Cascada - Because The Night Video and Lyrics
Because The Night by Cascada, Music Video and Lyrics
The original song “Because the Night” is a rock song written by Bruce Springsteen and Patti Smith, and released as a lead single from Patti Smith Group 1978 album Easter.
In 2008, Cascada’s version appears on her second album Perfect Day. The single will be released later this summer, but it’s not sure.
The music video for the single premiered on YouTube on 28 May 2008.
You can listen the song here, this is the official video.
Cascada - Because The Night Lyrics
Take me now baby here as I am
hold me close, try and understand
Desire is hunger is the fire I breathe
Love is a banquet on which we feed
Come on now try and understand
The way I feel when I’m in your hands
Take my hand come undercover
They can’t hurt you now
Can’t hurt you now, can’t hurt you now
Because the night belongs to lovers
Because the night belongs to lust
Because the night belongs to lovers
Because the night belongs to us (x2)
Have I doubt baby when I’m alone
Love is a ring, the telephone
Love is an angel disguised as lust
Here in our beds till the morning comes
Come on now try and understand
The way I feel under your command
Take my hand as the sun descends
They can’t touch you now
Can’t touch you now, can’t touch you now
Because the night belongs to lovers
Because the night belongs to lust
Because the night belongs to lovers
Because the night belongs to us (x2)
Cascada - Because The Night Song Information
Released TBA
Recorded 2007
Genre Eurodance
Length 3:25
Label All Around the World
Writers Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith
Producer Yann Pfeiffer, DJ Manian
Angelina Jolie’s World Refugee Day PSA
Angelina Jolie is proving, once again, she is more than just a pretty face.
She’s a pretty face with a good cause.
The soon-to-be mother of twins appears in a new public service announcement seeking to raise awareness for World Refugee Day this Friday.
“They have survived war, they have survived displacement, they have survived rape, they have survived hunger and disease. For those who have survived and for those who did not, we are thinking of you on this day,” says Jolie, a Goodwill Ambassador to the United Nations Refugee Agency.
Jolie will also be penning an article to appear in a major U.S. newspaper to mark Friday’s occasion.
Jill Hennessy Searching for Baby Name that Rhymes with ’Mastropietro’
A pregnant Jill Hennessy, looking radiant in a black dress and high heels, stepped out Tuesday night with hubby Paolo Mastropietro, and the discussion quickly turned to her unborn baby boy – namely, what the heck she’s going to call her second child.
“I honestly wish I had a good name picked out right now,” she said at City Harvest’s Bid Against Hunger fundraiser in New York City. “His last name is Mastropietro and we’re racking our brains. If you have anything that rhymes with the last name, let me know.
Her current plan? “What we’re going to do is we have a short list and we are going to wait for the delivery and hold up the list to the kid’s face and try to compare his face to something that works.”
– Paul Chi
Elizabeth Hurley Blamed For Celebrity Craze
Elizabeth Hurley Blamed For Celebrity Craze
Being famous these days seems to come with a lot more baggage than it ever did in the past. And one actress is naming Elizabeth Hurley as the reason for the recent trend in “fast food celebrity.”
Actress Thandie Newton has some harsh words for her fellow Brit. She claims that Hurley started the trend of fame seeking celebrities. And she dates it back to the 1990’s.
Back when Hurley was dating Hugh Grant, she was a virtual nobody. But as soon as she wore her now-famous black plunging Versace dress to the premier of Four Weddings And A Funeral, she was practically a household name.
“Celebrity these days is just about wearing something plunging on the red carpet. There’s such a hunger for fast-food celebrity. I think Liz Hurley wearing that Versace dress started it all but anyone can wear a gorgeous dress,” Newton told press.
And the Pursuit of Happyness actress longs for the days of the past, when being famous actually meant that you were good at something. “When you ask a kid these days what they want to be they say, ‘I want to be famous.’ That didn’t happen when we were little. You wanted to be famous for a reason,” she laments.
