Hello! I saw a few people talking about it in the Aphelios Mains subreddit, so I wanted to come on and say that I made the fanmade Aphelios song. :) It's just a humble little song about how I imagine Aphelios would react (in the Heartsteel universe) to finding out that he may never be able to sing again after his vocal cord surgery. Hope you enjoy!
Crazy long reverb/FX times: I thought that there might be some insanely long tail on a reverb/delay plugin causing long tails that though inaudible were technically still there. Even when I export with these plugins removed, this extra silence is still there
"Silence" is a song by Canadian electronic music group Delerium featuring Canadian singer and co-writer Sarah McLachlan, first released in May 1999. Over the years, its remixes have been hailed as one of the greatest trance songs of all time, over two decades after its initial release.[1] The Tiësto remix of the song was voted by Mixmag readers as the 12th-greatest dance record of all time.[2]
Although the original song did receive Canadian radio airplay in 1997, it was not released as a single until 1999, two years after the release of Karma, though it was only the Airscape Remix which received airplay at this time, rather than the more downtempo original version. The single prominently included remixes by DJ Tiësto, and Fade, which significantly boosted the song's proliferation through club play (particularly by influential DJs such as Paul Oakenfold) as evidenced by the single's positions on the Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play charts. It was on the soundtrack for the movie Brokedown Palace featuring Claire Danes and Kate Beckinsale.
As a consequence, the song was largely promoted as an uptempo vocal trance song, which then influenced the marketing of the next several Delerium singles as well. Unlike most of its successors, however, "Silence" also broke into the adult top 40 radio format due to the song's club success,[4] and through radio airplay the original version received mainstream awareness relatively greater than the remixes among club patrons.
A music video for "Aria", a track from the following studio album "Poem" that was first released as B-Side on a "Silence" single, was released in early 2000, featuring the Mediæval Bæbes. The single and video use the video edit of the song.
This mod is designed to work with Baldur's Gate: Enhanced Edition, Baldur's Gate II: Enhanced Edition, BG2: Shadows of Amn (with or without the expansion pack Throne of Bhaal), Icewind Dale: Enhanced Edition, and with the mod conversions Enhanced Edition Trilogy, Baldur's Gate Trilogy, and Baldur's Gate Tutu. The mod is fully compatible with the changes made in the Ashes of Embers "Universal Weapons" component, provided Song and Silence is installed after it. The Rogue Rebalancing and Refinements mods from Spellhold Studios also alter rogues (bards and thieves); if you are using these then you should get the benefits of whichever was installed most recently. Until I get HLAs (High Level Abilities) done in this mod I would recommend installing one of them before this mod, so you get their HLAs and my new kits and changes to classes. All the new kits in this mod currently use the standard HLA tables so will be compatible with Refinements and Rogue Rebalancing. If you have kitted Imoen or Nalia with the Adventurer kit from the NPC Kitpack, installing Song and Silence's Adventurer kit will update them to the (slightly different) S&S version of the Adventurer. The Acrobat and Chorister bard kits will use the additional songs from IWDification's Bard Song component.
These sad wanderers seek to express their grief through songs that teach the hearts of their listeners the meaning of true sorrow. Some of these fallen bards want nothing more than for others to understand the depths of their loss. A few are sinister creatures who believe that, since joy has been extinguished for them, they must in turn extinguish the joy of others by using their powers to teach the folly of love, the futility of hope, and the finality of the grave. Dirgesingers of this last sort often associate themselves with powerful undead; serving in the courts of vampire lords or lich-kings.
LURING PIPER: Luring Pipers are often employed as rat-catchers or similar vermin control specialists by townsfolk or farmers. By using their enchanting song they are able to charm their foes into traps or away from the town or farmland. However it unwise to cross a luring piper as their song can affect more than just vermin.
Windows 10 and Audacity 2.1.2
At the end of the last song I get the same silence gap of 5 seconds regardless of whether I place the cursor at the end of the last song and delete the grey area defined by cursor to track end or use some combination of split delete and delete using cursor to track end. This relates to the finished wave form that is ready for export.
Assuming that the songs in the wave form have been prepared with a split delete one second silence gap between them, does this 5 second silence period at the end of the last song extend the silence gap between it and the next song in the playlist when the playlist is burned on a CD? If so, does Audacity have a procedure to adjust the silence length at the end of the last song in the project?
@blairhansler: What export command exactly are you using? It sounds like you are only exporting one audio file instead of a file for each song as would be more usual. If you export one file for each song then the CD burner setting decides the gap between each song.
Last night as I often do, I went to sleep with a particular song playing on 1-song repeat mode. This morning, at 10:27 I noticed that the song was still playing but I wasn't hearing anything. I opened it up and saw that the time marker was at 1:05:xx of a 0:01:52 length song. No Spotify alarms today, and no alarms at all in that time range.
The story of Christ's grace is clearly presented in this meaningful offering. There is a pleasing blend of original material with familiar hymns along with a scripture-based narration. This flexible chamber cantata includes two final songs: one for Holy Week and the other for Easter. A small yet effective orchestration provides instrumental or track options, while part-dominant tracks make learning convenient and approachable. A cantata of remembrance, reflection, and resurrection! Songs: A Quiet Gathering; Somewhere in the Silence; Prepare Your Hearts; I Heard the Voice of Jesus Calling; Just Beyond the Palms; In the Stillness of This Moment; Silent Was the Night: The Lamb Is Silent Now; The Silence Speaks; Set Free Your Alleluia! Score and parts (flute 1, flute 2/oboe, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, violin 1-2, cello, bass) are available as a digital download.
The song "Silence" by @JWLKRS Worship is a song for that kind of moment - a 3am faith anthem. In an interview with Annie F. Downs on her That Sounds Fun podcast, Noah Schnacky talked about the song as an anthem to sing over ourselves (or listen to others sing over us) in difficult seasons.
After using the 'share song to iTunes' with Logic Pro x, an extra minute of silence is added to the end of the song. I've checked my start and end locators, I've tried sharing using the 'cycle length option' and making sure cycle length is activated but it keeps going past the end locator / the end of the cycle length.
Check that you aren't haven't ticked Include Audio Tail, which will capture any reverb or hum at the end of the actual song. Check that you have no reverbs or delays or open audio tracks too - mute all those using automation if they're are active.
Then, again and again, we are confronted with our own lower consciousness, with our restlessness, pain, trouble, worldly and disharmonious experiences, with our reactions to city life, to our work situations, and to family circumstances. Our subconscious mind and our restless dreams reflect our unresolved inner state. Fortunately, the inner silence resurfaces repeatedly. The song expresses this stark contrast with these lyrics:
Fools said I, you do not know,
[Soul-] Silence like a cancer [of the physical body] grows.
Hear my voice that I might teach you,
Take my [spiritual] arms that I might reach you.
But my words, like silent raindrops, fell
And echoed in the wells of silence.
Silence leads me to the door
Of the eternal evermore
Beyond boundaries of all thought and form,
Through the tunnel where the light is born,
Where the lotus flowers bloom in the secret garden
Of my spine in the stillness of silence.
Silence plays its melody
Within you and within me.
When we take the time to be alone,
We find the path that takes us to our home
In the depths of our inmost soul where we want to be,
Where we are free beyond the silence.
Beautiful! The topic of silence and the deep experience it offers seems to be coming up more and more even in the mainstream. Shivani has captured the heart of it in this rendition. And the singers have delivered so beautifully! Thank you for sharing this!
"Silence" is a song by Kylie Minogue. Recorded during the sessions for her eleventh studio album Aphrodite (2010), the song didn't make the album's final track list, but appeared as the B-side to "Put Your Hands Up (If You Feel Love)", which was released as the fourth and final single from Aphrodite in May 2011.
Written by Henry Samuel, Chris Bruce and Stuart Price, with production being handled by the latter, the song features live guitars as well as drum machines, much like other songs that were recorded in that period. At a length of three minuted and forty-two seconds, the song deals with Kylie's ability to understand her lover "in the silence, so there's no need to say a word".
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