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The album featured the original score composed by Bruno Coulais, who worked on the film for over a year, and was recorded at several places including Paris, Budapest, Los Angeles and Cincinnati. Coulais had developed the themes based on the visual style and used variety of instruments and orchestral and choir portions, to create strange sounds.
Teatro d'ira: Vol. I is the second studio album by Italian rock band Måneskin. [2] It was released on 19 March 2021 through RCA and Sony. It includes the singles "Vent'anni" and the Sanremo and Eurovision 2021-winning "Zitti e buoni", [3] [4] [5] as well as the songs "I Wanna Be Your Slave" and "Coraline".
Coraline (/ ˈ k ɒr əl aɪ n /) [2] is a 2002 British dark fantasy horror children's novella by author Neil Gaiman.Gaiman started writing Coraline in 1990, and it was published in 2002 by Bloomsbury and HarperCollins.
"Caroline, No" was written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher, possibly within a few days of writing "Wouldn't It Be Nice". [3] Although Wilson claimed that Asher only provided the words to his music, Asher credited himself with contributing musical ideas to at least three songs on Pet Sounds, including "Caroline, No".
Dangerous Dreams is the debut studio album by American dance-punk band Moving Units. It was released on October 12, 2004, by Palm Records. [9] It was their second release, after their 2002 Moving Units EP. The track "Between Us & Them" was used in Leo Romero's opening part in Foundation's skateboarding video That's Life.
Coraline is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephin Merritt and a book by David Greenspan. It is based on the 2002 novella of the same name by Neil Gaiman. The story follows Coraline Jones, a young girl who discovers a parallel world beyond a secret door in her new home. The world has everything Coraline dreams of, but hides an ominous secret.
"Coraline" is a rock ballad by Italian rock band Måneskin, from their second studio album, Teatro d'ira: Vol. I (2021). Although it was not released as a single it reached a Top 5 position in Finland, Greece and Lithuania.
An interactive web film, Rome: 3 Dreams of Black, was created for the song "Black" by Chris Milk with Aaron Koblin, using HTML5 technology including WebGL as part of Chrome Experiments. The song "Black" accompanied the ending of "Face Off", the final episode of Breaking Bad ' s fourth season.