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In 2010, McCulloch featured in a guest role on the song "Some Kind of Nothingness" by the Manic Street Preachers from their tenth album Postcards from a Young Man. [17] In 2012, McCulloch released his fourth and most recent studio album, Pro Patria Mori, as well as a live album Holy Ghosts in 2013. [18] [19]
"Proud to Fall" is the first single released by Ian McCulloch from his debut solo album Candleland, in 1989. The song reached number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart in the US and number fifty-one on the UK Singles Chart.
The discography of the British singer Ian McCulloch consists of four studio albums, one compilation album, and nine singles.While he was still the lead singer of the band Echo & the Bunnymen, McCulloch released his debut solo single, a version of the standard "September Song", in 1984 which reached number fifty-one on the UK Singles Chart.
In 1913, the line Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori was inscribed on the wall of the chapel of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. [7] In the final stanza of his poem, Owen refers to this as "The old Lie". [6] Some uncertainty arises around how to pronounce the Latin phrase when the poem is read aloud. There are essentially three choices: 1.
The shorter phrase Pro Patria ("for the homeland") may or may be not related to the Horace quote: Pro Patria is the motto of the Higgins or O'Huigan clan. It is the motto of the Sri Lanka Army as well as being inscribed on the collar insignia of the Royal Canadian Regiment. Pro Patria is the name of a neighborhood in Caracas, Venezuela.
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Track #3 on Side 1 is 'Dulce et Decorum Est (Pro Patria Mori)'. A rough translation is "It is a sweet and glorious thing (to die for one's country)". Dulce et Decorum Est is a poem by Wilfred Owen. Track #3 on Side 2 is Thanatos, the Greek word for "death" and the name of the ancient Greek god of death.