CARPE DIEM song of 1994 holds on strong Thursday night at Radio City Music Hall, NY, NY – SEAL/”PRAYER FOR THE DYING” Tempo Analysis, velocity-time graphs, video links. Meanspeed=100 bpm, the unisexual speed of Orgasm BPM.

 seal-on-itunes-screenshot

seal-on-itunes-screenshot

Seal

Seal
Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Menaspeed Music Temo Graphic w

Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Menaspeed Music Temo Graphic w

Ian Andrew Schneider

song title=PRAYER FOR THE DYING
performer=SEAL
composer=SEAL, Isidore
average time per trial=4 minutes, 0.22 seconds
beat s measured per trial=468 beats
average length, whole note=2402 milliseconds
beat=quarter note
average length of beat=600 milliseconds
mean speed=100 beats per minute
year of release=1994
genre under iTunes®=pop
File Kind=MPEG audio file
Size=126 MB
Bit Rate=320 kbps
Sample Rate=44.100 kHz
Format=MPEG-1, Layer 3
Channels=Stereo
ID3 Tag=v2.2
Encoded With=iTunes® 8.1.1
Software=Excel® by Microsoft® for Macintosh®, HEAR audio
Hardware=MacBook® by Apple®
emotional expression as would be predicted by the meanspeed music theory=natural
emotional concept of song=natural
line in piece most indicative of  emotive idea=
“I’m crossing that bridge with lessons I’ve learned/
Playing with for and not getting burned/
I may not know what you’re going through/
But time is the space between me and you
There is a light through that window/
Hold on say ‘yes,’ while people say ‘no,’
Life Carries On!”
Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Menaspeed Music Temo Graphic 1 !

Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Menaspeed Music Tempo Graphic 1 !

Meanspeed Music Temop Map - SEAL - prayer for the dying

Meanspeed Music Tempo Map - SEAL - prayer for the dying

Carpe diem · Classical Studies

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For other uses, see Carpe diem (disambiguation).

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FMV – Seal – Prayer For the Dying – Kingdom Hearts 1 2

05:20 – Aug 16, 2006 2 years ago

(7 Ratings) - Rate:
video.google.com

Fanmade music video using clips from Kingdom Harts 1 and 2. Music By Seal. I’m not satisfied with this video. The song is damn hard

A sundial with a carpe diem inscription used to tell time.

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Another sundial with a carpe diem inscription.

Carpe diem is a phrase from a Latin poem by Horace (See “Source” section below). It is popularly translated as “seize the day”. The general definition of carpe is “pick, pluck, pluck off, gather” as in plucking, although Horace uses the word in the sense of “enjoy, make use of, seize.”

Contents

Meaning of the phrase

One interpretation of the phrase might be as, an existential cautionary term, much like “eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die”, with emphasis on making the most of current opportunities because life is short and time is fleeting.

Related expressions

Evoking some of the same meaning is the expression, “Eat and drink, for tomorrow we die” which derives from verses from the biblical books of Isaiah 22:13 and 1 Corinthians 15:32, and which occurs many times in modern English-language popular culture.

The phrase non-collige virgo rosas (“gather, girl, the roses”) appears at the end of the poem De rosis nascentibus[1] (also called Idyllium de rosis) attributed to Ausonius or Virgil. It encourages youth to enjoy life before it’s too late.

Related but distinct is the expression memento mori (“remember that you are mortal”); indeed, memento mori is often used with some of the sense of carpe diem. However, two major elements of memento mori are humility and repentance, neither of which figures prominently in the concept of carpe diem.

In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Siduri attempts to dissuade Gilgamesh in his quest for immortality, urging him to enjoy life as it is: “As for you, Gilgamesh, fill your belly with good things; day and night, night and day, dance and be merry, feast and rejoice. Let your clothes be fresh, bathe yourself in water, cherish the little child that holds your hand, and make your wife happy in your embrace; for this too is the lot of man.”

In the Ecclesiastes are some paragraphs with a similar message (9,7-9):

7 Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, and drink thy wine with a merry heart; for God now accepteth thy works.

8 Let thy garments be always white; and let thy head lack no ointment.

9 Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest all the days of the life of thy vanity, which he hath given thee under the sun, all the days of thy vanity: for that is thy portion in this life, and in thy labour which thou takest under the sun.

Horace himself parodies the phrase in another of his poems, ‘The town mouse and the country mouse’. He uses the phrase carpe viam meaning ‘seize the road’ to compare the two different attitudes to life of a person (or in this case, a mouse) living in a city and in the countryside.

Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Menaspeed Music Temo Graphic 1

Meanspeed Music Tempo Sheet - Seal - Prayer For the Dying - Meanspeed® Music Tempo Graphic 1