Symphonic metal masters VISIONS OF ATLANTIS will release their first live album, “The Deep & The Dark Live @ Symphonic Metal Nights”, on February 22, 2019 via Napalm Records. With focus on songs from the band’s latest studio album, “The Deep & The Dark”, this live opus pushes the mystical adventure of VISIONS OF ATLANTIS to another level — powerful and perfectly executed.

Track listing:

01. Intro
02. The Deep & The Dark
03. New Dawn
04. Book Of Nature
05. Ritual Night
06. Lost
07. The Silent Mutiny
08. The Last Home
09. Words of War
10. The Grand Illusion
11. Passing Dead End
12. Return To Lemuria

“The Deep & The Dark” was released in February via Napalm Records.

Vocalist Clémentine Delauney told Metal Underground about the disc: “We all do believe this is the best album the band has ever released. We went back to a more melodic and symphonic metal style with an old-school touch and a production that suits the genre. We wrote diversified songs with rich arrangements using many different influences [and] I was finally able to take part in the creative process. I wrote many of the vocal lines, most of the lyrics together with Siegfried, and I wrote the last song of the album, ‘Prayer To The Lost’. So, for the first time, I’m able to release really personal material and to sing about things that deeply matter to me. I’ve been waiting for this since I joined my first band in 2010.”

In a separate interview with Distorted Sound, Clémentine spoke in more detail about the songwriting process for “The Deep & The Dark”. “I feel more comfortable when I am writing lyrics when I have a melody because as a singer, it’s easier to have a melody so you can let the words come out,” she said. “Depending on the notes, I can see which one is more natural to sing an ‘a,’ another vowel or a specific word that contains a letter like a ‘c’ or a ‘t’ where I know to project the sound. So, you have singing tricks that someone doesn’t normally think about and sometimes, not necessarily in our music, in general the words match so well with the melody because they were created together. I like to make sure the words match the melody so it’s easier for me to know the strength of the melody first and then I can shape the words and lyrics nicely to the melody rather than have a text that gets put on top of a melody, as that is difficult.”

Photo by Emilie Garcin

Fonte: Blabbermouth.net

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