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"Edge of the Universe" is a rock song by the Bee Gees, written by Barry and Robin Gibb from the album Main Course released in 1975, and also released as a B-side of "Nights on Broadway". Recording [ edit ]
Katie Baillie from Metro said: "Edge of the Night" has "a bit of a DNCE vibe" and is an "uplifting summer banger with a cool video to boot". [3] In a review of the album, Stack Magazine said the song "over-reaches, trying too hard to be a party anthem but ending up sounding like a Peter Andre out take." [4]
The track was written by M.I.A., Levi Lennox and Amish Patel, [4] and has been described as an electronic song incorporating such musical styles as hip hop and world music. [3] M.I.A. reportedly wrote "Borders" in two hours, which is the quickest she has ever written a song. [5]
"Edge of the Earth" is a song by American rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars. The song was released through Immortal and Virgin on March 3, 2003, as the second single from the band's self-titled debut album. The song was written by Jared Leto and was produced by Bob Ezrin, Brian Virtue and 30 Seconds to Mars.
While most of the tracks date from the 21st century of rock music, the featured Korn and Sublime songs date back to 1998 and 1996, respectively. The two-disc set was a success on the U.S. charts, debuting at number four on the main Billboard 200 album chart, [1] and topping both the Rock Albums and Alternative Albums charts as well. [citation ...
Lauren Beverly of Rogers Revue had said "The soundtrack to “Edge of Tomorrow” is one of those that you definitely must have in your music collection. The combination of techno, sound effects and classical music make this soundtrack unique and beautiful. The way Beck combines each element creates a musical journey of epic proportions.
She and The Edge's U2 bandmate Larry Mullen Jr. contributed to "Heroine", with O'Connor providing lead vocals and Mullen providing drums. The music on Captive is a mix of ambient styles. The majority of tracks, except tracks 2 and 4, are instrumentals. [citation needed] The track "Heroine" was released as a single.
"Seconds" is the second track on U2's 1983 album, War. The track, with its recurring lyric of "it takes a second to say goodbye", refers to nuclear proliferation . It is the first song in the band's history not sung solely by Bono , as the Edge sings the first two stanzas .