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"Songs for the last view" CD by Lacrimas Profundere

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The line-up problems are like yesterday's snow: Rob Vitacca enriches with his charisma and his chameleon-like voice the well balanced Gothic Rock of the Southern Germans. Hit potential and depth effect aren't excluded. Incl. bonus tracks!

General

Item no. 434381
Musical Genre Gothic Metal
Exclusive No
Media - Format 1-3 CD & DVD
Edition Limited Edition
Product topic Bands
Band Lacrimas Profundere
Product type CD
Release date 6/27/08

Disc 1

  • 1.
    The Last View
  • 2.
    A Pearl
  • 3.
    The Shadow I Once Kissed
  • 4.
    Veins
  • 5.
    We shouldn't be here
  • 6.
    And God's Ocean
  • 7.
    Suicide Sun
  • 8.
    Dear Amy
  • 9.
    A Dead Man
  • 10.
    Sacrificial Lamb
  • 11.
    Lullaby For A Weeping Girl
  • 12.
    While
  • 13.
    Burn (Bonus Track)
  • 14.
    The Beauty Of Who You Are (Bonus Track)
  • 15.
    The Shadow I Once Kissed (Second Version) (Bonus Track)
  • 16.
    Sweet Letter C

Disc 2

  • 1.
    A Pearl (Videoclip)
  • 2.
    A Pearl (Making Of)
  • 3.
    Tourmovie
  • 4.
    Live Footage
  • 5.
    Intro
  • 6.
    My velvet little darkness
  • 7.
    Again it's over
  • 8.
    Sweet Caroline
  • 9.
    Amber girl
  • 10.
    My mescaline
  • 11.
    For bad times
  • 12.
    Should
  • 13.
    To Love Her On Knees
  • 14.
    Sarah Lou
  • 15.
    One Hopes Evening Music
  • 16.
    Ave end

by Björn Thorsten Jaschinski (31.01.2008) Never change a winning team? At least star producer, John Fryer (HIM, Nine Inch Nails, Paradise Lost) stuck to the chart-spoilt, German Gothic-Rockers. Inside the band, some changes were inevitable: interim singer, Peter Kafka still plays the bass, the previously unknown Rob Vitacca replaced Christopher Schmid. No easy task one should think but the only 21-year-old is a raw diamond growing by the grind of Fryer. Many songs suggest more than one singer, that's how easy Rob changes from a Pete Steele tomb-intonation to rough, aggressive vocals or fragile, high tunes. Still, apart from "The shadow I once kissed", there is no duet partner in sight. "Songs for the last view" beside the usual, cool Rockers ("A pearl") offers a flashback to the band’s own Doom-roots ("Veins"), restrained Ethno flairs ("Sacrificial lamb"), beautiful, dark Pop music ("And God’s ocean") and a deep going finale with piano and smooth orchestration. Superb!

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