Voyage to Isis

Voyage to Isis is the second album by industrial band Delta-S, released in December, 2007 on WindM Records. The songs "The Phoenix Effect", "Denial", "Wastelands", "Erase", "Rapture of the Deep" and "Waiting for the Sunrise" can all currently be heard on the band's MySpace page.[1]

Voyage to Isis
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 2007
Recorded2007 at the Inspiration Room, Camarillo
GenreIndustrial, electronica, trance
Length71:39
LabelWindM Records
ProducerDelta-S
Delta-S chronology
Chasm
(2005)
Voyage to Isis
(2007)

Track listing

All songs written by Lyte except where noted.

  1. "Damage Control" – 7:32
  2. "Wastelands" (Lyte, DJ Amanda Jones) – 4:29
  3. "My Crusade" (Lyte, Lucien) – 5:17
  4. "Waiting for the Sunrise" (Lyte, Emilee Seeger) – 4:50
  5. "The Summoning of the Sea" (Lauren Edman, Lyte) – 6:19
  6. "Anomaly" – 4:50
  7. "Erase" – 5:30
  8. "The Phoenix Effect" (Lyte, Kirsty Hawkshaw) – 7:57
  9. "Denial" – 3:45
  10. "Rapture of the Deep" – 4:02
  11. "Tempest" – 4:57
  12. "Star·Kindler" (Lyte, Hawkshaw) – 3:38
  13. "Isis" (Lyte, Lucien) – 6:40
  14. "Epilogue" – 2:00

Credits

All vocals performed by Lyte except where noted.

  • Track 1: Co-produced with Ever. Vocals by Lyte, Michelle Averna, and Nikki Williams.
  • Track 2: Vocals by DJ Amanda Jones.
  • Track 3: Co-produced with Nicki Tedesco.
  • Track 5: Co-produced with Lauren Edman. Vocals by Lauren Edman.
  • Track 7: Vocals by Lyte and Sheri Shaw.
  • Track 8: Co-produced with Kirsty Hawkshaw. Vocals by Kirsty Hawkshaw and Lyte.
  • Track 9: Vocals by Colleen Kelly and Lyte.
  • Track 11: Vocals by Lyte and DJ Amanda Jones.
  • Track 12: Co-produced with Kirsty Hawkshaw. Vocals by Kirsty Hawkshaw.

Personnel

  • Lyte – vocals, keys, guitar
  • Lucien – guitar, vocals
  • Colleen Kelly – vocals
  • DJ Amanda Jones – vocals
  • Nicki Tedesco – bass, upright bass, vocals, guitar
  • Tony Bandos – drums
gollark: Sad.
gollark: > One litre of liquid water has a mass of almost exactly one kilogram, because the kilogram was originally defined in 1795 as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at the temperature of melting ice (0 °C).[4] Subsequent redefinitions of the metre and kilogram mean that this relationship is no longer exact.[5]
gollark: Interesting! However, l looks bad.
gollark: I see. What unit were *you* using?
gollark: Also, the correct symbol is dL.

References

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