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Sweet Oblivion is the sixth studio album by Screaming Trees, released on September 8, 1992. It quickly became the band's best-selling record, and was the closest they ever came to achieving mainstream success. Sweet Oblivion sold in excess of 300,000 copies on the strength of the band's biggest hit, "Nearly Lost You". [8]
"Nearly Lost You" is a song by the American alternative rock group Screaming Trees. It was the first single released in support of their sixth album, Sweet Oblivion.Perhaps their best-known song, it was a moderate success on modern rock radio, partly because of its appearance on the soundtrack to the 1992 Cameron Crowe film Singles.
However Lethe's association with Sleep might perhaps also imply a positive aspect, similar to that of Sleep who is said to "free us of cares" and "offer sweet respite from toil". [16] One of the sepulchral epigrams from the seventh book of The Greek Anthology, apparently an inscription from the "tomb of Teos", mentions a "Lethe". The epigram ...
In 2024, De Melo auditioned for The Voice Australia.He performed "I See Fire" in the blind auditions and got the four coaches, Guy Sebastian, LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller-Heidke, and Adam Lambert to turn for him.
Guildbook: Pardoners and Puppeteers is a sourcebook intended to be used with the tabletop role-playing game Wraith: The Oblivion, [1] where players take the roles of wraiths. [2] It is the fifth in a series of supplements that describes the history of the Arcanos (wraithly powers) and the societies that surround each.
L. A Little Bit of Miles; Live 'n' Kickin' (West, Bruce and Laing album) Live (Mott the Hoople album) Live (The Dubliners album) Live and Doin' It; Live & in Concert
An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia suggests that the theme of "Ex Oblivione"—that nothingness is preferable to life—was derived from Lovecraft's reading the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer. Lovecraft expressed similar sentiments in non-fiction work at the time, writing in In Defense of Dagon , "There is nothing better than oblivion, since in ...
Oblivion: Stories (2004) is a collection of short fiction by the American writer David Foster Wallace. Oblivion is Wallace's third and last short story collection and was listed as a 2004 New York Times Notable Book of the Year. [1] In the stories, Wallace explores the nature of reality, dreams, trauma, and the "dynamics of consciousness."