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Will Wood is an American musician, singer-songwriter, and comedian. [1] [2] Wood has released four studio albums; Everything Is a Lot (2015), Self-ish (2016), The Normal Album (2020), [3] and "In case I make it," (2022). The first two were released as Will Wood and the Tapeworms, Wood's prior band name. He has additionally released two live ...
Various poses were photographed, with the final choice being of Wood waving out from the window. Wood edited this image's contrast, making it pale while surrounding it by a dark retro-pattern border with crumbled text. This stylistic choice is intended to translate Wood's sense of humor, self-describing the album art as "a piece of black comedy ...
"White Noise" is a ballad, [6] beginning with solo tenor ukulele composed in 4 4 time signature. [1] [7] Once Wood enters, he softly sings portamento.The song builds in intensity throughout and climaxes during the second verse and chorus, [1] introducing string instruments and a choir. [7]
3.3 Music videos. 4 References. 5 External links. Toggle the table of contents. ... Memento Mori, on August 16, 2016, which hit number 1 on the Heatseakers Charts. [5]
Kory Grow of Rolling Stone stated, " 'Before We Drown', cowritten by Gahan, drummer Christian Eigner and multi-instrumentalist Peter Gordeno (members of Depeche Mode's touring lineup), builds tension minute after minute, as Gahan sings, 'First we stand up, then we fall down/We have to move forward, before we drown'.
Remember to Live is an EP by American rock band Flyleaf and released after the tour supporting their previously released album Memento Mori. [3] The album consists of songs that fans have requested to be recorded for years, therefore the album was created especially for them.
Memento Mori is in one movement and last for approximately 14 minutes. [1] It is in common time and the tempo is lento. [7] The piece opens with an introduction, which them leads into two statements of the Dies irae plainchant, part of the Latin mass for the dead: Following this, the music oscillates between the pitches of G and A-flat.
Memento mori (Latin for "remember (that you have) to die") [2] is an artistic or symbolic trope acting as a reminder of the inevitability of death. [2] The concept has its roots in the philosophers of classical antiquity and Christianity , and appeared in funerary art and architecture from the medieval period onwards.