Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Maria Wisława Anna Szymborska [1] [2] (Polish: [viˈswava ʂɨmˈbɔrska]; 2 July 1923 – 1 February 2012) was a Polish poet, essayist, translator, and recipient of the 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in Prowent (now part of Kórnik in west-central Poland), she resided in Kraków until the end of her life.
In this way, Szymborska breaks with a traditional mental model according to which ignorance of death is a paradisiacal state. [22] According to Renate Ingbrant, Szymborska often uses an unusual point of view such as the one in the poem, through which the reader not only observes the cat, but is drawn into its feline nature in order to gain new ...
Double Brutal is the second full-length album by As I Lay Dying vocalist Tim Lambesis' parody project Austrian Death Machine.Unlike the previous album, Total Brutal, Double Brutal is a two disc effort; the first disc composed of original songs inspired by Arnold Schwarzenegger movies, and the second disc being covers of songs that can relate to Schwarzenegger movies.
"E=MC 2" is a 1986 single by the English band Big Audio Dynamite, released as the second single from their debut studio album, This Is Big Audio Dynamite (1985). The song was the band's first Top 40 hit on the UK Singles Chart , peaking at number 11.
Transylvania 90210: Songs of Death, Dying, and the Dead is the debut studio album by American horror punk musician Wednesday 13, released on April 13, 2005, by Roadrunner Records. The album contains fourteen standard tracks, as well as a bonus track exclusive to Japan, titled "Thank You Satan".
Written in a two-week period, "Death & Romance" is a psychedelic pop, neo-psychedelia, and synth-pop track led by piano and drums. The fictional lyrics represent a woman who was left by her alien boyfriend. Upon its release, "Death & Romance" was met with positive reception from music critics; some of them called it a standout on Imaginal Disk.
"Deep", originally recorded and intended for Danzig 5: Blackacidevil, was available on Songs in the Key of X, the soundtrack to The X-Files television series. [17] The mix used on the X-Files soundtrack differs very slightly in its final second of audio, ending abruptly rather than with a brief echo as on Lost Tracks.
Dornacker described the group as closer to musical theatre than rock music: "I worked with a couple of girls I knew from dance classes, and we did nutty dance routines and songs, and I did these long, rambling monologues.' [10] Gates and the band became Pearl Harbor and the Explosions without Dornacker. Guitarist Miles Corbin formed the surf ...