Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Ancient Aliens" by Lemon Demon on Spirit Phone, 2016 "Decks Dark" by Radiohead on A Moon Shaped Pool, 2016 "Hey Aliens" by The Bouncing Souls on Simplicity, 2016 [citation needed] "Spaceship" by Kesha, 2017 [24] "Herd Culling" by Porcupine Tree on CLOSURE/CONTINUATION, 2022 "Silver Circles" by Upchurch, 2023 [25] "End of the World" by Tom ...
Saturn imaged in 2021 through a 6" telescope, dimly showing the polar hexagon. Saturn's polar hexagon was discovered by David Godfrey in 1987 [14] from piecing together fly-by views from the 1981 Voyager mission, [15] [16] and was revisited in 2006 by the Cassini mission.
"Saturn" is a 2017 single by Sufjan Stevens, Bryce Dessner, Nico Muhly, and James McAlister, featured on the collaborative album Planetarium. It was officially released on March 27, 2017, although it had previously been performed as early as 2012 as a part of the group's original Planetarium performances.
“Saturn Return” appeared on R.E.M.’s 12th studio album, Reveal. The song is sung from the perspective of a woman who has an epiphany about changing her life while working at a convenience store.
The album consists of songs inspired by the Solar System. There are songs for the system's planets—Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—as well as the dwarf planet, Pluto. There are also songs inspired by black holes, Halley's Comet, the Kuiper belt, the Moon, and the Sun.
A Saturn return marks when the planet Saturn returns to the sign, and degree, it was in when you were born. This cycle takes anywhere between 27 and 30 years, and lasts for about three years.
Ultu Ulla is the fourth studio album by American deathcore band Rings of Saturn.It was released on July 28, 2017, through Nuclear Blast. [1] It is their first release through Nuclear Blast since their signing in May 2016.
The song was played to open night-time transmission of the pirate radio station Radio Caroline. The year following its release, American soft rock duo the Carpenters covered the song, using a crew of 160 musicians. [5] The Carpenters' version reached the top 10 in the UK and Canada, and charted at number 1 in Ireland.