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On 4 March 2013, the band released the second music video from Sempiternal which was "Sleepwalking" on YouTube via the band's Vevo channel and Epitaph Record's channel. The band announced on their Facebook and Twitter pages that their third single would be "Go to Hell, for Heaven's Sake" and would officially release the song as a single on 10 June.
"Symphony of Destruction" is 4 minutes, 7 seconds long. [11] In the first five seconds of the song, the sound of an orchestra tuning is heard, [12] followed by a short segment of vocals from the Domine Jesu Christe — the choral tutti in the beginning with the lyrics Rex Gloriæ — from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Requiem.
The music video for "Can You Feel My Heart", directed by Richard Sidwell and Alistair Legrand, [12] was filmed in Los Angeles, California and released on 16 August 2013. [13] The Guardian , who premiered the video, described it as "suitably ostentatious" for the song, outlining that it "follows a distressed looking man who is chased by evil ...
On 1 September 2021, Kane posted on twitter "ahaha just wrote a song and one of the line says why dont u take him and go to hell". [3] Kane continued to tease the rock song on social media for a while [4] and on 2 December 2021, Kane posted on twitter announcing the song's release at "midnight tonight". [1]
"Welcome to Hell" is a song by English rock band Black Midi, released in 2022 as the lead single from their third studio album, Hellfire. A satirical anti-war song, "Welcome to Hell" tells the story of Tristan Bongo, a soldier who engages in hedonistic acts while on shore leave to dull the trauma he has endured during war.
The edit occurred during the early 1982 mixing sessions in which the Clash and Glyn Johns reduced Combat Rock from a 77-minute double album to a 46-minute single album. [5] The full, unedited version of "Straight to Hell" may be found on the Clash on Broadway and Sound System box sets.
The line describing the encounter, "Paradise on my right, and h-h-hell on my left, the a-a-angel of death, right behind me" is also reference to a line in Frank Herbert's Dune. Grimes states that certain lyrics in the song have their own themes: such as lyrics about insomnia, her experiences with record labels, and the city she recorded the ...
YouTube Music is a music streaming service developed by the American video platform YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet's Google. The service is designed with an interface that allows users to simultaneously explore music audios and music videos from YouTube-based genres, playlists and recommendations.