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"Seven Minutes to Midnight" was the second and final single released by Pete Wylie's Wah! Heat incarnation. The band had made major line-up changes and bass guitar player Pete Younger was replaced by Colm Redmond, then Carl Washington who became Wylie's right hand. The recording included keyboard player King Bluff for the first time.
Seven Minutes to Midnight", a 1980 single by Wah! Heat, refers to that year's change of the Doomsday Clock from nine to seven minutes to midnight. Australian rock band Midnight Oil's 1984 LP Red Sails in the Sunset features a song called "Minutes to Midnight", and the album's cover shows an aerial-view rendering of Sydney after a nuclear strike.
Seven Minutes to Midnight may refer to: Doomsday Clock, a symbolic clock face, representing a countdown to possible global catastrophe "Seven Minutes to Midnight" (Heroes), an episode of the science fiction drama series Heroes "Seven Minutes to Midnight" (song), a song by Pete Wylie's Wah! Heat
Six Minutes to Midnight is a 2020 British war drama film directed by Andy Goddard from a screenplay loosely based on a true story [2] by Goddard, Celyn Jones and Eddie Izzard, starring Izzard, Judi Dench, Carla Juri, James D'Arcy and Jim Broadbent. Six Minutes to Midnight was released in the United Kingdom on 26 March 2021, by Sky Cinema. [3]
"Doomsday Clock" (song), the opening track from the Smashing Pumpkins album, Zeitgeist; Doomsday Clock, a superhero comic book limited series "2 Minutes to Midnight", a song by Iron Maiden from the 1984 album Powerslave "Five Minutes to Midnight", a song by Boys Like Girls from their 2006 self-titled debut album
The song was written by band members Peter Garrett and Jim Moginie. The title and lyrics of the song allude to the Doomsday Clock , a symbolic timepiece published by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists , which represents the proximity of nuclear war (or more generally "catastrophic destruction"), designated as "midnight".
A Thousand Suns is the fourth studio album by American rock band Linkin Park.It was first released in multiple nations on September 8, 2010, and in the United States on September 13, 2010, [1] by Warner Bros. Records.
His alarm clock reads 11:55, the then Doomsday Clock time, referencing the album title Minutes to Midnight and the song which is the fifth song on the album. The video is over four minutes long, meaning that the time at the end would be 11:59 PM, or one minute to midnight. Bennington then watches the news, washes up, gets dressed, and goes outside.