Aurora - Music

Music

  • Aurora (electronica band), a British group
  • Aurora (punk band), a Hungarian group
  • Aurora (Christian band), an American/British girl group
    • Aurora (Aurora album), self-titled debut album
  • Aurora (Bada album)
  • Aurora (Angela Chang album)
  • Aurora (Esmerine album)
  • Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
  • Aurora (Nico Touches the Walls album)
  • Aurora (Jean-Luc Ponty album)
  • Aurora (opera), by Ettore Panizza
  • Aurora, an album by Avishai Cohen
  • "Aurora", a song by 36 Crazyfists from Rest Inside the Flames
  • "Aurora", a song by The Andrews Sisters
  • "Aurora", a song by Björk from Vespertine
  • "Aurora", a song by Foo Fighters from There Is Nothing Left to Lose
  • "Aurora", a song by Hans Zimmer in response to the 2012 Aurora shooting
  • "Aurora", a song by Lapush from Someplace Closer to Here
  • "Aurora", a song by Vanessa Mae from Storm
  • "Aurora", a song by Veruca Salt from Tank Girl
  • "Aurora", an orchestral tone poem by William Lloyd Webber

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    While the music is performed, the cameras linger savagely over the faces of the audience. What a bottomless chasm of vacuity they reveal! Those who flock round the Beatles, who scream themselves into hysteria, whose vacant faces flicker over the TV screen, are the least fortunate of their generation, the dull, the idle, the failures . . .
    Paul Johnson (b. 1928)

    Franceska: I was happy in the life I built up for myself. I put a fine high wall of music around me and nothing could touch me. I was safe and secure. And then you had to come along and knock it all down and I hate you for that.
    Maxwell: On the contrary, you love me.
    Muriel Box (b. 1905)

    We often love to think now of the life of men on beaches,—at least in midsummer, when the weather is serene; their sunny lives on the sand, amid the beach-grass and bayberries, their companion a cow, their wealth a jag of driftwood or a few beach plums, and their music the surf and the peep of the beech-bird.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)