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It is Era's third album. It achieved success in several European countries. The title track, "The Mass", is an adaptation of O Fortuna, a classical piece by Carl Orff. [citation needed] Videos were shot for "The Mass" and "Looking for Something" on location at Chateau de Commarque, France; featuring actors Pierre Boisserie and Irene Bustamante.
Era mixes Gregorian chants and occasionally world music with contemporary electronic and pop-rock arrangements. It is reminiscent of new-age music projects such as Enigma, Gregorian, and Deep Forest. Era's lyrics are written in Latin and English, and some are based on beliefs of the Cathars, a 13th century sect of French heretics. [citation needed]
"Ameno" is a song by French new-age musical project Era (stylized as +eRa+). It was released in June 1996 as a single from their self-titled debut album Era and became a chart success in France, Belgium, Sweden, Switzerland, Poland and Latin America.
Electric Prunes – Mass in F Minor (album) Enigma – Sadeness (Part I), Mea Culpa (Part II) Enya – Pax Deorum, Tempus Vernum, Afer Ventus, Cursum perficio * Era – The Mass; Erasure – Gaudete (rejoice (imperative Plural Form)) David Essex Oh What a Circus (Salve regina mater misericordiae) “Hail (the) queen, mother of mercy”
A "Premium" version was also released at the same time which includes a Video DVD. The back cover reads "The Complete Era video collection including all Era music videos and special features." Music videos include: 1. Misere Mani 2. Mother 3. The Mass 4. Looking For Something 5. Ameno 6. Infanati 7. Enae Volare Mezzo 8. Divano 9. Looking For ...
Era is the debut album by Eric Lévi's new-age project Era, first released in 1996 and re-released in 1998. Some editions include bonus track "After Time". Some editions include bonus track "After Time".
Léonin's two-part version of Viderunt Omnes was written about 1170 (the composer's dates are fl. 1150s — d. ? 1201). In his variation, the bottom voice sings the familiar chant as a drone while the top voice echoes in rich polyphony—a symbol of religious unity; a form of communal togetherness.
British composer Peter Maxwell Davies: parody mass Missa super l'homme armé [10] (1968, revised 1971). [11] Welsh composer Karl Jenkins drew heavily on L'homme armé for his 1999 mass, The Armed Man - A Mass for Peace, composed for SATB chorus, soloists and symphonic orchestra and dedicated to the victims of the 1998-1999 Kosovo War.