Trans-Siberian Orchestra’s “highly anticipated” next album, “Night Castle,” hit stores Oct. 27. And when an album is “highly anticipated,” that usually means that fans, reporters and the executives of your record company have been asking about it for a very long time.
“It was supposed to come out in July 2005. Obviously, I’ve missed that deadline,” said Trans-Siberian Orchestra creator Paul O’Neill by telephone from Omaha, Neb. “I’m always in awe of writers because occasionally I’ll pick up a newspaper and see a story that is brilliantly written and it’s like, ‘Son of a (expletive). This person wrote this in six hours, because it only happened eight hours ago.’ But I’m always tinkering. I just don’t want to let the fans down. And the later it gets, the more pressure to make it perfect.”
Trans-Siberian Orchestra performs in Peoria on Nov. 7. While a full-scale production of “Night Castle” is not yet being performed, the Peoria show will include songs from the new album. The production includes material from “Christmas Eve and Other Stories” in the first half and “Beethoven’s Night” in the second half.
“Night Castle” is O’Neill’s second non-Christmas rock opera since the release of “Beethoven’s Last Night” in 2000. (Other albums include 1996’s “Christmas Eve and Other Stories,” 1998’s “The Christmas Attic,” 2001’s “The Ghosts of Christmas Eve” and 2004’s “The Lost Christmas Eve.”)
The word on the street is that “Night Castle” is the story of a U.S. Army special forces officer and his journey to fight during the Khmer Rouge period of 1970s Cambodia. O’Neill won’t share details of the plot.
“I want people to find it out for themselves,” he says. “Saying ‘Night Castle’ is about Cambodia, that’s like saying ‘Ben Hur’ was about boats.
“Cambodia’s in it, but so is medieval Europe. So is 42nd Street, Manhattan. It’s about how human beings make the same mistakes over and over again. And somehow, in the end, good always overcomes. I felt the album was so appropriate these days, there’s a lot going on on Wall Street, people are feeling hopeless. But what happened in Cambodia is hard to comprehend. They killed three million men, women and children.”
The decision to stray from the Christmas theme wasn’t because O’Neill, 55, felt he had said enough about the holiday. Rather, there are other topics he wants to explore.
