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"The 1975" is the opening song on the 1975's fourth album, Notes on a Conditional Form. [8] Healy initially said that the band were choosing between three songs to release on 31 May 2019 as the lead single of the album. [25] However, "The 1975" was the first song to be released, on 24 July 2019, and the lead single "People" debuted on 22 August.
The music video for "Violence" was released through Grimes' YouTube channel alongside the song's official release on September 5, 2019. [11] It was directed by Grimes herself. The video begins with the singer reading The Art of War by Sun Tzu which would predict the outcome of the video.
In a 2019 post, Young explains the urgency for unity as the world seeks to address its social and environmental challenges: "Rainbow of Colors" is a song about the USA and the whole world. The idea of this song is that we all belong together. Separating us into races and colors is an old idea whose time has passed.
Pages in category "Songs about climate change" ... Climate change in music; 0–9. 4 Degrees (song) The 1975 (song) A. All Star (song) All the Good Girls Go to Hell;
[4] [5] The name of the album is a pun on the feminine title "Miss", and the words "misanthrope" and "Anthropocene", [6] a neologism popularised by Paul J. Crutzen in 2000 that was proposed to denote the current geological age the Earth is in. [7] [8] The album is a loose concept album about an "anthropomorphic goddess of climate change ...
The study, published in the journal Environmental Research: Climate, found that 84% of Atlantic hurricanes between 2019 and 2023 were, on average, 18 mph stronger because of climate change.
Climate change became a more prevalent topic in music during the 2010s, [23] [24] owing to changes in public opinion and the influence of the climate movement, youth strikes and Greta Thunberg. [25] A number of figures and groups from the music industry in the United Kingdom formed Music Declares Emergency in 2019 and declared a climate ...
For example, it is estimated that flood heights from Hurricane Katrina in 2005 - one of America's deadliest storms - were 15-60% higher than they would have been in the climate conditions of 1900.