Black rain refers to two atmospheric events:
Black Rain may refer to:
In film:
In music:
Other:
"Black Rain" is a single by the American rock band Soundgarden, featuring lyrics written by frontman Chris Cornell and music written by bassist Ben Shepherd and guitarist Kim Thayil. The single debuted at number 24 and number 14 on the US Billboard Alternative Songs chart and the US Billboard Rock Songs chart respectively in August 2010. It is also Soundgarden's first and currently only song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at #96. The song appears on the compilation album Telephantasm and on the music video game Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock. This is the first single that Soundgarden has released since 1997.
The song was mostly recorded during sessions for Badmotorfinger in 1991. In 2010, the band reworked the original recording with Down on the Upside co-producer Adam Kasper, who was working with the band on archival material. Cornell noted that when they listened to the original recording for the first time after almost two decades, he immediately remembered the problems he had with the song. Cornell explained that the original version of the song was much longer, and that he was unhappy with how it was arranged. He was also dissatisfied with the lyrics in the chorus. After so many years, however, Cornell noted that the issues seemed "easy to resolve". For the new mix, the music was re-arranged, the chorus vocals were re-written and re-recorded by Cornell, and new guitar overdubs were added. Kim Thayil explained to Rolling Stone, "[In] many ways, it's a new song."
Black Rain is a 1989 American action thriller film directed by Ridley Scott, starring Michael Douglas, Andy García, Ken Takakura, Kate Capshaw and Yusaku Matsuda. The story centers on two New York City police officers who arrest a member of the Yakuza and must escort him back to Japan. Once there, he escapes, and the two police officers find themselves dragged deeper and deeper into the Japanese underworld.
Nick Conklin is a New York City police officer facing possible criminal charges; Internal Affairs believes Nick was involved with his partner who was caught taking criminal money in a corruption scandal. Nick is divorced from his wife, who has custody of their two children. Nick also has financial difficulties.
At a restaurant, Nick and his partner Charlie Vincent observe two Japanese men meet with Mafia gangsters. Nick's suspicions are validated when another Japanese man enters the restaurant, seizes a small package at gunpoint, stabs several people, and leaves. Nick and Charlie chase and arrest the suspect after he nearly kills Nick. The suspect, a Yakuza gangster named Sato, is to be extradited to Osaka and given to the police there. Though angered Sato will not be prosecuted in the US, Nick agrees to escort him. Nick’s captain believes it will keep Nick from causing more trouble and exacerbating the already biased Internal Affairs investigation.
I live your most secret dream
All is true what I see
Hard enough to believe
When your heart stands before my eyes
It can't stop raining from the sky
You're the cold black rain
Now I'm falling down
Cover me now
One time again
Come cover the ground
Cover me now and never end
You come to fill up my worries
Like a drug in my own thoughts
You're a hope in the madness
I get down but I won't stop
You don't know how I need you
How much love I got for you
I'm fool and thirsty
You control me by desire
Now this strenght is killing me again
Embrance my soul
The power is possessing me
The power is possessing me
Transform my heart into a stone
My breath is dying away
You will win again
Black rain until the end
And I'm the taste of your disease
Though I want to believe in you
You're killing me
But I can't stand the temptation to call
The black rain again
Still comes strong
To fill my veins
Now I'm falling down
Cover me now
One time again
Come cover the ground
Cover me now and never end
Wash away the time
I'm a prisoner inside
Take me to the light
Black rain refers to two atmospheric events:
Black Rain may refer to:
In film:
In music:
Other:
The Independent | 15 Jul 2018