~ Beautiful and above all very varied album. Fast rhythms alternate with ballad-like, only to be replaced again by breakbeats. Orchestral sounds change with keyboards and guitars and all this in the dialogue with a very bright and clear but pleasant voice. In two three pieces the boys take right to drive and the singing chasing the keyboards and strings, or sometimes vice versa. Anspieltipps definitely the very powerful "crystral Lake" and the almost epic "Stellaris", both arranged wonderfully, great harmonies and incredibly exciting. Later, when everything so beautiful harmony and a little more calm returns, is also time for a short instrumental piece - "After All, He Was Sad". Nowadays it could be something all knitted in personal union by a musician from two computers, and guys are taking all orchestrated completely. All this cries out for live - and may the guys too. The music goes quickly into his ear, excited but more than two times Listen. The pieces live and grow, some almost to the ecstatic. Therefore, this disc requires active (throughput) hearing. Runs alongside the music, then a crescendo noise at the end of a song towards ever seem strange at short notice!
One complaint there if I did not have the heart to bring to devalue it. The sound is standard. Right flat, undynamic and almost washed out in the heights. But the music is so authentic and alive that you (almost) no longer noticed after two clocks.
At the end still a little anecdote - sorry guys! Have the CD discovered in business because I liked the cover, which is really designed very carefully in details (cardboard / digi pack). The audition convinced. So the group I was nothing else known. Have just a little surprised that the singer "was displayed anywhere. When I a few days later the video and the singer then" saw here, I was quite amazed. My girlfriend wanted to personalize it and do not believe until they saw the video ...
So no offense, but this is the most feminine singing voice I've ever heard from the lips of a man. (Jimmy Sommerville or the Bee Gees times left out, because also sound not really female.)
Of course, the art does not diminish (see also high for voice)!