You don't have  to tell Lacuna Coil singer  Cristina Scabbia that the band's new  disc _Unleashed Memories_ [reviewed in  this issue] is going to  break the  Milan, Italy-based band  into stardom.  She knows this already.  She just wants the  metal world to discover  the record and let fate take its course.
 "This is a very emotional  and powerful record", starts a vibrant Scabbia down  the line from  Milan, Italy.  "We have become  more than just a gothic metal band with a female singer and male growled vocals. The band has grown tremendously. We've  have matured as singers and as songwriters and I think people, especially those who have followed our career up to this point, will  hear that with _Unleashed Memories_. We worked hard with this record and I  know it'll open a lot of doors for us, doors we haven't been able to open yet."
 Listening to the passionate and expressive compositions making up _Unleashed Memories_,  such as the  beautiful opener "Heir of  a Dying Day", "When a Dead Man Walks" and "Cold Heritage" (the song closest to Scabbia's heart), one  must wonder what inspired Scabbia  and the rest of Lacuna  Coil --  the sextet  is rounded out  by Andrea  Ferro (male vocals), guitarists Cristiano Migliore and Marco Biazzi, bassist Marco Coti Zelati and drummer Cristiano Mozzati  -- to really make an effort to take flight and be able to produce a unique offering for metal fans to digest.
 "I think we just wanted to have  a record that we could be really happy about, both  as songwriters and as musicians",  she relays. "The last few  recordings were great,  but they didn't really  capture what Lacuna Coil was about,  I think. This record is all  that. I feel very strongly about the disc. I love it!"
 And what about The Gathering  references that seem to have dogged the band  since signing on  with Century Media  back in 1998  with the self-titled EP [CoC #31]? Does it bother her and her band mates?
 "Not really",  she comments. "I mean,  I can see how  it happened early  on.  Two  gothic  metal  bands with  female  singers  and  soft melodies. The comparisons were expected. But that has all changed now, really. We both have changed so much as bands. The Gathering are going off and doing their thing and bringing new sounds into their music and we are just doing our own thing too, just getting better at it. People can say what they want. It doesn't bother me."
 The  topic   of  conversation  turns  toward   the  recording  of _Unleashed Memories_ and how it all came about. While it wasn't really an arduous  task, seeing  that the  band was  working once  again with gifted  producer Waldemar  Sorychta (Moonspell,  Tiamat), finding  the time and initiative to get the ball rolling was another thing.
 States Scabbia, "Making a record is  always a big deal for us. We know what we want  and how we want to do things. It's  just the act of getting into  the studio and getting  it all down on  record. <laughs> After the last EP  (_Halflife_ in 2000) we set a  goal to have another disc out within  a year. A month  went by and no real  work, then four months  and then  another couple  of months  and then  we realized  we wouldn't be  keeping our commitment to  have something out. So  we got our act together and went in to record the new disc."
 "I really get excited about my music and just making music in the studio and  playing live", says  the singer.  "I don't know...  I just think making records and being creative  with all of those involved in the band  is such a wonderful  experience. Making a record  is tiring, yes, but so  rewarding. I couldn't be happier with  the end result. It just adds another  direction and style for Lacuna Coil.  I can see the changes within what we do."
 Unlike the way things were going for the European metal community a few  years back with  a major  emphasis on Scandinavian  acts, Italy seems to  be spurting  out some quality  bands like  Rhapsody, Domine, Power Symphony and White Skull. What  does Scabbia credit this to? Why are these bands making names for themselves after years of not getting noticed?
 "I am so proud to see a lot  of these bands, a lot of good bands, getting noticed by the metal fans around the world. There are a lot of good acts here", she  insists. "I think the reason why  a lot of bands have never really taken off is because most of them were afraid to try new things and just  copied other acts and it all  sounded too much of the same  and fans  never caught on.  Now a lot  of Italian  bands are making an effort to be true to what they want to do and make music for the sake of making music, not just to  be a part of a trend or to copy bands they worship."
 She adds:  "I think  we were in  the same frame  of mind  when we started out  and we just  realized we needed to  make an effort  to be true to what we wanted to do as a band. We needed to grow and expand."
 "When I listen to the new  record, I get this real strong feeling of passion. The record is full of some great moments, both from myself and  all of  the others  in  the band.  The  real strength  is in  the songwriting this time. I think this is some of our deepest, as well as best work",  she notes.  "We knew  we had  a lot  to provide  for this record and one listen and you'll know  we were on fire when it came to songwriting."
 Scabbia continues:  "I think it  was important for us  to explore new ideas and not be worried with  what people would say", she says of the band's varied  approach to certain songs. "Nothing  on this record sounds the  same, yet it all  meshes together quite well.  That is the way any good record should be."
 "Being part of this creative team is like no other job. Every day it  is  a new  experience.  And  the music  just  makes  it even  more enjoyable", she ends. "I'm  just proud to be a part  of music that not only moves our fans, but moves me as well."