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Vinyl, CD and digital 2 LPs, 1 CD and download; the original 13-track album as an LP, CD and download. On the two LPs, tracks 1-4 are side one, 5-8 are side two, 9-11 are side three, and 12-13 are side four. Unusual for an LP, the last track, "Don't Stop Running", includes the hidden track, "Road Trip", with silence separating the tracks.
This song is worked around the now defunct website skyisover.com which Tankian supports. This means that the song is about pollution and global warming. Tankian said also, about the meaning of the song, in an interview with Roadrunner Records: I've always thought of the sky as, like, an open canvas.
"Video Wars" was a competition set by Adam and Joe for listeners to create a music video for two Song Wars songs: either Adam's song 'Jane's Brain' or Joe's song 'Meatballs'. [16] Reviewing the show in the Telegraph, Gillian Reynolds noted that the hosts described the videos as, "so good they surpassed what is on TV" and Reynolds adds, "They ...
A satirical cartoon about sea level rise.. References to climate change in popular culture have existed since the late 20th century and increased in the 21st century.Climate change, its impacts, and related human-environment interactions have been featured in nonfiction books and documentaries, but also literature, film, music, television shows and video games.
A BBC weather forecast for the year 2050 shows that summer temperatures of 38 °C for the UK are "par for the course". The probable range by which the planet will warm over the next century is between 1.4 °C and 5.8 °C. Or, says Attenborough, "to put it another way, the impact of global warming will be somewhere between severe and catastrophic."
The idea of transforming Mars into a world more hospitable to human habitation is a regular feature of science fiction. Scientists are now proposing a new approach to warm up Earth's planetary ...
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The lyrics are written from the perspective of Mother Nature speaking to her inhabitants as a call to action against climate change. [3] Gore described the song as capturing Mahatma Gandhi's satyagraha. [3] Tedder described the background for the original composition of the song: [1] To me, this needed to be reverential.