your daily “bundle of sunshine” channel that specialises in either making you really depressed or making you really happy, all whilst hibernating every 5 videos for 4 weeks
my name's nathan! i'm 18 years old and i go by he/him pronouns! i make music!!! please enjoy your stay!
as you can probably tell, i don’t have the most flexible schedule, but i’ll try and get content out as fast as my poor body can handle (*^▽^*)
and I like owl city lots if you couldn’t tell(╹◡-)
( I ◡ I )
owl city slowed + reverb playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLBPhGMYknXI4y-3K38_Piuj4FWO-ded7k
Thank You. Shooting Star is my all-time favorite song, it pulled me through my first semester of classes and helped me see light. It's lyrics also inspired the beginnings of a story I'm writing. Needless to say, this brings about that good ole' Nostalgia, and I thank you for it😊
This and Saltwater Room I think are my favourite Owl City songs. These slowed + reverb versions just make them so much more bittersweet, I absolutely love them
The History of Lighthouses refers to the development of the use of towers, buildings, or other types of structures as an aid to navigation for maritime pilots at sea or on inland waterways. Premodern era Before the development of clearly defined ports, mariners were guided by fires built on hilltops.[citation needed] Since raising the fire would improve visibility, placing the fire on a platform became a practice that led to the development of the lighthouse. In antiquity, the lighthouse functioned more as an entrance marker to ports than as a warning signal for reefs and promontories, unlike many modern lighthouses. Excavation at Kuntasi on the coast of India has revealed a square watch tower with a ramp which would have originally been 10-12 meters, used to guide boats coming to Kuntasi from Rann of Kutch. The possibility of it being a lighthouse cannot be ruled out.[1] If so, the lighthouse would date from about 2000 BCE.[2] Greek-Roman period According to Homeric legend, Palamedes of Nafplio invented the first lighthouse, although they are certainly attested with the Lighthouse of Alexandria (designed and constructed by Sostratus of Cnidus) and the Colossus of Rhodes. However, Themistocles had earlier established a lighthouse at the harbour of Piraeus connected to Athens in the 5th century BC, essentially a small stone column with a fire beacon.[3] Lesches, a Greek poet (c. 660 BC), mentions a lighthouse at Sigeion in the Troad. This appears to have been the first light regularly maintained for the guidance of mariners.[4] Written descriptions and drawings of the Pharos of Alexandria provide information about lighthouses, but the tower itself collapsed during an earthquake many centuries after its construction in the 3rd century BC by the Greeks. The Tower of Hercules at A Coruña in Spain has a Roman core, and the ruins of the Dover lighthouse in England give insight into its construction; other evidence about lighthouses exists in depictions on coins and mosaics, of which many represent the lighthouse at Ostia. Coins from Alexandria, Ostia, and Laodicea in Syria also exist. While the evidence provides insight into the exterior structure of these structures, there are many gaps in the evidence concerning less visible aspects of the structures. The remains at A Coruña and Dover help determine how each lighthouse structure functioned, though one must make some assumptions to determine how the structures beacons were illuminated. Presumably locally available fuels will have included wood and probably coal to keep a fire going continuously during the night, and there is a large chimney leading to the top room at the Tower of Hercules. The example from Dover has been converted at some stage into a simple bell tower for the adjoining church. Lighthouse keepers may have added combustible liquids to reduce the expenditure on fuel and keep the light steady during gales, but little information exists in the literature from the time. It may also be possible that the light was protected from the wind by glass windows, and large mirrors may have assisted in projecting the light beam as far as possible. It is likely that lighthouses would have required considerable labour for transporting the fuel and maintaining the flame. At Cape Hatteras in the 1870s, one keeper and two assistants kept themselves busy by tending more sophisticated flames from powerful oil lamps. While artistic representations assist us in re-creating a visual image of lighthouses, they present many problems. Depictions of lighthouses on Roman coins, inscriptions, carvings, and mosaics present an inconsistent view of the actual appearance of the structures. Most show a building with two or three stories that decreases in width as it ascends. The limited size of coins could cause the producer of the coin to alter the image to fit on the surface. The similarity in depictions of lighthouses is symbolic rather than accurate representations of specific beacons.
This song means a lot to me especially the lyrics, my crush is called Angelica and I met her at an acting class. “The most angelic actress this dramatic world would see” is uncanny. And “I long to see ever since you made your stage debut” too because we performed our performance then the club ended. When I heard it for the first time I was thunderstruck you could say
This is sick! Next task: Garden Party (slowed & reverb) Adam check please up north (slowed & reverb) On the wing (ocean eyes) (slowed & reverb) Gold (acoustic) (slowed & reverb) Shooting star (acoustic) (slowed & reverb)
Hey y’all! Sorry I’ve been so inactive on this account! If I’m being honest, I’ve been working non stop all summer and probably will continue to, I just also don’t really feel like I have anything else to post for you guys, but I’ll be sure to check in every now and then :) Thank you for the continued love and support, I still see and read all of your comments even now and it means the world to me! - Nathan :)
What I actually meant off key is we take the original version played in B flat and 1 step from B flat is A flat and half a step in A now this is off key because the A flat is a little sharp in this version so meaning off key would be a quarter step!
I agree with the perceptible off key. This off key version is about to surpass my level of sanity. How could a music apparently make my real world seem surreal.