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"Wagging Tongue" is a song by English electronic music band Depeche Mode. It was released on 7 July 2023 as the third single from their fifteenth studio album, Memento Mori . [ 1 ]
Memento Mori (stylised on cover as Memento| Mori) is the fifteenth studio album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 24 March 2023 [2] through Columbia. [3] [4] The album was produced by James Ford, and marks their first album in six years since 2017's Spirit, the longest period of time between albums in the band's history.
Depeche Mode have released a total of 15 studio albums, 10 compilation albums, six live albums, eight box sets, 13 video albums, 71 music videos, and 54 singles. They have sold over 100 million records and played live to more than 35 million fans worldwide.
[2] [3] Focusing on themes of mortality and salvation, and filmed in black and white, the video shows a gloomy figure in an overcoat who slowly walks into a dangerous sea, and, in the end, the elements consume him. [4] [5] For the Memento Mori album, Corbijn also directed videos for "Wagging Tongue", "Ghosts Again" [6] and "My Favourite Stranger".
101 is a live album and documentary film by the English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 13 March 1989 by Mute Records.It chronicles the final leg of the band's Music for the Masses Tour and the final show on 18 June 1988 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.
Lin-Manuel Miranda is "still surprised" that "We Don't Talk About Bruno" was the runaway hit from Encanto.That's why he's hesitant to guess what could be the fan-favorite song from Mufasa: The ...
His older sister said he was “traumatized” by the assault. “He’s very shaken up by the whole event that took place this morning,” his sister Shaniqua told WRAL. “He’s pushing through.
Memento mori (Latin for "remember (that you have) to die") [2] is an artistic or symbolic trope acting as a reminder of the inevitability of death. [2] The concept has its roots in the philosophers of classical antiquity and Christianity , and appeared in funerary art and architecture from the medieval period onwards.