Stardust | ||||
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File:Lena Stardust Album Cover.jpg | ||||
Studio album by Lena | ||||
Released | 12 October 2012 | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Language | English | |||
Label | Universal Music Germany | |||
Producer | Swen Meyer, Sonny Boy Gustafsson [1] | |||
Lena chronology | ||||
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Singles from Stardust | ||||
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Stardust is the title of the third studio album by German singer Lena Meyer-Landrut (also known by her stage name Lena in Europe). It is scheduled for a release on 12 October 2012.
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Stardust is the first album without Lena's former mentor Stefan Raab and the first album where she participated at many titles as co-author. Principal songwriting began in early 2012 and during that process Lena made travels to Stockholm, London, Berlin, and Hamburg.[2] Lena collaborated with musicians like Matthew Benbrook[3],Pauline Taylor[3], John McDaid[4],James Flannigan[4], and Sonny Boy Gustafsson.[1] who produced six of the songs.[5] Four titles were written in collaboration with Miss Li[6] of which one is a duet with the Swedish singer-songwriter. The production was finished in July 2012 and in end July and early August Lena presented eight of the twelve songs from the album during four promotional events in Munich (July 30), Cologne (July 31), Hamburg (August 6), and Berlin (August 7) to the press and the radio stations. Stardust was partly produced by Swen Meyer in Hamburg, known by his work with Tomte, Tim Bendzko, and Kettcar.[1] The first single with the eponymous name is scheduled for a release on 21 September 2012, the music video to this song will be released on 7 September 2012 on MyVideo. On 20 September 2012 Lena will introduce the album for the first time to a larger audience at the Reeperbahn Festival in the music venue Schmidt's Tivoli in Hamburg.[6]
Standard listing | ||||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | ||||||
1. | "Stardust" | Rosi Golan, Tim Myers | 3:28 | |||||||
2. | "Neon" | Matthew Benbrook, Pauline Taylor, Lena Meyer-Landrut | ||||||||
3. | "Don't Panic" | John McDaid, James Flannigan, Lena Meyer-Landrut | ||||||||
4. | "To the Moon" | Lena Meyer-Landrut, Alexander Schroer |
Region | Date | Format | Label |
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Germany, Switzerland, Austria | 12 October 2012[7] | CD, Download, Vinyl (limited to 1,000 hand signed copies) | Universal Music Germany |
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Stardust is a 1978 album by Willie Nelson that spans the genres of pop, jazz, and country music. Its ten songs consist entirely of pop standards that Nelson picked from among his favorites. Nelson asked Booker T. Jones, who was his neighbor in Malibu at the time, to arrange a version of "Moonlight in Vermont". Impressed with Jones's work, Nelson asked him to produce the entire album. Nelson's decision to record such well-known tracks was controversial among Columbia executives because he had distinguished himself in the outlaw country genre. Recording of the album took only ten days.
Released in April, Stardust was met with high sales and near-universal positive reviews. It peaked at number one in Billboard's Top Country Albums and number thirty in the Billboard 200. Meanwhile, it charted at number one in Canadian RPM's Country Albums and number twenty-eight in RPM's Top Albums. The singles "Blue Skies" and "All of Me" peaked respectively at numbers one and three in Billboard's Hot Country Singles.
Stardust (Lambda-Zero) is a fictional character appearing in the comic books published by Marvel Comics and existing in that company's Marvel Universe. Stardust is one of the many Heralds of Galactus. Unlike most of Galactus's Heralds, Stardust seeks to kill all who attempt to escape the planets that Galactus feeds upon, an action that Galactus neither requires nor forbids.
This Stardust should not be confused with the other Marvel character known as Stardust, a former enemy of Rom the Spaceknight.
The Ethereal Lambda-Zero, who later became known as Stardust, the Herald of Galactus, was first introduced in the comics series Stormbreaker: The Saga of Beta Ray Bill. The first planet Stardust fed to Galactus was New Korbin, after he slaughtered most of the planet's inhabitants.
This led to a series of confrontation with Beta Ray Bill, who was busy attempting to rescue the Korbinites. The two fought each other, and after the first confrontation, Stardust sought out Bill after he obtained the Meta-Orb. Planning on crushing Bill with it, the two fought each other until Stardust opened a portal to a dimension filled with the most evil beings of the universe hoping to trap Bill there. Bill managed to escape, but a being named Asteroth escaped and began devouring galaxies. Stardust and Bill joined forces, with Stardust using his powers to open a black hole behind Asteroth hoping to lock Asteroth in it. However, Asteroth resisted and the hole instead sucked both Stardust and Bill to a near death.
Robot General Trading Co d.o.o. is Bosnian domestic supermarket chain and group. The company's headquarters is located in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was founded in 1995 by Bosnian businessman Selver Oruč. The main activity of Robot is the production of household appliances through its own brand AWT – Appliance White Techniques (formerly known as BIRA Bihać) as well as trade, wholesale and retail of technical goods, consumer goods and food products. Robot sells merchandise through wholesale departments, and it was among the first companies in BiH that started to build modern shopping centers in major Bosnian cities.
In December 2015, Robot had 23 stores (Hypermarkets, Supermarkets or Shopping malls) opened in Bosnia and Herzegovina and more than 1,500 employees. The Group also operates in Croatia through the company "Robot Commerce" Split.
Robot Shopping Centar is usually formatted as large hypermarkets with additional facilities such as kids playground, cafes, boutiques and restaurants.
2.0 is an upcoming Indian Tamil–Hindi science fiction film directed by S. Shankar. A sequel to Enthiran (2010), the film will feature Rajinikanth reprising the roles of Dr. Vaseegaran and Chitti, alongside Akshay Kumar and Amy Jackson. Produced by Subaskaran Allirajah of Lyca Productions, the film is expected to be the most expensive film in Indian cinema, surpassing the Baahubali series. The soundtrack album will be composed by A. R. Rahman while the dialogues, cinematography, editing and art direction are handled by Jeyamohan, Nirav Shah, Anthony and T. Muthuraj respectively. The film is scheduled for a 2017 release.
The commercial success of Enthiran (2010) prompted the makers of the film to immediately consider making a sequel and by March 2011, the original film's cinematographer, Rathnavelu revealed that initial pre-production work on a second part had begun with the same technical team.S. Shankar, the director of Enthiran, moved on to work on Nanban (2012) and I (2015) and plans to reunite with the same producers as the original was dropped, with Shankar revealing that he was unsure if the film "will happen at all" during an interview in 2014. While finishing the production of I, Shankar drafted the scripts of three more feature films, including that of a sequel to Enthiran.
Soul is the sixth studio album released by American country rock & southern rock band The Kentucky Headhunters. It was released in 2003 on Audium Entertainment. No singles were released from the album, although one of the tracks, "Have You Ever Loved a Woman?", was first a single for Freddie King in 1960.
All songs written and composed by The Kentucky Headhunters except where noted.
On the Soul (Greek Περὶ Ψυχῆς, Perì Psūchês; Latin De Anima) is a major treatise by Aristotle on the nature of living things. His discussion centres on the kinds of souls possessed by different kinds of living things, distinguished by their different operations. Thus plants have the capacity for nourishment and reproduction, the minimum that must be possessed by any kind of living organism. Lower animals have, in addition, the powers of sense-perception and self-motion (action). Humans have all these as well as intellect.
Aristotle holds that the soul (psyche, ψυχή) is the form, or essence of any living thing; that it is not a distinct substance from the body that it is in. That it is the possession of soul (of a specific kind) that makes an organism an organism at all, and thus that the notion of a body without a soul, or of a soul in the wrong kind of body, is simply unintelligible. (He argues that some parts of the soul—the intellect—can exist without the body, but most cannot.) It is difficult to reconcile these points with the popular picture of a soul as a sort of spiritual substance "inhabiting" a body. Some commentators have suggested that Aristotle's term soul is better translated as lifeforce.