Cascada Albums (2)
Perfect Day

'Perfect Day'

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What The Critics Say

Perfect Day is Cascada's second album of 2007 (although Everytime We Touch was originally released in 2006) and it sounds like she thought she had found a winning formula. The opening track and Top Ten single "What Hurts the Most" begins as a ballad backed by an acoustic guitar for the first 40 seconds, with the only hint of the electro-pop to come being the reverb on Natalie Horler's vocal. But then the drum beat kicks in and indeed you have another Cascada album after all, with Europop electronic beats and the production of DJ Manian and Yanou at the fore, although Horler's voice is never dominated by the music. Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boy" and Pink's "Just Like a Pill" have all their inherent anger extracted, and the Cascada versions become pleasant tunes to dance to. As with her previous album, Perfect Day ends with a chillout version of the first single, subtitled "Yanou's Candlelight Mix." ~ Sharon Mawer, All Music Guide

Everytime We Touch

'Everytime We Touch'

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What The Critics Say

Everytime We Touch: The Album was the CD originally released in 2006 by Natalie Horler, otherwise known as Cascada, a group name for the girl with flowing blonde hair from Bonn, Germany. Cascada was not just Natalie however, but also DJ Manian (Manuel Reuter) a German DJ and Yanou (born Yann Peifer) a remixer and producer specializing in house music and trance. If one is a fan of Eurobeat pop à la DJ Sammy and the aforementioned Yanou, or any number of anonymous European DJs/producers, then this was the album to buy. It was filled with 15 tunes, all with the same insistent drum machine to the fore, set to the same speed, far too fast for running, let alone jogging, and a synthesizer as the only other instrument to be heard. Produced by the two male members of Cascada, the title track was a massive summer hit in the U.K., reaching number two in August 2006; it was followed by the Savage Garden song "Truly Madly Deeply" at Christmas, and "Miracle," which became yet another Top Ten hit in March just as the album was reissued. The tempo slows down on just one track, the ballad "Another You" although two tracks are featured on the album in two different mixes: "Truly Madly Deeply" was recorded as a Eurobeat single version, and also as a slow trance version almost the same tempo as the Savage Garden original, while "Everytime We Touch" was recorded as a very slow ballad and titled the "Candlelight remix" in the same vein as the earlier hit by Yanou was turned into an ultra slow "Heaven" ("Candlelight remix"). The music is for dancing to, particularly in a club with the lights flashing and people all around, not sitting in a living room listening to it, so after nearly an hour of the same repetitive beat, one's senses can become a little jaded, so when you reach the songs "Kids in America" and "Wouldn't It Be Good," you can only remember how good the originals by Kim Wilde and Nik Kershaw were. Rewind nearly 15 years and 2 Unlimited were hitting the top of the charts with very similar albums and, rather unusually for this genre of music, Cascada's album also hung around the upper regions of the charts spending 11 weeks inside the Top Ten and peaking at number two. ~ Sharon Mawer, All Music Guide


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