Blackmore's Night - The Village Lanterne (Limited Edition)
Release: Blackmore's Night - The Village Lanterne (Limited Edition)
- Datum: 01.04.2006
CD1 03:15
03:15
01. 25 Years 04:58
02. Village Lanterne 05:14
03. I Guess it Doesn't Matter Anymore 04:50
04. The Messenger 02:55
05. World of Stone 04:26
06. Faerie Queen - Faerie Dance 04:57
07. St. Teresa 05:26
08. Village Dance 01:58
09. Mond Tanz , Child in Time 06:12
10. Streets of London 03:48
11. Just Call My Name (I'll Be There) 04:49
12. Olde Mill Inn 03:21
13. Windmills 03:27
14. Streets of Dreams 04:31
03:15
CD2 03:15
03:15
01. Call it Love 02:54
02. Streets of Dreams Feat. Joe Lynn Turner 04:31
-------
Total
68:17 min
- Genre: Rock
- Qualität: 192 kbit/s
ED2K-Links
Für diese Downloadart benötigst du die Software eMule oder einen vergleichbaren P2P-Client.Ab sofort wird ein großteil der Dateien mit WinRar 5.x gepackt. Die Dateien können mit alten WinRar Versionen wie 4.x weder geöffnet noch entpackt werden da nicht abwärtskompatibel. Installiert euch daher Winrar 5.x >WinRAR 5.x<
Style : Folk-Rock
Grabber: EAC
Encoder: LAME
Quality: VBRkbps/44,1kHz
Reldate: Mar-31-2006
Street : 000-00-0000
Songs : 16
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Release Notes:
Ritchie and his partner Candice are back with a new album, a couple
of years after their previous studio album entitled "Ghost Of A
Rose". In the meantime, however, the band has released a
compilation of their ballads, "Beyond The Sunset" and a double DVD,
"Castles And Dreams".
The new studio album, entitled "The Village Lantern", is a
collection of fourteen songs, including covers of the classics
"Mond Tanz/Child In Time" and "Streets Of London" which Ritchie had
originally recorded with Deep Purple and Rainbow, respectively.
Both covers are great, especially the second, and they give a new
dimension to the already great originals.
The new songs, now, well they're exactly what you would expect: the
typical Blackmore's Night folk atmosphere, the renaissance
melodies, the acoustic guitars, the gypsy steel guitars... A few of
the songs are enhanced with the addition of a full rock band, and
of course Ritchie's world famous semi-clean leads are all over the
album - most of the times the result is stunning. Much of the new
material is very nice, most songs are a fun background while you're
reading a book set in the 15th century, and I don't think there's
any bad song in the album really. The reason I'm so harsh with the
grade is simply because we've already heard this stuff again and
again and again in Blackmore's Night previous releases. A few steps
ahead wouldn't hurt. However, I have to acknowledge that every
release from this band is better than the previous ones.
On the whole, "The Village Lantern" is another good release from
Blackmore's Night, but the band has been feeding on the same
chords, melodies and moods for way too long. A good album for every
music fan, but not if you already have anything else from the
band's catalogue.
(www.metal-realm.com)