De Vampyrica Philosophia

http://dbpedia.org/resource/De_Vampyrica_Philosophia an entity of type: Thing

De Vampyrica Philosophia is the debut solo studio album by Italian extreme metal vocalist Lord Vampyr, released on 6 February 2005 through Officina Rock Records. The album was Lord Vampyr's first release following his departure from Theatres des Vampires. The title is a pun on the famous occult treatise De Occulta Philosophia. The spoken-word portion of the track "De Vampyrica Philosophia" was taken from the opening lines of the 2003 film The Order, and the instrumentation is sampled from the 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula. Tracks 6 and 7 contain quotations from poems by Oscar Wilde. rdf:langString
rdf:langString De Vampyrica Philosophia
rdf:langString De Vampyrica Philosophia
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rdf:langString Lord Vampyr
rdf:langString De_Vampyrica_Philosophia.jpg
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString Officina Rock
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rdf:langString instrumental
rdf:langString Stefano Morabito
xsd:date 2005-02-06
rdf:langString Morgana
rdf:langString ...Now... Sleep...
rdf:langString A Sad Litany of Vampires
rdf:langString Blood Lovers
rdf:langString Carmilla... Whispers from the Grave
rdf:langString De Vampyrica Philosophia
rdf:langString Die Herrschaft des Blutes"
rdf:langString Nocturnal Vampire's Orgy
rdf:langString The Ophelia's Ghost
rdf:langString :(I. "Dracula's Guest") :(II. "Draculea, Prince of Wallachia)
rdf:langString studio
rdf:langString De Vampyrica Philosophia is the debut solo studio album by Italian extreme metal vocalist Lord Vampyr, released on 6 February 2005 through Officina Rock Records. The album was Lord Vampyr's first release following his departure from Theatres des Vampires. The title is a pun on the famous occult treatise De Occulta Philosophia. The spoken-word portion of the track "De Vampyrica Philosophia" was taken from the opening lines of the 2003 film The Order, and the instrumentation is sampled from the 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula. Tracks 6 and 7 contain quotations from poems by Oscar Wilde.
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