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"Children of the Sun" (Feeder song), 2012 "Children of the Sun" (Tinie Tempah song), 2013 "Children of the Sun", by Dead Can Dance from Anastasis, 2012 "Children of the Sun", by Flowing Tears from Serpentine, 2002
Anastasis is a 2012 studio album by the British-Australian band Dead Can Dance. [11] It is the eighth studio album by the band and the first after Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard disbanded in 1998. It was officially released on 13 August 2012 by PIAS Recordings , 16 years after the group's last album, Spiritchaser .
The group's debut album, Dead Can Dance, was released in February 1984. [5] The artwork, which depicts a ritual mask from New Guinea, "provide[s] a visual reinterpretation of the meaning of the name Dead Can Dance", [6] [7] set in a faux Greek typeface.
Dead Can Dance (1981–1998) (2001) is a four-disc box set, containing three CDs of music spanning Dead Can Dance's career and a DVD of their 1994 video release Toward the Within. While most of the tracks are taken from previously released albums, this set also contains a large number of rarities.
Children of the Sun is the third studio album by Australian musician Billy Thorpe, released in 1979. The album spawned the singles "Wrapped in the Chains of Your Love", "Goddess of the Night", "Children of the Sun" and "Simple Life". [citation needed] The album peaked at number 44 on the Kent Music Report.
AllMusic commented on the album's sound: "Bearing much more resemblance to the similarly gripping, dark early work of bands like the Cocteau Twins and the Cure than to the later fusions of music that would come to characterize the duo's sound, Dead Can Dance is as goth as it gets in many places".
The physical CD contained nine Dead Can Dance songs (five from Anastasis), "Lamma Bada" and "Song to the Siren". The deluxe live edition contained the original studio version of Anastasis and the 11-track version of the concert. [2]
A cover version of "Enigma of the Absolute" – Dead Can Dance version is on Spleen and Ideal – is used in the Civilization IV game modification, Fall from Heaven 2, as the theme song of the Runes of Kilmorph religion. "Summoning of the Muse" from Within the Realm of a Dying Sun (1987) was used in: A national women's gymnastics program.