A dream is an experience during sleep.
Dream, The Dream or Dreams may also refer to:
The Dream is the eighth studio album released by ambient techno group The Orb in September 2007(US release 17 June 2008). The album features somewhat of a return to the earlier sound of the Orb (notably, "The Truth Is..." features the same vocal sample as the group's early-90s single, "Blue Room"), and shares much more in common with their 2004 album Bicycles and Tricycles than with their minimal 2005 release, Okie Dokie It's the Orb on Kompakt.
The Dream was released in Japan in 2007 and the following year in the US and UK. Orb member Thomas Fehlmann was absent on the album and Paterson was instead reunited with Martin Glover and joined by Tim Bran of Dreadzone. The album features more of a return to The Orb's sounds of the early 1990s, with peculiar vocals and playful samples. The Orb also brought in jazz and house music singer Juliet Roberts, guitarist Steve Hillage, and Aki Omori, who had worked with The Orb on Cydonia.
The Dream is a poem written by Lord Byron in 1816. It was partially inspired by the view from the Misk Hills, close to Byron's ancestral home in Newstead, Nottinghamshire.
"Have You Heard" is a 1969 song by the progressive rock band The Moody Blues. Written by the band's keyboardist Mike Pinder, "Have You Heard" is actually a two-part song, and both parts were recorded and released in 1969 on the Moody Blues Album On the Threshold of a Dream.
Both parts of "Have You Heard" make up two parts of a three-part suite that concludes the album, with the first part beginning the suite and the second part ending it. The second part of this suite is an instrumental song named "The Voyage", which was also composed by Pinder.
This three-part suite is preceded by a short spoken-word prelude called "The Dream". The beginning of "The Dream" somewhat describes a typical nightmare, since the whole album's concept is about dreams. The final line of "The Dream" actually includes the album's title: "Live hand in hand, and together we'll stand on the threshold of a dream." "The Dream" was written by the Moody Blues' drummer Graeme Edge, but was recited in the recording by Pinder himself.
The Dream is a 1989 television film starring Jeremy Irons. It was adapted by Murray Watts from a short story by Fyodor Dostoyevsky called "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man". Irons is the sole speaking cast member; he is a character simply known as The Man who performs a monologue.
The Dream is the first full length album by the indie rock band Open Hand, released on February 24, 2003. It consists of their two demo EPs: Evolution (tracks 1-5) and Radio Days (tracks 6-10); while Track 11, "626", is a new song.
Close the Demon City gate
And ring the sorrow bell
Sit with me at bedside
As thy brothers under spell
I fear that he shall never wake
And the wind will speak his name
Silence within the desert night
Remember these dark days
For blood we raise
Our fist in the air in dedication
Memory of one
Who sleeps eternally
For blood we sing
In honor of our demon brother
Stay within our hearts
He will not fade away
He travelled on by sunrise
But his body stayed behind
Moving from the mortal world
To the shadows of the night
Silence in the city walls
Until the sun went down
On that night our voices sang