The Path is the tenth studio album by English acoustic roots duo Show of Hands, released in April 2003. The album was conceived as an "instrumental journey" around the South West Coast Path, a 630-mile coastline path opened in 1978 in the duo's native West Country, and a celebration of the coastline's "sights and sounds". It is the band's only completely instrumental album, with each of its songs named after and inspired by different locations on the path. It was a project between Show Of Hands and The South West Coast Path Team, as part of the latter's celebrations for the silver jubilee (25th anniversary) of the path. As such the album is endorsed by various organisations who own different parts of the path, namely The Countryside Agency, The National Trust and English Heritage Commission,.and the music is ambient instrumentals inspired by different locations around the coastline.
The duo hoped that, with the album, listeners would be inspired to discover or rediscover the "endless fascination" of the coast path. The album was released on 14 April 2003 by the duo's own label Hands on Music, a month before they released their following album Country Life. In July 2012, music from The Path featured in several themed videos on a new interactive official website for the South West Coast Path, which attracts some 400,000 hits a year. One track from the album, "Port Isaac", featured on their compilation album Roots: The Best of Show of Hands (2007).
The Path may refer to:
Onobox is a 1992 comprehensive 6-disc collection of Yoko Ono's work from 1968 to 1985. The discs are grouped by era and theme. Disc three features the entire Feeling the Space project, which was originally conceived and recorded as a double album before being edited down, while disc six is the previously unreleased 1974 album A Story, which was later reissued separately with an altered track listing, along with the rest of Ono's back catalogue. There was also an accompanying concise one-disc "greatest hits" release, entitled Walking on Thin Ice. While the Rykodisc press release for Onobox declared the collection "not as bad as you might think", it also urged the public to "smash your preconceptions". Which, for the most part, they did, finding the box gave "Yoko Ono the avant- garde heroine her due".
"The Path" is the twenty-fifth episode of the science fiction television series 2002 revival of The Twilight Zone. The episode was first broadcast on January 8, 2003, on UPN.
Allison "Ali" Warner (Linda Cardellini) works as a reporter for a tabloid newspaper. She and co-worker Seth (Colin Cunningham) are commiserating at a local cafe over her not being able to get a new job, with Ali lamenting that she has "lost her path". A young enigmatic West African named Kamayo (Method Man) sitting nearby overhears and offers to help her find her path by looking into her future. Ali is skeptical, but agrees as Kamayo is not charging her for his services. He looks into her future and tells her she can find her path if she keeps looking.
Ali is back at work and receives a call from a major magazine. They had attempted to contact her via e-mail but as Ali's e-mail was down for several days she never received it. She is told the magazine wants to interview her for a job. Ali is pleased, and goes to the cafe to thank Kamayo. She asks him if the interview will be successful. He reads her future and tells her not to worry — she has a secret admirer.