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3%% Do NOT uncomment Zero-Context Examples unless you're going to give them the proper context.
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5%% See: Administrivia/HowToWriteAnExample
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9[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/strato17_1.jpg]]
10[[caption-width-right:350:Left to right: Jens Johansson, Timo Kotipelto, Lauri Porra, Rolf Pilve and Matias Kupiainen]]
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12Stratovarius are a Finnish power metal band, est. 1984 by [=drummer/vocalist=] Tuomo Lassila, guitarist Staffan Stråhlman and bassist John Vihervä, under the name Black Water.
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14In 1985, guitarist Stråhlman left and was replaced by Timo Tolkki, who also took up vocal duties from Lassila. The band was renamed to its current moniker at Tolkki's suggestion--it's a combination of "Stratocaster" and "Stradivarius", a reference to Tolkki's neo-classical metal sensibilities. They recorded a demo, sent to various companies until CBS Finland picked them up in 1987.
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16Their first album, ''Fright Night'', was released in 1989. Their second album was released three years later, but the band was dropped by CBS Finland. Jari Kainulainen became the new bassist in 1994, halfway through recording of their third album ''Dreamspace''. Around this time, Tolkki's voice began to fail, and auditions for a new vocalist landed Lappajärvi native Timo Kotipelto. ''Fourth Dimension'' was recorded with him and released in 1995, to much success.
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18Following this, Tolkki massively overhauled the band's sound, getting rid of Lassila and keyboardist Antti Ikonen. In their place came, respectively, Jörg Michael from Germany and Jens Johansson from Sweden. This new lineup put out ''Episode'' in 1996, a major breakthrough for the band with a full string orchestra and choir in some songs, with such classics as "Father Time", "Will the Sun Rise?" and "Speed of Light".
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20They released three more albums over the next four years: ''Visions'', ''Destiny'' and ''Infinite''. They also toured extensively in this time, and recorded their first live album ''Visions of Europe'' in Greece.
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22After this, the band took a brief hiatus before the big project in their plans. To sate fans's wishes for new material, four new tracks were recorded for the compilation ''[[MeaningfulName Intermission]]'', which also had B-sides and bonus tracks from the previous albums. When they returned in 2003, ''Elements'' did not disappoint--with a peak in their new style of symphonic metal, it was the most epic thing Stratovarius had ever done, to the point it was split into two albums.
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24Unfortunately, after touring for ''Elements'', Tolkki had a grueling CreatorBreakdown that came with some absurd publicity stunts (like inexplicably replacing Kotipelto and Jörg and "converting" to Kabbalah); he was diagnosed with chronic depression and confined to a mental hospital.
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26Band issues were resolved by January 2005, with Kotipelto and Jörg back in the fray. By June, Jari Kainulainen amicably left the band, burned out from the constant touring at the time, and passed his spot on to Lauri Porra. With him, they recorded a self-titled album that spawned the single "Maniac Dance" and did a world tour in 2005 and 2006, where they visited the USA and Canada for the first time.
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28In 2008, after a long period of silence from the band, Timo Tolkki announced Stratovarius's breakup on the official website, citing too much internal tension. However, the rest of the band wasn't willing to throw in the towel just yet, and so Tolkki signed over the rights to the name and left for good. He'd written about 95% of the band's repertoire before this, so his leaving would mark a major change in the band's style.
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30The next year (2009) saw the release of ''Polaris'', recorded with new guitarist Matias Kupiainen, and its single "Deep Unknown", followed two years later by ''Elysium'' and the "Darkest Hours" single. During this time, Jörg Michael discovered a malignant tumor and had to be temporarily replaced while he got treatment; he recovered, but ultimately retired from drumming after a farewell mini-tour.
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32In 2012, 23-year-old Rolf Pilve joined as their new drummer and has stayed ever since; with him, the band has released ''Nemesis'' in 2013, ''Eternal'' in 2015 and ''[[GreatestHitsAlbum Best Of]]'' in 2016, with the new track "Until the End of Days".
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34!! The lineup as of 2013 is:
35* Timo Kotipelto - Vocals
36* Jens Johansson - Keyboards/Piano
37* Rolf Pilve - Drums
38* Lauri Porra - Bass guitar
39* Matias Kupiainen - Guitar
40
41!!Former members:
42* Timo Tolkki - Guitar (Left the band in 2008 due to tension between the band members since 2004-05), also vocals until 1994 (though he continued to sing backing vocals after that)
43* Jörg Michael - Drums 1995-2012, left the band after a battle with cancer
44* John Vihervä - Original bass guitarist, left in 1984
45* Staffan Stråhlman - Original guitarist, left in 1985
46* Tuomo Lassila - Original drummer and vocalist, replaced as vocals by Tolkki and then kicked out in 1994
47* Jyrki Lentonen - Bass guitar from 1984-1989
48* Antti Ikonen - Keyboards from 1988-1995
49* Jari Behm - Bass guitar from 1989-1993
50* Jari Kainulainen - Bass guitar from 1993-2005, left due to personal reasons (though there was no drama involved)
51* Sami Kuoppamäki - Session drums from 1994-1995 due to Tuomo Lassila's arm injury
52* Anders Johansson - Replaced Jörg Michael briefly in 2004, though never featured on an album
53* Katriina "Miss K" Wiiala - Replaced Timo Kotipelto on vocals in 2004 briefly, though she was never featured on an album
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55Stratovarius are mainly known for their symphonic and classical tendencies (hence the genre of the band), often using choirs or orchestras as well as traditional metal instruments. They are also well-known for Timo Kotipelto's distinctive high-pitched singing voice.
56
57!!Studio albums to date:
58* ''Fright Night'' (1989)
59* ''Stratovarius II'' (1991)
60* ''Twilight Time'' (1992)[[note]]International reissue of ''Stratovarius II''; both are counted in the band's discography[[/note]]
61* ''Dreamspace'' (1994)
62* ''Fourth Dimension'' (1995)
63* ''Episode'' (1996)
64* ''Visions'' (1997)
65* ''Destiny'' (1998)
66* ''Infinite'' (2000)
67* ''Intermission'' (2001)
68* ''Elements Part I'' (2003)
69* ''Elements Part II'' (2003)
70* ''[[SelfTitledAlbum Stratovarius]]'' (2005)
71* ''Polaris'' (2009)
72* ''Elysium'' (2011)
73* ''Nemesis'' (2013)
74* ''Eternal'' (2015)
75* ''Enigma: Intermission II'' (2018)
76* ''Survive'' (2022)
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78----
79!!Stratovarius provides examples of:
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81%% (Speculative troping) * AIIsACrapshoot: The song "030366" seems to be about this.
82* ArcWords:
83** "The times are changing" (or a variation of that) appears in a lot of their lyrics, like "The Kiss of Judas", "Destiny", and "Under Flaming Skies".
84** [[HopeSpot "The things will be alright"]] appears a few times as well.
85* AudienceParticipationSong: "Distant Skies" has Kotipelto telling the crowd "Destination unknown" and the crowd responding with the song's title.
86%% (ZCE) ** Also, "Forever" from ''Episode'' and "Forever Free" from ''Visions''.
87* CasualCarGiveaway: Happens in the music video of "Hunting High and Low", where the protagonist gives his car to a pair of hobos, as part of spiritual liberation from his former life.
88* CallBack: The pelican that's on the cover for ''Elysium'' also appears on the cover for ''Infinite'' in the background.
89* ChronologicalAlbumTitle: ''Stratovarius II'' is the second album, ''Fourth Dimension'' is the fourth, and ''Infinite'' is the eighth album and the infinity symbol represents a sideways 8.
90%% (Speculative troping) * ConceptAlbum: ''Visions'' and ''Destiny'' are usually cited as a two-part concept album, though there's nothing that suggests any form of concept in the songs themselves...
91* CoverVersion:
92** Included on the ''Intermission'' album are covers of "Bloodstone" by Music/JudasPriest and "Kill the King" by Music/{{Rainbow}}, as well as a live cover of "I Surrender" by Music/{{Rainbow}}.
93** The single for ''S.O.S.'' contains a cover of "Blackout" by Music/{{Scorpions|Band}}.
94* DistinctDoubleAlbum: ''Elements Pt. 1'' and ''2'' were conceptualized together but were released as standalone albums several months apart.
95%% (ZCE) * DreamWeaver: The name of one of their songs.
96* EpicRocking: Over the 7-minute mark we have:
97** ''Fright Night'' has "Fright Night" (8:13).
98** ''Stratovarius II''/''Twilight Time'' has "Madness Strikes At Midnight" (7:20).
99** ''Fourth Dimension'' has "We Hold The Key" (7:53) and "Twilight Symphony" (7:00).
100** ''Episode'' has "Babylon" (7:09) and "Night Time Eclipse" (7:58).
101** ''Visions'' has "Visions (Southern Cross)" (10:15).
102** ''Destiny'' has "Destiny" [[LongestSongGoesFirst (10:15)]] and "Anthem of the World" (9:31).
103** ''Infinite'' has "Mother Gaia" (8:18) and "Infinity" (9:22).
104** ''Elements Pt. 1'' has "Soul of a Vagabond" (7:22), "Fantasia" (9:56), Papilion (7:01) and "Elements" (12:01).
105** ''Stratovarius'' has "Back to Madness" (7:43), "Götterdämmerung (Zenith of Power)" (7:13) and "United" (7:02).
106** ''Elysium'' has "Elysium [[LongestSongGoesLast (18:07)]].
107** ''Eternal'' has "The Lost Saga" [[LongestSongGoesLast (11:39)]].
108** ''Survive'' has "Voice of Thunder" [[LongestSongGoesLast (11:10)]].
109* FakeShemp:
110** All the bass parts in ''Stratovarius II'' were performed by Timo Tolkki, as despite appearing in band photos and being credited as the bassist, Jari Behm had already left the band before recording the album.
111** Session musician Sami Kuoppämaki played drums on four tracks for ''Dreamspace'', due to Tuomo Lassila coming down with an arm injury.
112%% (ZCE) * GreenAesop:
113%% (ZCE) ** "We Are the Future".
114%% (ZCE) ** "Paradise."
115* HeavyMithril:
116** "Visions (Southern Cross)" is based on Nostradamus's prediction that the world would end in 2000.
117** "Fantasia" is based on the movie ''Film/TheNeverendingStory''.
118%% (ZCE) ** ''Polaris'' has "King of Nothing" and the two-part "Emancipation Suite" are the best examples.
119%% (ZCE and Speculative troping) ** Many of the tracks in ''Nemesis'' also seem to be going this route.
120%% (ZCE) * HumansAreBastards:
121%% (ZCE) ** Invoked in some of their songs, notably "We Are the Future" and "Infinity".
122%% (ZCE) ** ''definitely'' popped up a lot in ''Eternal''.
123%% (ZCE) * KillItWithFire: The Japanese bonus track on ''Nemesis'' is actually called this.
124* LongestSongGoesFirst: ''Destiny'' opens with "Destiny" (10:15).
125* LongestSongGoesLast:
126** ''Elysium'' closes with "Elysium" (18:07).
127** ''Eternal'' closes with "The Lost Saga" (11:39).
128** ''Survive'' closes with "Voice of Thunder" (11:10).
129* NewSoundAlbum: The SelfTitledAlbum ''Stratovarius'' was, ironically, remarkably different from the usual Stratovarius sound, more in the veins of riff-driven hard rock than the melodic and speedy power metal. It didn't stick, and the follow-ups returned to the power metal sound.
130** ''Nemesis'' includes notable influences from electronic music.
131%% (ZCE) * PepTalkSong:
132%% (ZCE) ** "Hold Onto Your Dreams"
133%% (ZCE) ** "Season of Faith's Perfection"
134%% (ZCE) ** "Until the End of Days"
135* PunctuatedForEmphasis: In a few of their songs. Kotipelto also seems to be fond of doing this live.
136** "The song is called... S! O! S!"
137** "Tokyo, tonight, you! Hold! The! KEY!"
138** "At! The! Speed! Of! Light!"
139** "Zero! Three! Zero! Three! Six! Six!"
140** "And the wisdom to know! The! Difference!"
141** "Legions" has "Raise! Your! Hands! For! US!!"
142* ShoutOut: "Know the Difference" quotes and paraphrases Desiderata, and the chorus is a paraphrase of the Serenity Prayer.
143* TalkyBookends: "Event Horizon" combines this trope with LastNoteNightmare: alarms and an automated voice warning about approaching a black hole.
144%% (ZCE) * TruckDriversGearChange: In "Somehow Precious," "Darkest Hours," "Hunting High and Low" and a few other songs.
145%% (ZCE) * AWorldHalfFull: "We Hold The Key" and "Infinity," among others.

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