Time is a common term for the experience of duration and a fundamental quantity of measuring systems.
Time also may refer to:
The Time is the 1981 debut album by The Time. The album proper was produced and arranged by Jamie Starr, which was one of Prince's many pseudonyms. The Time produced three singles: "Get It Up", "Cool" and "Girl", with the first two charting within the top ten on the R&B charts. "Cool" was covered by Snoop Dogg for his ninth album, Ego Trippin'.
All songs written and composed by Prince, except where noted.
The Original 7ven (also known as The Time as well as Morris Day and the Time) is an American musical group that was formed in Minneapolis in 1981. Their work has been a part of the formation of the 'Minneapolis sound', featuring a mix of soul music and dance music with funk, rock n roll, and more. Led by singer-songwriter Morris Day, the band members are close Prince associates, and the group is arguably the most successful artist who have worked with him, achieving particular popularity with R&B fans with tracks such as "Jerk Out" and "Jungle Love". Band members Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis are also long-time collaborators with Janet Jackson, producing all of her most successful albums.
The band was assembled under a clause in Prince's contract with Warner Bros. that allowed him to recruit and produce other artists for the label. Inspired by the 1980 film The Idolmaker, Prince decided to put together a pop-funk group that would serve as an outlet for material in the vein of his own early albums, while he explored other genres and styles in his own career.
The Time: Night (Russian: Время ночь) is a novella by Russian author Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. It was originally published in Russian in the literary journal Novy Mir in 1992 and translated into English by Sally Laird in 1994. In 1992 it was shortlisted for the Russian Booker Prize.
The Time: Night follows the struggles of the matriarchal Anna Andrionova as she holds together an emotionally unstable and financially decrepit family in early . Writing in first-person, Petrushevskaya presents the novella as a manuscript Anna's family finds after her death, and into which she poured the frustration and sheer power of her parenthood. Anna's struggles throughout to reconcile her intense love for her family with their parasitic lifestyles. The opening pages introduce Anna's daughter, Alyona, through a brief stolen segment of her diary, unveiling her chronic promiscuity and destructive incompetence. Alyona's rambunctious toddler, Tima, for whom Anna shows riveting affection aion, accompanies his grandmother during his mother's escapades. Anna's ex-convict son Andrei makes intermittent appearances at her communal apartment, looking for food and booze money. As the manuscript progresses, Petrushevskaya reveals the pitiful and terminal condition of Anna's mother in a mental hospital, and another illegitimate child of Alyona's. The narrative concludes with Alyona fleeing the apartment with her children in the night, after the death of Anna's mother.
Fly, as high as you can
Don't you fear the night
The night belongs to us
Even last out last
When you fall down to the floor
Don't hide the tears away
Look right deep inside of you
Through the dark, you'll see the light
Wherever you'll go, whatever you'll do
I'll be standing right beside you
No matter how far, no matter how long
I will follow where you go
Cause I believe in you
I believe in you
Run, as far as you can
You can reach the stars
And through the midnight sky
Love will rise again, and it will shine
When you fall down to the floor
Don't hide the tears away
Look right deep inside of you
Through the dark, you'll see the light
Wherever you'll go, whatever you'll do
I'll be standing right beside you
No matter how far, no matter how long
I will follow where you go
Cause I believe in you
I believe in you.
Wherever you'll go, whatever you'll do
I'll be standing right beside you
No matter how far, no matter how long
I will follow where you go
Cause I believe in you
I believe in you.