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Draconian Times is the fifth studio album by British death metal band Paradise Lost, released on 12 June 1995 through Music for Nations and Relativity Records.Two tracks from the album, "The Last Time" and "Forever Failure", were released as singles with music videos, and both charted.
Title Album details Peak chart positions FRA [7]GER [8]At the BBC: Released: 14 April 2003; Label: Strange Fruit; Formats: CD — — The Anatomy of Melancholy
Faith Divides Us – Death Unites Us is the twelfth studio album by British gothic metal band Paradise Lost, released through Century Media in September 2009. The album cover is based upon the Danse Macabre – "The Abbot" woodcut, first published in 1538.
Paradise Lost is the tenth studio album by British heavy metal band Paradise Lost, released on 17 March 2005.It was recorded between January and June 2004 at Chapel Studios, Lincolnshire and Hollypark Lane, Los Angeles; it was mixed and mastered at Green Jacket Studios.
"Paradise Lost", backed with "Come On–Believe Me", was released by Fontana on 1 December 1967, ahead of the Herd's five-date tour of Scotland. [5] Originally to have been issued on 17 November, the single was pushed back due to the prolonged chart success of "From the Underworld".
— Paradise Lost, Book 2, lines 910–920 Pullman chose this particular phrase from Milton because it echoed the dark matter of astrophysics. [11] Pullman earlier proposed to name the series The Golden Compasses, also a reference to Paradise Lost, where it denotes the pair of compasses with which God set the bounds of all creation:
Shades of God is the third studio album by British metal band Paradise Lost, released on 14 July 1992 through Music for Nations.It retains the heavy instrumentation and growled vocals characteristic of the band's previous death-doom efforts, and also shows the beginning of the band's transition to a more melodic, gothic metal sound heard on the follow-up album Icon.
As understood through analyses of early proto-cuneiform notations from the city of Uruk, there were more than a dozen different counting systems, [18] including a general system for counting most discrete objects (such as animals, tools, and people) and specialized systems for counting cheese and grain products, volumes of grain (including ...