King of the Nordic Twilight
Studio album by
Released22 September 1999
RecordedSascha Paeth Studio and Gate Studio, Wolfsburg, Germany, April–June 1999
GenreSymphonic power metal
Length50:16
LabelLimb Music/SPV
ProducerSascha Paeth & Miro
Luca Turilli Band chronology
The Ancient Forest of Elves EP
(1999)
King of the Nordic Twilight
(1999)
Prophet of the Last Eclipse
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

King of the Nordic Twilight is the first album in a trilogy by Luca Turilli's eponymous band. It was released in 1999 through Limb Music Productions.

The limited edition of this album comes in a digibook, with an expanded booklet. A video for the song "The Ancient Forest of Elves" is included as a hidden feature on the disc in .mov format.

Track 11 is unlisted on any form of the album. It is an a cappella rendition of a traditional Icelandic song by soprano Rannveig Sif Sigurdardottir. Sometimes the track is referred to by her name, or as "Lullaby", but the real name of this song is "Sofðu unga ástin mín" ("Sleep My Little Loved One")

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Luca Turilli; all music is composed by Luca Turilli

No.TitleLength
1."To Magic Horizons"1:21
2."Black Dragon"5:04
3."Legend of Steel"5:21
4."Lord of the Winter Snow"6:06
5."Princess Aurora"3:37
6."The Ancient Forest of Elves"4:44
7."Throne of Ice"1:51
8."Where Heroes Lie"4:25
9."Warriors Pride"3:47
10."Kings of the Nordic Twilight"11:37
Hidden track
No.TitleLength
11."Sofðu Unga Ástin Min" ("Sleep My Little Loved One")2:12
Japanese bonus track
No.TitleLength
12."Knight of Immortal Fire"5:11
Total length:50:16

Credits

Band members
  • Luca Turilli — guitars, additional keyboards
  • Olaf Hayer — lead and backing vocals
  • Sascha Paeth — bass, acoustic and additional guitars, guitar solo on "Where Heroes Lie", producer, engineer, mixing, mastering
  • Miro — keyboards, piano, harpsichord, producer, choir arrangements and conduction
  • Robert Hunecke-Rizzo — drums
Additional musicians
  • Opera Choir:
    • Sonja Pallasch, Heidrun Brockoff, Rosina Herrera-Sicilia, Ewald Bayerschmidt, Georg Mihalinov, Karl Heinz Kinsel, Jasinsky, Enrike Ochmann
  • Rannveig Sif Sigurdardottir - soprano voice
  • Epic Choir:
    • Thomas Rettke, Robert Hunecke-Rizzo, Cinzia Rizzo, Kirsten Metzing, Miro, Olaf Hayer
  • Matthias Brommann - first violin
  • Annette Berryman - flute
  • Bettina Jhrig - viola
  • Lord James David - narrator

Charts

Chart (1999) Peak
position
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[2] 53

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.