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TV Animation Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Tanjiro Kamado, Unwavering Resolve Arc Original Soundtrack (TVアニメ「鬼滅の刃」竈門炭治郎 立志編 オリジナルサウンドトラック, Terebi Anime「Kimetsu no Yaiba」Kamado Tanjirō Risshi-hen Orijinaru Saundotorakku) is the soundtrack album to the first season of the anime series.
There are eleven tracks on the album, with origins illustrating death and destruction, war, serial killers, and the Apocalypse. World Painted Blood is the band's final album to be released through American Recordings, as well as the final collaboration between Slayer and label owner Rubin, who had worked with the band as their producer or ...
The Art of War was recorded in early 2005 at Hertz Studio in Białystok, Poland produced by Wojtek & Sławek Wiesławscy. Photo session was made by Krzysztof "Sado" Sadowski, and it took place at Błędów Desert in Poland. A music video was shot for the song "This Is the War" which was produced and directed by Arkadiusz Jurcan. [5]
An 84-page booklet, titled Rengoku Volume 0, which includes the 19-page one-shot chapter and interviews with the staff and cast of the film, was given to the Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train theatergoers on October 16, 2020. [26] [27] [28] The booklet had a limited print run of 4.5 million copies. [28]
Official war artists have been appointed by governments for information or propaganda purposes and to record events on the battlefield; [2] but there are many other types of war artist. A war artist will have depicted some aspect of war through art; this might be a pictorial record or it might commemorate how war shapes lives. [3]
The War of Art (a word play on The Art of War) may refer to: The War of Art, 2002 book by Steven Pressfield; The War of Art (American Head Charge album), 2001 album by metal band American Head Charge; The War of Art (Badawi album), 2022 album by electronic artist Badawi "The War of Art" (The Simpsons), 2014 episode of The Simpsons
The War of Art is the second studio album by industrial metal band American Head Charge, released on August 28, 2001 through American Recordings. [3] It was produced by Rick Rubin . [ 4 ] Several songs on the album were re-recorded from the band's self-released debut album Trepanation (1999).
This category is for articles on art that portrays war, and the artists who create it. See Commons:Category:Paintings of war for a collection of images . Subcategories