Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A frame from the "We Are Golden" music video. The music video for "We Are Golden" was shot on 9 July 2009 and 10 July 2009 in Elstree Studios. It was directed by the Swedish film director Jonas Åkerlund. [7] The video premiered on 4 August 2009 in the United Kingdom on Channel 4. [8]
"The Twelve Days of Christmas" is an English Christmas carol. A classic example of a cumulative song, the lyrics detail a series of increasingly numerous gifts given to the speaker by their "true love" on each of the twelve days of Christmas (the twelve days that make up the Christmas season, starting with Christmas Day).
Other early translations of the Golden Verses and Hierocles' commentary include the translation into French by André Dacier (1706) [10] and the translation into English by Nicholas Rowe (1707). [11] A modern critical edition and English translation of the Golden Verses was prepared by Johan C. Thom in 1995, [ 12 ] while a recent English ...
In June 2012, McGlynn released his third full-length album, "Now We're Golden," recorded in New Jersey, Amsterdam, and Paris and was produced by Ken Stringfellow. In 2013, McGlynn released a 6-song EP of original Christmas songs called "North Pole Vault EP."
This Torah verse represents one of several versions of the Golden Rule, which itself appears in various forms, positive and negative. It is the earliest written version of that concept in a positive form. [32] At the turn of the era, the Jewish rabbis were discussing the scope of the meaning of Leviticus 19:18 and 19:34 extensively:
The dove: iconographic symbol of the Holy Spirit. Veni Sancte Spiritus (“Come, Holy Spirit”), sometimes called the “Golden Sequence” (Latin: Sequentia Aurea) is a sequence sung in honour of God the Holy Spirit, prescribed in the Roman Rite for the Masses of Pentecost Sunday. [1]
Book cover by Frank Green, 1869. It is generally thought that this song was adapted, possibly by Frank J. Green in 1869, as "Ten Little Niggers", though it is possible that the influence was the other way around, with "Ten Little Niggers" being a close reflection of the text that became "Ten Little Indians".
The 'Golden' label was first coined in 'a version of the speech printed near the end of the Puritan interregnum' [1] which bore a header beginning 'This speech ought to be set in letters of gold'. [2] It was to be reprinted time and time again up to the eighteenth century, whenever England was in danger, as the Golden Speech of Queen Elizabeth.