Lupus Dei

Lupus Dei
Studio album by Powerwolf
Released May 7, 2007
Recorded January 2007 at SU2 Studio in Illingen, Germany
Genre Power metal, Heavy metal
Length 43:31
Label Metal Blade Records (Europe)
Producer Fredrik Nordström
Powerwolf chronology
Return in Bloodred
(2005)
Lupus Dei
(2007)
Bible of the Beast
(2009)

Lupus Dei (Latin for Wolf of God) is the second full-length studio album by German power metal band Powerwolf. In addition to recording at Woodhouse Studios, Germany, the band recorded some parts of the album in an undisclosed 12th-century chapel. The band also used a 30-piece choir on the songs "In Blood We Trust" and "Lupus Dei".[1]

In a May 2007 interview with Lords of Metal, Matthew Greywolf talked about the story in Lupus Dei:

Well, generally 'Lupus Dei' is focussed on parables taken out of the Bible and set in context to our passion for metal. Finally it had turned out being a real concept album with the wolf himself as the protagonist. In the Introduction to the album he loses faith in good and descends to the evil. He doesn't believe in anything but blood anymore ("In blood we trust") – but during the album he realizes the light of God step by step and finally in the title track he experiences God.

The title of the album may be a reference to the story of Thiess of Kaltenbrun, a Livonian man who lived in Jürgensburg, Swedish Livonia, in 1692 and publicly admitted being a werewolf, referring to himself as "The Hound of God", claiming that he and other werewolves went to Hell to fight the Devil.

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Lupus Daemonis (Intro)"   1:17
2. "We Take It From the Living"   4:04
3. "Prayer in the Dark"   4:20
4. "Saturday Satan"   5:18
5. "In Blood We Trust"   3:03
6. "Behind the Leathermask"   4:35
7. "Vampires Don't Die"   3:09
8. "When the Moon Shines Red"   4:25
9. "Mother Mary Is a Bird of Prey"   3:16
10. "Tiger of Sabrod"   3:53
11. "Lupus Dei"   6:08
Total length:
43:31

Personnel

References

  1. Metal Underground. "Powerwolf Set To Release Sophomore Album, "Lupus Dei"". Retrieved 23 October 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.