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Music CD - Delerium: The Best of Delerium

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Music CD: The Best of Delerium Artist: Delerium
List Price: $15.98
Our Price: $9.95
Your Save: $ 6.03 ( 38% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Nettwerk Records
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Flowers Become Screens - Delerium, Leeb 2. Silence - Delerium, McLachlan 3. Paris - Delerium, Leeb 4. Truly - Delerium, Pallot 5. Terra Firma - Delerium, Leeb 6. Incantation - Delerium, Leeb 7. After All - Delerium, Jaël 8. Underwater - Delerium, Kamal 9. Run for It - Delerium, Nash 10. Remembrance - Delerium, Leeb 11. You & I - Delerium, Johnston 12. Innocente - Delerium, Nash 13. Euphoria (Firefly) - Delerium, Hunt, Jacqui 14. Silence - Delerium, McLachlan
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0067003037723 Format: Limited Edition Label: Nettwerk Records Manufacturer: Nettwerk Records Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Nettwerk Records Release Date: 2004-09-07 Studio: Nettwerk Records
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Very good music Comment: I only found a couple of selections that I liked but that's typical. You pay 20 bucks for two songs. I bought if for "That's price of falling in Love". Love that piece. The rest is OK.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Another "must have". Comment: Great compilation. Even though I own a lot of their stuff, I still bought this CD.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Pleasant Comment: This album was very nice. I would have done it a bit different, but then we all have different tastes. I love "Paris", that is such a fun song. Another great song that I thought was great was "Flowers Become Screens", this sounds like a gothic/angelic piece. This is a great album, you will have fun with the many different moods it creates.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Overview and Collection Comment: I have many of the Delerium CD's but there are songs here that I have never heard before. This is an excellent compliation of the music of Delerium. I'm frankly surprised that they would make it as good as it is since you could buy it and have much of their best music. On the other hand the music is so good it could also inspire you to buy all of their other CD's. If you like Delirium in the least this is a can't miss purchase.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Nice Blend Comment: This album is a nice blend of 14 really good tracks by Delerium. There is not a single song that I skip on this CD. From what I have read and listened to, if you are going to buy only one Delerium album, make it this one. There are some Gregorian monks chanting, Indian sound clips, good special effects and synth use, beautiful sounding female vocalists, poppy upbeat songs, and more introspective tracks as well. If you like this album I can also recommend Amethystium, Mythos, Blue Stone, Balligomingo, and Sleepthief. I am happy to have them all in my collection. Really exquisite stuff.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Delerium was the perfect diamond chipped out of the blasted earth of Front Line Assembly. A collaboration between FLA's Rhys Fulber and Bill Leeb, Delerium took them to the opposite pole of their prior industrial electronic sound. Where FLA was a group that would just as soon sledgehammer Pachebel's "Canon in C," Delerium turns it into a dance number of ethereal seduction called "Paris." Drawing from their recordings for Nettwerk Records, this collection focuses on the seductive side of Delerium with chilled electro-dance rhythms and the bevy of ethereal girls they've used to front their project. Of course, Sarah McLachlan's "Silence," a yearning hymn for heaven, is here in it's original and a remixed version. "Silence" remains Delerium's greatest hit, but there are many equally compelling tracks including songs with Leigh Nash of Sixpence None the Richer and early works featuring a little-known singer, Kristy Thirsk. It was Thirsk who established Delerium's penchant for gothic lyricism on "Flowers Become Screens." While their recent CD, Chimera, shows a slick tendency toward the middle of the road, this retrospective highlights Delerium's crafty merger of techno-dance grooves and diva-driven lyricism. --John Diliberto
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