In a 2005 interview, composer Gavin Goszka said this of the album:
We feel that The 13th Hour is definitely our best work to date, both musically as well as atmospherically. The sound effects were based on real-life stories of paranormal experiences... the is our audio interpretation of an actual haunted house.
Both Goszka and Edward Douglas also credit their love of ghost stories, horror movies, and their studio as further inspiration for the album. Douglas mentioned that some of the soundscape on the album was inspired by a presentation George Lutz gave describing his experiences in the house that became the basis for the book, The Amityville Horror. The album is set in the personal residence of the doctor who created Haverghast Asylum, a fictitious turn-of-the-century haunted mental institution first introduced on the band's 2001 release, Gates of Delirium.
Album Information and Release
The cover artwork was created by fantasy artist, Keith Parkinson. The album featured vocal effects by Lily Lane of the band, Lazy Lane as the character, Madeline Haverghast. Douglas called Lily's vocal performance "perfect" adding "she was so critical to." The track Footsteps in the Dust featured Douglas' 2-year old daughter. The album was released through Entity Productions and self-distributed nationally through chains like Spencer Gifts and Hot Topic, as well as in costume shops, game stores, and Halloween-merchandise retailers like Spirit HalloweenThe band held a press preview at the purportedly haunted Agora Theater and Ballroom followed by a release party at the Phantasy Nite Club where a psychic, and haunted house actors entertained guests followed by performances by the bands Lazy Lane, Filament 38, and State of Being.
Reception
Belgium's Side Line Magazine praised how the soundscape elements took the album further than typical horror film scores. Outburn, Movement, and Rue Morgue Magazines called it the band's best work to date with Outburn and Rue Morgue adding that the band had "revolutionized and redefined the Halloween horror music genre." The 13th Hour album won Best Gaming Accessory at the 32nd Origins Awards presented by the Academy of Adventure Game Art & Design. It marked the first time a music album had won an Origins Award. In 2006, The 13th Hour also became the first music CD to win an award at the ENnies, a fan-based annual award show for role-playing game publishers and products.
The song, Hand in Hand Again was written in 1919 by Richard A. Whiting and Raymond B. Egan as an answer song to their hugely popular "Till We Meet Again" from 1918.