Soledad, Spanish for "solitude", often refers to María de la Soledad (Our Lady of Solitude), a variant name of Mary the mother of Jesus, in Roman Catholic tradition
Soledad may also refer to:
Soledad (Spanish pronunciation: [soleˈðað]) is a municipality in the Colombian Departments of Colombia of Atlántico part of the metropolitan area of Barranquilla. It is 6th in population in Colombia and 3rd in the Caribbean region, after Barranquilla and Cartagena. It is also the city with the highest population growth in Colombia and in 2005 was 455,734 and 2010 580,851. On October 25th 2015 Joao Herrera Iranzo was elected by popular vote as the new mayor of Soledad.
More detailed information about Soledad, Atlantico can be found on the spanish version of this page.
Bordered on the north by the special district of Barranquilla, where the boundary is the Arroyo Don Juan, on the south by Malambo, on the east with the Department of Magdalena, separated by the Magdalena River, and on the west by Galapa.
Physical Description: The location of the municipality of Soledad in relation to geographical coordinates is as follows: 10°55'N and 74°46'W.
Soledad is one of 29 barangays or villages in the municipality of San Jose, Camarines Sur in the Philippines. It belongs to the municipality's poblacion or downtown core.
Barangay Soledad is classified as an urban place and is composed of 6 puroks or zones. It is generally described as plain with a total land area of 77.76 hectares. It is bounded to the north by Sta. Cruz, south by San Antonio, east by San Vicente-San Antonio, and in the west by Boclod. Its major source of livelihood is agriculture (farming). It has a total population of 1,223, with 261 households, 261 families, and 766 registered voters.
Elected barangay officials are as follows: Marciano V. Panuelos Jr.- Punong Barangay and the barangay councilors are:Arnulfo M. Valencia, Efren I. Gasga, Rocky R. Lupo, Emar R. Pacao, Zyron B. Israel, Cristita G. Pacamarra, and Salvador SB. Brito. The appointed barangay secretary and treasurer are: Gina C. Lastima and Cening B. Marcial, respectively. Barangay personnel include 19 barangay tanod, 9 barangay health workers, 1 Day Care Worker.
Drone or drones may refer to:
Drones is the seventh studio album by the English rock band Muse, released on 5 June 2015 in Europe and 8 June in the United Kingdom under Warner Bros. Records and Helium-3. It was recorded between October 2014 and April 2015 at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, British Columbia, and co-produced by the band and Robert John "Mutt" Lange. Muse aimed to return to the simpler guitar-bass-drums rock sound of their earlier albums. It is a concept album following the protagonist's journey from abandonment to indoctrination as a "human drone" and eventual defection.Drones received generally positive reviews; critics often praised the music but criticised the lyrics. It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards.
On their previous albums The Resistance (2009) and The 2nd Law (2012), Muse experimented with orchestral and electronic music. In December 2013, Muse released a live album and video, Live at Rome Olympic Stadium; songwriter Matthew Bellamy said the band wanted the live album "to capture some of the extremes of what we've been doing since we want to go in a different direction in the future."
Drones (1983) is an album by the American ambient musician Robert Rich. Like most of Rich’s early work, this album consists of slow, textural drone music. The first track (“Seascape”) features ocean waves recorded at Encinada, Mexico. In 1994 this album was rereleased with Rich’s previous album Trances in a two-disc set titled Trances/Drones.