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  1. 5 days ago · He gets a sitar like tinge to the breezy “Sailing Away” while creating dark brush stokes on the intricate “Missing In Action”. There’s a liquid palpability to his strings as he digs in on Hypthetical Retrospection” and creates rich harmonies with Lionel Cole’s voice on “I Believe”.

  2. 4 days ago · The opening track and the first track to be written for the album, "Through the Rain", was written by Carey and Lionel Cole, was inspired Carey's recent experiences, and was co-produced by Jam and Lewis. It was released as the lead single from the album.

  3. 20 hours ago · Cole Palmer delivered one of the best individual performances of any Premier League player, hauling a dysfunctional Chelsea side to sixth place in 2023/24, yet narrowly misses out.

  4. 20 hours ago · “Lead singer Paddy McAloon wrote each of the album's songs. He's just as good as Elvis Costello, but with some Gershwin, Cole Porter and Hoagy Carmichael thrown into the mix. There's an old-school literacy and urbanity, a dreaminess, to his songs of love, guilt, Eros and heartbreak; it rings of the '40s more than the '80s” 3

  5. 2 days ago · The cover shows the same distinctive design features with Lionel the Rhino placed at the centre looking out sideways at the reader. This time, blue is the colour chosen to depict the animal and the bold title with other colours used as a frame depicting an intriguing selection of instruments.

  6. 2 days ago · The ball bounced in front of Cole and he bounced it over the defender's head and volleyed it straight into the corner of the net. "We had a really good striker at the time who was open, but what Cole had seen that no one else had was the goalie had come out of his net to mark this striker and the goal was open.

  7. 1 day ago · Brigadier-General Lionel Forbes Ashburner (1874—1923), GOC 142nd Brigade; Major-General Sir Cromer Ashburnham (1831—1917), Governor of Suakin; General Charles Ashe à Court-Repington (1785–1861), Colonel of the 41st (Welch) Regiment of Foot; General William Ashe-à Court (c. 1708—1781), Colonel of the 11th Regiment of Foot