Psalm 79 (Greek numbering: Psalm 78) is the 79th psalm in the biblical Book of Psalms.
Psalm 138 is the 138th psalm from the Book of Psalms, which is the first book of the Ketuvim ("Writings") in the Hebrew Bible, and is also a book of the Christian Old Testament. This particular psalm describes that those who are close to God live in reality, and those who believe in human power live in a world of fantasy. It is attributed to King David.
Historically, this psalm was recited or sung at the office of Vespers on Wednesday, according to the Rule of St. Benedict. In the Liturgy of Hours, Psalm 138 is recited at Vespers of Tuesday of the fourth semaine. Moreover, in the liturgy of the Mass, it is played on the 21st Sunday of Ordinary Time of the year, the 5th and the 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time of the year.
Psalm 95 (Greek numbering: Psalm 94) is part of the biblical Book of Psalms. One of the Royal Psalms, Psalm 93-99, praising God as the King of His people.
In the Latin Psalters used by the Roman liturgy it forms the invitatory which is sung daily before matins. It may be sung as a canticle in the Anglican and Lutheran liturgy of Morning Prayer, when it is referred to by its incipit as the Venite or Venite, exultemus Domino (also A Song of Triumph).
Zilch is the fourth studio album by Filipino alternative rock band Pupil, released on March 6, 2015. It is the band's first album released through MCA Music and their first one to feature guitarist Jerome Velasco.
The music video for "Out of Control" received a nominated for Favorite Rock Video at the Myx Music Awards 2015.
All songs written and composed by Ely Buendia, except where noted.
The Z-machine is a virtual machine that was developed by Joel Berez and Marc Blank in 1979 and used by Infocom for its text adventure games. Infocom compiled game code to files containing Z-machine instructions (called story files, or Z-code files), and could therefore port all its text adventures to a new platform simply by writing a Z-machine implementation for that platform. With the large number of incompatible home computer systems in use at the time, this was an important advantage over using native code or developing a compiler for each system.
The "Z" of Z-machine stands for Zork, Infocom's first adventure game. Z-code files usually have names ending in .z1, .z2, .z3, .z4, .z5, .z6, .z7 or .z8, where the number is the version number of the Z-machine on which the file is intended to be run, as given by the first byte of the story file. Version# and specification. This is a modern convention, however. Infocom itself used extensions of .dat (Data) and .zip (ZIP = Z-machine Interpreter Program), but the latter clashes with the present widespread use of .zip for PKZIP-compatible archive files starting in the 1990s, after Activision had shut down Infocom. Infocom produced six versions of the Z-machine. Files using versions 1 and 2 are very rare. Only two version 1 files are known to have been released by Infocom, and only two of version 2. Version 3 covers the vast majority of Infocom's released games. The later versions had more capabilities, culminating in some graphic support in version 6.
Zilch (stylized as zilch or Z.I.L.C.H.) was an alternative/industrial rock band formed in 1996 by Hideto "hide" Matsumoto (formerly of X Japan), Ray McVeigh (formerly of The Professionals), Paul Raven (Killing Joke), Joey Castillo (Danzig and Queens of the Stone Age) and Kazuhiko "I.N.A." Inada (hide with Spread Beaver).
Before the release of their first album, 3.2.1., the group had already faced a major setback, as frontman hide died in May 1998. The band continued to perform live with the help of several guest musicians and released a remix album, Bastard Eyes, based on their debut. They went on to release another studio album, SkyJin, and two singles, "Mimizuzero" and "Charlie's Children."
Zilch disbanded in 2002, and Raven died in 2007.
Guest musicians
The record was released on Fat Mike's record label, Fat Wreck Chords. The methodology for writing and recording the songs was much the same as the band's Fuck the Kids EP. Fat Mike wrote all of the songs in a limited amount of time, claiming to have only given himself ten minutes to finish each one, and did not teach the songs to the rest of the band until the day of recording. The EP was recorded in two full-day sessions, making it one of the band's fastest-completed EP or album recording, second to Fuck the Kids which was recorded and mixed in a day and a half.
The EP was later included on the second disc of 45 or 46 Songs That Weren't Good Enough to Go on Our Other Records, but with one track omitted ("Three Shits to the Wind") in order to preserve something unique about the original 7" release.
The album cover and lyric sheet was inspired by Bad Religion's 1988 record Suffer. Another reference to Suffer is etched into the vinyl: "THE MASSES OF HUMANITY HAVE ALWAYS HAD TO SURF," as opposed to ""THE MASSES OF HUMANITY HAVE ALWAYS HAD TO SUFFER" which is etched on the Bad Religion album. The artwork of the lyrics being written on a wall was also replicated for Surfer.
1, 2,
1, 2, 3, 4.
Just another sunny day, I'm gonna ride that perfect wave,
I got a red stripe down my back, but the cool beach takes the pain away,
I left without a care in the world, and I know you've planned it all this way.
'Cause I know that you're God, and you care - that's okay.
I am a master of the sea, and there's a-two cat's calling me,
When I'm out there hanging ten, all the other dudes are history,
Every chick is looking my way, but I'm giving you all the praise.
'Cause I know that you're God, and you're there every day.
Lord, I thank you for this time, the sun, the surf, the sand, and friends of mine.
Baby, when I'm out there on those waves, the surf's creeping up behind me and I see the shore straight ahead, sometimes I just thank God that I'm just a supremely talented surfer,
And if, by some small chance, I take the gnarly wipeout, I know you'll be there on the beach waiting for me...that will still be excellent.
Lord, I thank you for this time, the sun, the surf, the sand, and friends of mine.
There is a band that I know well and, as bands go, they're kind of swell,
But as far as surfer dudes, there's not a snowball's chance in...
Well, they've never surfed a single day in their lives, but they wrote a surfer psalm anyway.
'Cause I know that you're God, and you're there every day,
'Cause I know that you're God, and you're there - that's okay,
'Cause I know that you're God, and you're there anyway,