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Perfect Day is the second studio album released by German Eurodance act Cascada. The entire album was produced by the act's two DJs, Yanou and DJ Manian with vocals by Natalie Horler . Like its predecessor , the album is comprised heavily of uptempo Eurodance tracks, many of which are cover songs.
"Perfect Day" is the fifth and final single released from Cascada's second album Perfect Day. "Perfect Day" was released in the United States as a CD Maxi Single on 3 March 2009 and on 17 February 2009 on iTunes. [1] It was also released as a download in certain European countries on 13 February 2010, almost a year after the United States release.
Their second album, Perfect Day was released in December 2007, which was commercially successful and produced the international single, "What Hurts the Most". This was followed by, Evacuate the Dancefloor , summer 2009 and the title track and first single, " Evacuate the Dancefloor ", entered the UK Singles Chart at number one becoming Cascada ...
At the end of 2007, Cascada released their second album, Perfect Day in the UK and several Northern European countries, [18] followed by the remaining markets in the first quarter of 2008, [19] The album contained cover versions of Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boi", Pink's "Just Like A Pill", Patti Smith's "Because the Night" and the Jeffrey Steele ...
Cascada's UK music label, All Around the World, released the music video on 19 January 2008, on their official site. In the video, Natalie and 3 friends are seen at a beach-side house, on the beach, and at a late night party, singing and dancing.
The new album isn’t perfect, as Green Day sometimes falters back into arena rock, resulting in the album’s weakest moments. “One Eyed Bastard” comes off as an awkward sports anthem, and ...
The maxi single release features remixes by 2-4 Grooves and Rocco vs. Bass-T along with the ballad mix by Yanou. [4] In Austria, "Everytime We Touch" was released on 4 September 2006 in the same format with all nine tracks featured on the U.S. maxi single but in a different order. [ 6 ]
The second album in Green Day’s 2012 trilogy is the shortest and most playful of the bunch, swerving from the earnest faux lo-fi opener “See You Tonight” to a swaggering song called “Fuck ...