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"Lux Æterna" (Latin for "eternal light") is a song by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on November 28, 2022, as the lead single from their eleventh studio album, 72 Seasons (2023). [3] It was first played live on December 16, 2022, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.
The video game crash of 1983 (known in Japan as the Atari shock) [1] was a large-scale recession in the video game industry that occurred from 1983 to 1985 in the United States. The crash was attributed to several factors, including market saturation in the number of video game consoles and available games, many of which were of poor quality .
"Lux Aeterna", a 2014 song by Two Steps from Hell from Miracles "Lux Æterna" (Metallica song), a 2022 single by Metallica from their 2023 album 72 Seasons; Lux Aeterna for 5 masked musicians, a 1971 avant-garde piece by George Crumb; Symphony N 5 Lux Aeterna, a 2006 avant-garde piece by Vassil Kazandjiev; Lux Aeterna for organ, a 1974 work by ...
Both "Lux Aeterna" and the re-orchestrated version, "Requiem for a Tower" that was created for the trailer of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, have been used in multiple forms of media, including the film trailers for The Da Vinci Code, I Am Legend, Sunshine and Babylon A.D.; trailers for the video games Assassin's Creed and Lord of the ...
72 Seasons is the eleventh studio album by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on April 14, 2023, by their own record label Blackened Recordings. 72 Seasons was produced by Greg Fidelman, who produced the band's previous studio album, Hardwired... to Self-Destruct (2016), and is the band's second studio album to be released through Blackened.
Their audition was recorded on video and features some of the earliest footage of Burton's playing style. The video also shows Burton playing parts of what would soon be two Metallica songs: his signature bass solo, "(Anesthesia) - Pulling Teeth", and the chromatic intro to "For Whom the Bell Tolls". [5]
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Game crash may refer to: video game crash of 1977, a glut in the market caused by manufacturers clearing older stock. video game crash of 1983; Crash (computing)