Written by singer Hansi Kürsch and composed by Kürsch and guitarist André Olbrich, the song is based on The Iliad by Homer and on the Aeneid by Virgil, and narrates the final days of Troy, as foreseen by Cassandra, daughter of the king of the destroyed city who foresaw the event.
The song required as much production time as the rest of A Night at the Opera combined due to its length, intricacy, and number of audio tracks. At over 14 minutes, it is the longest track recorded by Blind Guardian. A new version was recorded in 2012 and included as part of the compilation album Memories of a Time to Come.
Track listing
"And Then There Was Silence" – 14:06
"Harvest of Sorrow" – 3:40
"Born in a Mourning Hall" (multimedia track) – 5:17
^Terich, Jeff; Hickman, Langdon; Davis, Cody (22 September 2017). "10 more of the best metal albums of the millennium". Treble. Retrieved 4 April 2019. The 14-minute closer, a progressive metal epic about the Trojan War that doesn't hit its first go-around of the chorus until just past the four-minute mark...