Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
7th Sea is a "swashbuckling and sorcery"-themed tabletop role-playing game by John Wick. [2] It is set in the fictional world of Théah, a fantasy version of 17th century Earth. Originally published by AEG, 7th Sea is currently published by Chaosium. The game won an Origins Award in 2000 and six ENNIE Awards in 2017.
A tibia is a sort of organ pipe that is most characteristic of a theatre organ.. Tibia pipes are generally made of wood, stopped, from 16' (Occasionally 32') with the top octave pipes (above 1/2', or 6" made of metal, stopped, and pipes from 1/4', 3" made of metal and open.
2nd Chapter of Acts. Annie Herring – acoustic piano, synthesizers, vocals; Nelly Ward – vocals; Matthew Ward – vocals; Musicians. Kerry Livgren – pianos, synthesizers, guitars; Greg Springer – synthesizers; Peter York – guitars; Herb Melton – bass; Jack Kelly – drums; David Kemper – drums
Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the score album to the 2013 film Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters.The second instalment of the Percy Jackson film series and the 2010 film Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief, it is loosely based on the 2006 novel The Sea of Monsters from Rick Riordan's fantasy adventure novel series Percy Jackson & the Olympians.
Signed to Mother Records, Tikaram released The Cappuccino Songs in 1998, and then retired for several years from the music industry, reappearing in 2005 with the album Sentimental, which was released on a French label. In 2012, she released Can't Go Back, her first album in seven years. After 2013, she continued touring the UK and Europe.
2nd Chapter of Acts. Annie Herring – vocals, acoustic piano, vocal arrangements; Nelly Ward – vocals, vocal arrangements; Matthew Ward – vocals, vocal arrangements, arrangements (1–7, 9, 10)
The ancient Roman equivalent was the tibicen (plural tibicines), from the Latin tibia, "pipe, aulos." The neologism aulode is sometimes used by analogy with rhapsode and citharode ( citharede ) to refer to an aulos -player, who may also be called an aulist ; however, aulode more commonly refers to a singer who sang the accompaniment to a piece ...
Alexandra David-Neel in 1933 Tibet with a Kangling instrument at her waist. Kangling (Tibetan: རྐང་གླིང་།, Wylie: rkang-gling), literally translated as "leg" (kang) "flute" (ling), is the Tibetan name for a trumpet or horn made out of a human tibia [1] or femur, used in Tibetan Buddhism for various chöd rituals as well as funerals performed by a chöpa.