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LIVING IN THE OPEN AIR
Publicado por FansOnTheRun
1 de abril de 2013
Exclusive!!!
How do we do it? Don't ask… but here's the cover for the NEW Paul's 2013 album and the tracklist.
Paul is working with producers Ethan Johns, Giles Martin and Mark Ronson for this upcoming album. Release date??? Soon… meanwhile, enjoy!
1 - Secret Window
2 - Brian's Lullaby
3 - Sweet Summer Song
4 - Hopeless Mirror
5 - A Walk To The Moon
6 - Daughter
7 - Memorial Drumbeat
8 - 79 Tears
9 - Blue Marble Tree
10 - Cinnamon House
11 - Orange Blues
12 - Twisted Apples
13 - Dancing Rain
April Fools' Day
ResponderEliminarFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
April Fools' Day is celebrated in many countries on April 1 every year. Sometimes referred to as All Fools' Day, April 1 is not a national holiday, but is widely recognized and celebrated as a day when people play practical jokes and hoaxes on each other.
In Italy, France and Belgium, children and adults traditionally tack paper fishes on each other's back as a trick and shout "April fish!" in their local languages (pesce d'aprile!, poisson d'avril! and aprilvis! in Italian, French and Flemish, respectively). Such fish feature prominently on many French late 19th to early 20th century April Fools' Day postcards.
The earliest recorded association between April 1 and foolishness is an ambiguous reference in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1392). Many writers suggest that the restoration of January 1 by Pope Gregory XIII as New Year's Day of the Gregorian Calendar in the 16th century was responsible for the creation of the holiday, sometimes questioned for earlier references.
In Spain and Ibero-America, an equivalent date is December 28, Christian day of celebration of the "Day of the Holy Innocents". The Christian celebration is a holiday in its own right, a religious one, but the tradition of pranks is not, though the latter is observed yearly. After somebody plays a joke or a prank on somebody else, the joker usually cries out, in some regions of Ibero-America: "Inocente palomita que te dejaste engañar" ("You innocent little dove that let yourself be fooled"). In Mexico, the phrase is "Inocente Para Siempre!" which means "Innocent Forever!". In Argentina, the prankster says "Que la inocencia te valga!" (which roughly translates as a piece of advice on not to be as gullible as the pranked) In Spain, it is common to say just "Inocente!" (which in Spanish can mean "Innocent!", but also "Gullible!"). Nevertheless, on the Spanish island of Minorca, "Dia d'enganyar" ("Fooling day") is celebrated on April 1 because Menorca was a British possession during part of the 18th century.