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May It Never Falter is the second studio album by the American musician Glaive.It was self-released under the Slowsilver03 record label on October 11, 2024. After releasing his debut album I Care So Much That I Don't Care at All with Interscope Records in 2023, Glaive travelled to Hvalfjarðarsveit, Iceland, to record May It Never Falter during April 2024.
Ash Blue Gutierrez (born January 20, 2005), known professionally as Glaive (stylized as glaive), is an American singer-songwriter.After posting a string of hyperpop songs to SoundCloud during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic that earned him a following, he signed a record deal with Interscope Records and released his debut extended play, Cypress Grove, in 2020.
A Bit of a Mad One is the third solo extended play (EP) by the American musician Glaive.It was released on February 23, 2024, via Interscope Records.After becoming frustrated with recording in Los Angeles and North Carolina, Glaive and the producers Jeff Hazin, Ralph Castelli, and John Cunningham holed up in Hope, Alaska to record the EP.
I Care So Much That I Don't Care at All is the debut studio album by the American musician Glaive, released on July 14, 2023, by Interscope Records.After gaining attention with a string of hyperpop songs released during the COVID-19 pandemic, Glaive signed a deal with Interscope, released three extended plays, and began collaborating with high-profile musicians.
All Dogs Go to Heaven is the second extended play (EP) by the American musician Glaive.It was released on August 6, 2021, via Interscope Records.After recording his debut EP Cypress Grove (2020) in his North Carolina bedroom, Glaive garnered critical acclaim and travelled to Los Angeles to record All Dogs Go to Heaven in a studio during a two week period.
"Glaive," a fictional weapon in the 1983 film Krull, which is actually most similar to a chakram in style; VkTrace, a software formerly known as "GLAVE" GlaveČ™, a river in Romania; The Gordon Glaves Memorial Pathway, a portion of the Hamilton–Brantford–Cambridge Trails
The generally known form of the song appears to have been based on an earlier version, "The Religious Turncoat; Or, the Trimming Parson". The melody is taken from the 17th-century folk melody "Country Gardens" which in turn was used in The Quaker's Opera, first printed in London in 1728, a three-act farce based on the story of Jack Sheppard which was performed at Bartholomew Fair.
Fauchard, a curved blade atop a 2 m (6 ft 7 in) pole that was used in Europe between the 11th and 14th centuries; Guisarme, a medieval bladed weapon on the end of a long pole; later designs implemented a small reverse spike on the back of the blade; Glaive, a large blade, up to 45 cm (18 in) long, on the end of a 2 m (6 ft 7 in) pole