Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Metallic Spheres is the tenth studio album by the ambient techno group the Orb, released in October 2010. It features the Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour and the Killing Joke bassist Youth. [3] It spent three weeks on the UK charts, reaching number 12. [4] In 2023, the album was remixed, partially re-recorded and released as Metallic Spheres ...
[3] [4] The family of three, Antoine, Jerri, and son Terry, came across a small metal sphere the size of a bowling ball. Their first thought was the sphere had been a cannonball left from New World conquistadors. They decided to take the sphere back to their house. [2] Several days later, Terry was playing the guitar in their home.
Featuring colourful light shows and psychedelic imagery, their performances often incited comparisons to Pink Floyd, whose guitarist, David Gilmour, later collaborated with them on the album Metallic Spheres in 2010. Their seventeenth studio album, Prism, was released on 28 April 2023 by Cooking Vinyl.
Metallic Spheres, a collaboration with former Pink Floyd musician David Gilmour, was released in October 2010. It gave the group their highest-charting album in the UK since U.F.Orb, peaking at number twelve on the country's albums chart. [6] Metallic Spheres also charted in several European countries, including Belgium, Greece and Ireland.
Orboretum: The Orb Collection disc one track listing; No. Title Original release Length; 1. "A Huge Ever Growing Pulsating Brain That Rules from the Centre of the Ultraworld" (Orbital Dance Mix)
Klerksdorp spheres are found in carbonaceous shales (wonderstone) that occur as lenses within the 1.5 km (0.93 mi) thick Syferfontein Formation. It is composed of feldspar-quartz-phyric felsic volcanic rocks, basaltic to andesitic lava, tuff and breccia and is part of the 2.7 km (1.7 mi) thick Mesoarchaean Dominion Group.
C. Careful with That Axe, Eugene; Carrera Slow Blues; Castellorizon; Chicago Dub; Childhood's End (Pink Floyd song) Classified (The Orb song) Cluster One
Oolites are internally structured spheres, composed mainly by calcium carbonate (Figure 1). They are a type of constituent in limestone. The size of these ooids ranges between 0.25 and 2 mm. The name derives from the Greek ooion (egg). They are formed by growing larger and accreting material as they move around.