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Age of Reason (song) " Age of Reason " is a song by Australian pop rock singer John Farnham. Written by Todd Hunter and Johanna Pigott, it was released as the first single from Farnham's 1988 album of the same name. The song topped Australia's ARIA Singles Chart for four weeks and became a hit in New Zealand, where it peaked at number four.
For example, Rose Rosengard Subotnik's Deconstructive Variations (subtitled Music and Reason in Western Society) compares Mozart's Die Zauberflöte (1791) using the Enlightenment and Romantic perspectives and concludes that the work is "an ideal musical representation of the Enlightenment." [184]
To date, "Age of Reason" remains Farnham's last No. 1 Australian single. Other charting singles from this album were, "Two Strong Hearts" which peaked at No. 6 and "Beyond the Call". [5] Age of Reason had international success peaking at No. 4 in Sweden, [49] [60] and No. 9 in Norway. [60]
They wrote "Age of Reason", [1] [2] which went to #1 in Australia for four weeks from 30 July [16] [17] and was a top 10 hit in Germany and Canada in 1989. "Age of Reason" won the APRA 'Most Performed Australasian Popular Song' of the year award for 1989. [18] After selling another million records worldwide in the 1980s Dragon disbanded again ...
Age of Reason is the thirteenth studio album by Australian pop singer John Farnham. ... The album was re-released on vinyl on 18 August 2017 by Sony Music.
In its first incarnation, Lead into Gold only released two 12 inch singles and one full-length studio LP. Idiot was the first release in 1988, followed by the Chicks & Speed: Futurism single and Age of Reason album, both released in 1990.
Age of reason (canon law), the age at which children attain the use of reason and begin to have moral responsibility. The Age of Reason, a theological work by Thomas Paine published 1794–1807. The Age of Reason (novel), a 1945 novel by Jean-Paul Sartre. "The Age of Reason" (Boardwalk Empire), a 2011 episode of the TV series.
Foster and Bronski Beat teamed up again in 1994, and released a techno "Tell Me Why '94" and an acoustic "Smalltown Boy '94" on the German record label, ZYX Music. The album Rainbow Nation was released the following year with Hellyer returning as lead vocalist, as Foster had dropped out of the project and Ian Donaldson was brought on board to ...