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Encyclopedia > Trans Siberian Orchestra
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Cover of Trans-Siberian Orchestra's Beethoven's Last Night album

Trans-Siberian Orchestra is a rock orchestra founded by Paul O'Neill, Robert Kinkel, and Jon Oliva in 1996.

Contents

Biography

Trans-Siberian Orchestra was founded in 1996 in New York City by composers Paul O'Neill, Robert Kinkel, and Savatage lead singer Jon Oliva. All three still work with the band.


Trans-Siberian Orchestra quickly released one of their most well-known works, Christmas Eve and Other Stories, and soon became notable as a rock band that played Christmas music in a rock opera style that appealed to adults and youth alike. Following a similar path to the band's first release, their 1998 release The Christmas Attic was also a concept album with a Christmas theme. In 2000, they released their first (and so far only) non-Christmas album, Beethoven's Last Night. After several years of touring, they returned to the studio with another full-length album, Lost Christmas Eve, and the accompanying DVD/3-CD release The Christmas Trilogy, which contained all three of their Christmas albums to date.


In the recording studio, Trans-Siberian Orchestra uses a full 60-piece orchestra and a choir. As of 2004, their touring band included 14 vocalists, 14 musicians, and 2 narrators.


The band is, as of early 2005, working on a new, non-Christmas album, entitled "Nightcastle." It is expected to feature the band's rendition of "O Fortuna," performed as a preview by the band during the 2004 tour.


Discography

  • Christmas Eve and Other Stories (1996)
  • The Christmas Attic (1998)
  • Beethoven's Last Night (2000)
  • Lost Christmas Eve (2004)
  • Christmas Trilogy (2004) (3 CDs and one DVD)

See also

External links



 

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