and lyrics/subject matter) became much more complex and challenging. The band's first recording with
Alder, 1988's
No Exit, would go on to become one of their highest-charting albums ever, and was followed up a year later with
Perfect Symmetry, as well as an inaugural tour of Europe. The early '90s saw
Fates Warning focus primarily on touring (only one album was issued during a several-year span, 1991's
Parallels), although guitarist
Jim Matheos did issue a solo album in 1993,
First Impressions. In 1994, the group issued
Inside Out, which was supported with a U.S. tour alongside
Dream Theater (at a hometown gig in Connecticut, former frontman
Arch joined the band on-stage). The group's first best-of compilation,
Chasing Time, followed a year later, as did appearances on tribute albums for
Rush (
Working Man) and
Judas Priest (Legends of Heavy Metal), which helped buy
Fates Warning time as they began composing the most challenging album of their career. It was also around this time that former
Armored Saint bassist
Joey Vera joined the band (although he was originally thought to be a temporary replacement,
Vera was still present several years later).
Finally issued in 1997,
Pleasant Shade of Gray took the extended suite style of
2112 and
Tales from Topographic Oceans to a new extreme, as the album comprised a single hour-long song (broken down into 12 different untitled sections). The very first live release by
Fates Warning,
Still Life, was issued in 1998, while
Matheos issued a solo release the following year (Away with Words) and
Alder, having formed a side project, Engine, recorded an eponymous CD.
Fates Warning continued strong into the 21st century, as evidenced by 2000's studio album
Disconnected and further extensive touring -- including a set of summer dates in 2003 alongside prog metal comrades
Queensrÿche and
Dream Theater. The band marked their 20th anniversary with the release of
FWX in 2004.
Though
Fates Warning continued to tour over the coming years, a new album was not yet forthcoming. In 2010, the
Parallels-era lineup of
Alder,
Matheos, drummer Mark Zonder, guitarist
Frank Aresti, and bassist Joe DiBiase briefly reunited to celebrate the new remastered edition of that album. The following year,
Matheos and former early-era vocalist
Arch formed a new group called
Arch/Matheos and released their own debut album. Then, after a nine-year gap,
Fates Warning delivered their 11th outing,
Darkness in a Different Light, through the InsideOut label in 2013. The lineup at this point included
Alder on vocals,
Matheos and
Aresti on guitars,
Vera on bass, and newcomer
Bobby Jarzombek on drums. A critical and commercial success, it was
Fates Warning's first album to reach the Billboard Top 200 since 1989's
Perfect Symmetry. This same lineup remained (minus
Aresti) to record their follow-up, Theories of Flight, which arrived in mid-2016 and featured some of their heaviest and most forward-thinking material. Four years later, that band returned with the epic and aptly named
Long Day Good Night, their 13th studio effort and longest album to date. ~ Greg Prato & Timothy Monger