Travma

Travma is a Greek album by singer Anna Vissi released in Greece and Cyprus on April 14, 1997. In Greece it became Gold within 12 days and 3x Platinum within 6 months, becoming one of the most commercially successful albums of the Greek 1990s.[1][2] The album also includes a duet with fellow Greek pop star Sakis Rouvas.

Travma
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 16, 1997
LabelSony Music Greece/Columbia
ProducerNikos Karvelas
Anna Vissi chronology
Klima Tropiko
(1996)
Travma
(1997)
Antidoto
(1998)

Australian edition

Trauma was released in Australia with English-language artwork and packaging in mid-1997, to help promote the Australian leg of the Trauma tour and her recent English-language single debut for "Forgive Me This".[3] The album was released in a special tour edition featuring a bonus disc with five songs from previous albums. Vissi promoted the album and tour by participating in a high-profile media campaign including press, radio, national television interviews, and in-store signings.[3]

Music

Music and lyrics are by Nikos Karvelas and Natalia Germanou (4, 5, 10).

Track listing

  1. "Travma" (Trauma)
  2. "Eki" (There)
  3. "Ntrepome" (I'm ashamed)
  4. "Siga!" (Slowly!)
  5. "Na' Se Kala" (Be well)
  6. "To Katalaves?" (Got it?)
  7. "Me Niazi" (I do care)
  8. "Mavra Gialia" (Sunglasses)
  9. "Eprepe" (I should have)
  10. "Apolito Keno" (Absolute emptiness)
  11. "To Megalitero Soukse" (The biggest hit)
  12. "Thanatos Ine I Agapi" (Love is death)
  13. "Me Halai" (It makes me feel bad)
  14. "Se Thelo, Me Thelis" (Duet with Sakis Rouvas) (I want you, you want me)
  15. "Se Thimame" (I remember you)

Singles

  1. "Travma"
  2. "Mavra Gialia"
  3. "Na' Se Kala"

Australian release

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[4]

Charts

Chart Providers Peak
Position
Certification
Greek Albums Chart IFPI 1 3x Platinum
Cypriot Albums Chart All Records Top 20 1 3x Platinum
Official Australian Album Charts ARIA Album Charts 73 -
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gollark: It's actually quaternionic.
gollark: To some extent I guess you could ship worse/nonexistent versions of some machinery and assemble it there, but a lot would be interdependent so I don't know how much. And you'd probably need somewhat better computers to run something to manage the resulting somewhat more complex system, which means more difficulty.
gollark: Probably at least 3 hard. Usefully extracting the many ores and such you want from things, and then processing them into usable materials probably involves a ton of different processes you have to ship on the space probe. Then you have to convert them into every different part you might need, meaning yet more machinery. And you have to do this with whatever possibly poor quality resources you find, automatically with no human to fix issues, accurately enough to reach whatever tolerances all the stuff needs, and have it stand up to damage on route.

References

  1. ΑΝΝΑ ΒΙΣΣΗ - ΒΙΟΓΡΑΦΙΚΟ (in Greek). Sony Music Greece. Archived from the original on October 11, 2010. Retrieved February 21, 2010.
  2. Staff. "Anna Vissi". Maple Jam Music Group. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  3. Inc., Nielsen Business Media; Develegas, Cosmas (1997-09-06). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. pp. 69–. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  4. Travma (LP, MC, CD). Anna Vissi. Sony Music. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
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