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A music video for "Self Care" was released on the same day as the song. Directed by Christian Weber, it begins with Miller buried alive inside a coffin. He raps his verses while smoking a cigarette, and carves "Memento mori" (Latin: "remember (that you have) to die") into the coffin using a pocket knife. After punching a hole into the coffin ...
Memento Mori: 3:03 This is their second single and music video on the album. "Believe In Dreams" 2010 Remember to Live EP 4:27 Re-recorded demo from the mid-2000s. "Bittersweet" 2009 Memento Mori: 4:04 Exclusive bonus only. "Break Your Knees" 2009 Memento Mori: 4:26 Bonus track on Memento Mori. "Breathe Today" 2005 Flyleaf: 2:31
Memento Mori is the second studio album by American rock band Flyleaf, released through A&M/Octone Records on November 10, 2009. [4] The title is a Latin phrase meaning "be mindful of death" or "remember you will die". Memento Mori debuted at number eight on the Billboard 200, selling 56,000 units in its opening week. [5]
Translated into Latin from Baudelaire's L'art pour l'art. Motto of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. While symmetrical for the logo of MGM, the better word order in Latin is "Ars artis gratia". ars longa, vita brevis: art is long, life is short: Seneca, De Brevitate Vitae, 1.1, translating a phrase of Hippocrates that is often used out of context. The "art ...
Memento Mori is in one movement and last for approximately 14 minutes. [1] It is in common time and the tempo is lento. [7] The piece opens with an introduction, which them leads into two statements of the Dies irae plainchant, part of the Latin mass for the dead: Following this, the music oscillates between the pitches of G and A-flat.
Voice actresses Ai Kayano, Haruka Tomatsu, and Saori Hayami released two cover versions of "Secret Base (Kimi ga Kureta Mono)" as a CD single on April 27, 2011, one as a "10 Years After ver." and the other as a "Memento Mori ver." [7] The song served as the ending theme for the anime series Anohana: The Flower We Saw That Day and the three were ...
[12] James McMahon from NME also gave the album four out of five stars, calling the album "a record that's the most authentic version of the band Lamb of God want to be." [16] He particularly singled out the song "Memento Mori", which "driven by Mark Morton's unforgiving guitar, flirts with the ethereal goth of the Sisters of Mercy." [16]
Exempli gratiā is usually abbreviated "e. g." or "e.g." (less commonly, ex. gr.).The abbreviation "e.g." is often interpreted (Anglicised) as 'example given'. The plural exemplōrum gratiā to refer to multiple examples (separated by commas) is now not in frequent use; when used, it may be seen abbreviated as "ee.g." or even "ee.gg.", corresponding to the practice of doubling plurals in Latin ...