Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The song was named "Sadeness (Part I)" on its single release in Germany, and "Sadness Part I" on its single release in the United Kingdom and Japan. It is a sensual track based around "questioning" the sexual desires of Marquis de Sade ; hence the German release name of "Sadeness", as opposed to the English word of " Sadness " used in the UK ...
In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau lamented the amount of filler throughout the two discs in the form of several hymns and love songs, but complimented the secular songs about true love, ordinary life, and "the days before rock and roll", finding the album "more affecting than you'd figure" overall. [11]
The album was a series of firsts for the band. It is the first album the band recorded entirely in or near their original hometown of San Francisco (at Pacific Recording Studio in nearby San Mateo, and at the similarly named Pacific High Recording Studio in San
Believe is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Disturbed, released on September 17, 2002 via Reprise Records.Produced by the band and Johnny K, it focuses heavily on religious and spiritual themes inspired by recent tragedies.
"Notion" is about religion, specifically not believing in it. The opening lines, "Sure it's a calming notion, perpetual in motion, but I don't need the comfort of any lies" And the ending lines, “Sure it’s a calming notion, but it’s a lie” Describe how religious texts calm people, though what it tells might not be true.
1970 – Wizz Jones, on the album The Legendary Me; 1971 – Hot Tuna, on the album First Pull Up, Then Pull Down [6] 1975 – Pearly Brown, on the album It's a Mean Old World to Try to Live In; 1975 – John Fahey and his Orchestra, on the album Old Fashioned Love; 1978 – Hot Tuna, on the album Double Dose; 1984 – Hot Tuna, on the album ...
When recording finished, the album was released to the public in the spring of 2003. [3] In 2005, they released their fifth album titled "Tell the Angels" in Memphis again. In 2006, they released a compilation of songs with the album's name being "Soulful Healing". In the 2000s they went to SoulLink Live! then the second one, then the third.
The album is noted for the higher tone of Schuldiner's vocals compared to the "deep death growls" on early and mid-career Death releases. [4] Journalists have made note of the apparent influence of European heavy metal bands Sortilège and H-Bomb present on the track "Crystal Mountain." The song contains an acoustic guitar solo in its outro. [10]