Until the End may refer to:
"Until the End" is the third single by Breaking Benjamin from their album Phobia. On February 11, 2014, "Until The End" was certified gold by the RIAA, which made the single the then-most commercially successful song by the band. Since then, the band have been awarded with more platinum and gold singles, and one double platinum single.
The song was posted on Breaking Benjamin's MySpace page and said to be a future single on July 10, 2007; its release was announced that same night on The Shallow Bay Radio, Breaking Benjamin's online radio station. The original date was for July 10, 2007, but was moved to October 2.
All songs written and composed by Benjamin Burnley, Aaron Fink, Mark Klepaski.
The song debuted at #35 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in its first week after being released, as so did Breaking Benjamin's biggest single, "Breath", which eventually went to number one the chart and remained at number one for 7 weeks. "Until the End" has peaked at number 6 so far. "Until the End" debuted at number 38 on the Modern Rock Chart. Breaking Benjamin's most successful singles on this chart were "So Cold" and "Breath", both of which peaked at number 3. "Until the End" has peaked at number 21 so far on the modern rock chart failing to hit the Top 20.
Until the End is the third album by the band Kittie. It was released in 2004 and included the single "Into the Darkness" which made its way to radio stations in June that year. A music video was also produced for the song. "Into The Darkness" made its video debut on MTV2's Headbanger's Ball and peaked at #41 on the US 'Radio & Records Active Rock Songs' chart and #116 on the Official UK Singles Chart. The track "Red Flags" was also released as a promotional single in the fall of 2004. The track "Pussy Sugar" also received significant airplay on the Hard Attack satellite radio station.
The album debuted at #105 in the Billboard Top 200, selling 19,000 copies. The album sold at least around 75,000 units in the United States.
All songs written by Morgan Lander and Mercedes Lander.
Unfair: The End (アンフェア the end) is a 2015 Japanese police drama thriller film based on the Japanese television drama series Unfair. It follows two other films based on the series, Unfair: The Movie (2007) and Unfair 2: The Answer (2011). The film is directed by Shimako Satō, who also directed the previous film, with Ryoko Shinohara reprising her role from the series and films. It was released on September 5, 2015.
The film was number-one at the Japanese box office on its opening weekend by number of admissions, with 214,000, and was second place by gross renevue, with ¥295 million. On its second weekend it earned ¥191 million and again placed second by gross revenue. By September 29, it had earned ¥1.79 billion.
KHTB (101.9 FM) is a Salt Lake City, Utah-based radio station. The station's studios are located in South Salt Lake (behind the I-15/I-80 interchange) and its transmitter site is located southwest of the city on Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains.
In 1995, KKAT licensed "Young Country" from Alliance Broadcasting. It was the first country station to intentionally go after young listeners. Also that year, Kid Cassidy (John Potter) of KWNR replaced Gary and Scotty in the mornings, with Insane Rick Shane remaining as producer. Other local hosts were T.J. Evans, "Gentleman Jim" Mickleson, Bob Wells and Tracy Chapman, while Blair Garner did the overnight shift. KKAT took over the number one position among five country stations from KSOP-FM, the only station in the group to lose listeners. Gary and Scotty had been hired to replace Ken Simmons after Simmons' arrest for lewd behavior, and the station and the morning hosts could not overcome the stigma of that incident. But hiring Cassidy and a strong promotional effort worked. KKAT would be replaced by KPQP, a Top 40 station, in 2004. KPQP would last until KENZ's move to the frequency in late 2005.
The End... is the fourth studio album by Nico. It was released in November 1974, through record label Island.
The End... is her fifth collaboration with John Cale and second with him as producer. It carries the same harmonium-based sound heard on The Marble Index (1969) and Desertshore (1970), with the addition of Brian Eno's synthesizers and electronic instruments.
The song "You Forget to Answer" tells of the misery felt by Nico when she failed to reach ex-lover Jim Morrison by phone only to find out later that he had died. All but two of the songs on the album were written by Nico: the cover of The Doors' "The End" and a version of the German national anthem "Das Lied der Deutschen". Brian Eno performs synthesizer on "It Has Not Taken Long", "You Forgot to Answer" and "Innocent and Vain".
The front and back covers feature stills from the Philippe Garrel film Les hautes solitudes (1974) in which Nico appears.
All songs written and composed by Nico, except as noted.
There is nothing left to do
It seems like everything is done
Nothing more to achieve
I no longer know in what to beleive
The path of my life
Once a road of many choices
Now a blind alley in the dark
And to guide my way I don't even have a spark
The death of what is dead, not a prayer will be said
Well, I guess it wouldn't help me anyway
When on the path of death I tread not a tear will be
shed
There's no-one who will miss me that day
The call of the wild
Has for many years ago
Forever lost it's charm
Now I just long for the Reaper's icy arms
I don't know when my time will come
But there is no-one to tell goodbye
Not a lover nor a friend
So I guess I'll move it on until the end
The death of what is dead, not a prayer will be said
Well, I guess it wouldn't help me anyway
The only one decease that is making my blood freeze
Is the boredom that has lead me astray
And it's too late for me to stay
Nothing can help me that day