... It was not disappointed. "I will love you Monday (365)" was already promising, but what Ms Dione stores here, her name is accessible: songs with its own aura. Unconventional soft and fragile begins the album with "Glass Bone Crash", although the title would actually suggest it. Vocally a wonderful number. "Little Louie" increases the pace a little. Is accompanied by a text of great silent-dängelden Banjo and spherical piano sounds. "Something from nothing" reminds stylistically on her debut album "Song for Sophie", emotional and fantastic interpreted fragile - partly I felt Dolores O'Riordan to listen if the song would not so insane pop. Pleasant surprise provides the rap in the middle part. "Stay the Same" also falls well out of the frame, with the guitar riff at the beginning, the reggae rhythm and again an unmistakable aura voice. The dirty-trashy trumpet solo rounds things off to a pleasant-independent number. 'Picture of the moon "sounds promising, is lyrically not bad, but the music needs with its spherical ballads sounds a little until it completely affects me. Fascinating I think definitely before the versatility of her voice. "You are the reason" sounds lyrically rather cheesy, but is offered by Aura with such a fervor that it also forgives her the lyrical clichés for this song again. The acoustic guitar flourishes are orginell again and let the song not so bogged down in the drama. "Song for Sophie" has been known for some time, but after much surprised not hear again pleasant to the ear canal and invites you to hum along. It's interesting that some songs that are released as a single, the album represent so little. "I will love you Monday" is indeed a very high quality, but in fact in emotionality and depth the slimmest song of the disc. One could dismiss this as the party song of the plate it outright. What is not meant to be derogatory. In "Clean Hands" I am again completely in my element. As the starter "Glass Bone Crash" here comes a fragility to bear that was rarely achieved on a Popscheibe. A fantastic gem of a ballad and a great reconciliation to my favorite song of this album: "Are you for sale". Lyrically and vocally just the ne plus ultra for me currently. Unfortunately, with just two minutes outrageously short. You could continue to listen for hours. But what finally there's the REPEAT button? "Antony" has the makings of the next single, even if it perhaps should not hit in the conventional charts. With her Tracy-Chapman-Timbre on this song she had the chance to the Independent-pop crown. Completion of the disc - how could it be otherwise? - Is the "Lulla Goodbye" with Music Box Introduction. One feels in the meantime - only supported by Auras voice - packed in cotton wool and have to force yourself at such a lullaby to fall asleep, because it really is due to the performance fesselden not now. The song shines Last but from much warmth and optimism that one finally falls asleep with a good-feeling-feeling yet. But only after the board has long been over. Wholeheartedly 5 Stars. Great album!