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"Lacrimosa" is Kalafina's fourth single, featuring Wakana, Keiko and Hikaru. The single was released on March 4, 2009. The song was used as the closing theme to the anime television series Black Butler starting with episode 14. The single was also available as a limited edition release, containing a bonus DVD. [1]
"Lacrimosa" is a song recorded by Dominican singer Juan Luis Guerra for his seventh studio album, Fogarate (1994), included as its seventh track. It was released to radio stations in Europe in 1994 and the United States in 1995 by Karen Records as a promotional single, following " Los Pajaritos ".
"Lacrymosa" received generally positive reviews from music critics. Ed Thompson from IGN deemed it the "most memorable track" on the album. [17] Don Kaye of the Blabbermouth.net felt that while the song was an "interesting experiment" it came "across as more of a stab at artsiness with its strings and choirs than a real song."
His longest-running project is the band Lacrimosa, which debuted in 1990. The band embraces a diverse range of gothic, darkwave and orchestral musical styles. Wolff composes, arranges, and writes the lyrics for almost all of Lacrimosa's songs. He also sings and plays piano for the songs and has contributed to the design of the album sleeves ...
A Touch of Humanity - Search Part 2: 5:07: 6. "Eine Nacht in Ewigkeit - Hingabe Teil 2" A Night in Eternity - Devotion Part 2: 5:54: 7. "Malina - Bittruf Teil 2" Malina - Petition call Part 2: 4:50: 8. "Die Schreie sind verstummt – Requiem für drei Gamben und Klavier" The Screaming has ceased – Requiem for three Viols and Piano: 12:42
The Lacrimosa (Latin for "weeping/tearful"), is part of the Dies Irae sequence in the Catholic Requiem Mass. Its text comes from the Latin 18th and 19th stanzas of the sequence. [ 1 ] Many composers, including Mozart , Berlioz , and Verdi have set the text as a discrete movement of the Requiem .
Lyrics cover Lacrimosa's by-now standard themes of love, estrangement and loneliness. A notable exception is the last individual track, "Hohelied der Liebe", a song written entirely for orchestra and choir with rock elements, and with lyrics taken from St Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians .
The album contains 10 songs, including "Mondfeuer"—the longest song (15:15) in the history of the band, which exceeds the length of the song "Die Strasse der Zeit" from the album Stille. [3] In addition to the standard edition, the group released the deluxe edition, supplemented by an alternative version of the song "Keine Schatten mehr" and ...