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After releasing the song "Closer to the Truth" under the band name Cryoshell for Bionicle's Mistika wave in October 2008, the group announced plans to record a full-length album. The entire album was recorded, produced and mixed by Jacob Hansen at Hansen Studios in Ribe, Northern Denmark. Demos were recorded in late 2008, with lead production ...
"Bye Bye Babylon" is the fifth and final Cryoshell song used by Bionicle before its 2010 discontinuation, following "Creeping in My Soul" and "Face Me" in 2007, and "Gravity Hurts" and "Closer to the Truth" in 2008. Additionally, the song's instrumental featured as background music on the band's website around the time of the single's release.
Riding on this success, Maltha, Søderlund and Simonsen went on to produce the tracks "Face Me" and "Gravity Hurts" with established Danish singer Niels Brinck for the campaigns of Bionicle's 2007 Mahri and 2008 Phantoka waves, respectively. Lorentzen rejoined Maltha and Søderlund to record "Closer to the Truth" for Bionicle's Mistika wave in ...
The song's success prompted Lego to produce further musical scores for later Bionicle campaigns, and by 2008, Lorentzen, Maltha and Søderlund released "Closer to the Truth", used to promote the Bionicle Mistika wave, under the band name Cryoshell. Cryoshell spent the majority of 2009 recording their self-titled debut album.
The lyrics allude to elements from the 2008 Bionicle storyline featuring the Phantoka characters. Maltha had previously penned and been involved in the production of two other songs – " Creeping in My Soul " and "Face Me" – also used in Bionicle's marketing campaigns, and would go on to produce more for the Lego.
During a Communist Party meeting earlier this month, Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed U.S. sanctions -- the government’s favorite whipping boy -- for the crisis.
Prior to the official formation of the band, an earlier version of "Creeping in My Soul" was produced for the Lego toy series Bionicle and featured in the promotional campaign of their Barraki sets of 2007. Upon its release, it proved popular with Bionicle's fan base and prompt the group to produce further songs for subsequent Bionicle toy ...
From January 2008 to March 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Lawrence T. Babbio, Jr. joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -53.5 percent return on your investment, compared to a -4.4 percent return from the S&P 500.