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Lo-Pro is an American hard rock band formed in 2002 by Pete Murray and Neil Godfrey after the disbandment of their previous band, Ultraspank, in 2001. The band was signed to major record label Geffen Records and released their first album, Lo-Pro in 2003. A year later, after touring in support of the album, they would be dropped from their label. It would be almost six years after their first release before the band would release any new albums, with the band opting to record and re-record several album's worth of material, participate in side-projects, and perform live shows prior to finalizing new music.
This seemingly inactive period would result in the release of the band's Letting Go EP in late 2009, their second full album, The Beautiful Sounds of Revenge, on June 8, 2010, and an acoustic album, Bittersweet, under the pseudonym "Life on Planet 9", on August 20, 2011. The band returned to working under the Lo-Pro name in 2012, recording their third studio album through 2013. The album, titled Disintegration Effect, was released on May 14, 2013. On August 26, 2014, the band released their second album under the "Life On Planet 9" moniker, The Theory of Everything. Since the release, the band has been inactive while Murray and ex-bassist John Fahnestock concentrate on their new band White Noise Owl.
Lo-Pro is the self-titled debut album of Lo-Pro, released on September 30, 2003. It had one single in "Sunday" which garnered considerable radio play upon release. Throughout 2003 and 2004, Lo-Pro toured with groups like Staind and Three Days Grace in promotion of the album before being dropped from their record label.
Singer Pete Murray and guitarist Neil Godfrey had previously played together in the band Ultraspank. After releasing 2 albums in 1998 and 2000, the band split up in 2001. Burned out and disillusioned, everyone parted ways to do their own thing. However, Murray and Godfrey eventually got back together with making music. Godfrey summed it up as:
The demos they created in these sessions were the starting point for the album. Eventually, they were able to gain the attention of Aaron Lewis, lead singer of the band Staind, and was signed to his vanity label, "413 Records", through Geffen. Through this, they configured the rest of the band, and began work on the actual album, with producing being done by Aaron Lewis and Don Gilmore.
Lo! was the third published nonfiction work of the author Charles Fort (first edition 1931). In it he details a wide range of unusual phenomena. In the final chapter of the book he proposes a new cosmology that the earth is stationary in space and surrounded by a solid shell which is (in the book's final words) ".. not unthinkably far away."
Of Fort's four books, this volume deals most frequently and scathingly with astronomy (continuing from his previous book New Lands). The book also deals extensively with other subjects, including paranormal phenomena (see parapsychology), which was explored in his first book, The Book of the Damned. Fort is widely credited to have coined the now-popular term teleportation in this book, and here he ties his previous statements on what he referred to as the Super-Sargasso Sea into his beliefs on teleportation. He would later expand this theory to include purported mental and psychic phenomena in his fourth and final book, Wild Talents.
It takes its derisive title from what he regarded as the tendency of astronomers to make positivistic, overly precise, and premature announcements of celestial events and discoveries. Fort portrays them as quack prophets, sententiously pointing towards the skies and saying "Lo!" (hence the book's title)—inaccurately, as events turn out.
Lož (pronounced [ˈloːʃ]) is a settlement in the Municipality of Loška Dolina in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Originally the settlement that is now Stari Trg pri Ložu was called Lož, but in 1341 a new settlement was begun around Lož Castle and the name of the older settlement as well as its market rights were adopted by the new settlement. The older settlement began to be referred to as Stari trg (literally, 'old market town' in Slovene; German: Altenmarkt). The new settlement was granted town privileges in 1477.
There are two churches in the settlement. The church in the centre of the town is dedicated to Saints Peter and Paul. It was first mentioned in written documents dating to 1428. During Ottoman raids in the late 15th century the church was fortified and a wall was built around the town. The second church is outside the town at the cemetery and is dedicated to Saint Roch. It was built in 1635 after an oath by locals in a 1631 outbreak of bubonic plague.
Ålo is a village in Søgne municipality, Norway. It is located with the sea and nearby Mandal municipality.
Coordinates: 58°03′N 7°42′E / 58.050°N 7.700°E / 58.050; 7.700
I run away but never have to go far
'Cause I know a place where I'll be
(Living in my head)
Far away from everything
You'll never reach me, never see me
(Sinking any lower)
You'll never reach me, never see me
(And that's what makes me happy)
Up here again I always win
'Cause I know a way, 'cause I know a place
(Living in my head)
Far away from everything
You'll never reach me, never see me
(Sinking any lower)
You'll never reach me, never see me
(And that's what makes me happy)
All around me I've heard
Empty faces speaking empty words
You'll never reach me, never see me
(Sinking any lower)
You'll never reach me, never see me
(Sinking any lower)
You'll never reach me, never see me
(Sinking any lower)
You'll never reach me, never see me
(And that's what makes me happy)