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This Side of the Moon is the third studio album by American singer Elizabeth Cook (pictured), released on May 17, 2005, by Hog Country Production. A country album, This Side of the Moon features lyrics about love and heartbreak. Cook based the album on her poor experience with Warner Bros., the record label which had released her unsuccessful second studio album, Hey Y'all, in 2002, after a delay. Most of the songs on This Side of the Moon were written by Cook and songwriter Hardie McGehee, working for Sis 'N Bro Music. Critics likened Cook's vocals to those of other country artists such as Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton. This Side of the Moon had a limited release in August 2004 before becoming more widely available the following year. The album received little airplay and, after its release, Cook worked as a waitress to secure steady pay. Critical response at the time was generally positive and, in retrospective articles, reviewers felt This Side of the Moon helped enhance Cook's musical career. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that following the Assyrians' conquest of the Kingdom of Israel, they incorporated aspects of ancient Israelite architecture (example pictured) into their own constructions in Nineveh?
- ... that puppeteer James Ortiz thought that his voice would be replaced in Project Hail Mary?
- ... that the range of characters in a fantasy novel series about cats was compared to that of a Greek drama?
- ... that, according to legend, Maurille de Sombreuil saved her father's life during the September Massacres by drinking a glass of blood?
- ... that Toronto's North Yonge subway extension cost less to build than was estimated four years before it was completed?
- ... that Panas Saksahansky's production of Othello served as the basis for later performances in Ukraine and throughout the Soviet Union?
- ... that Souraja survived the 2018 Sulawesi earthquake and tsunami unscathed?
- ... that the birthplace of the Father of Mexico is now home to a tequila distillery?
- ... that two library clerks stole George Washington's diary from Ainsworth Rand Spofford's desk?
In the news
- The Progressive Bulgaria coalition, led by former president Rumen Radev (pictured), wins a majority of the National Assembly in the parliamentary election, in a bid to end the ongoing Bulgarian political crisis.
- In Ukraine, seven people are killed and fourteen others are injured in a mass shooting at a Kyiv supermarket.
- Separate school shootings in Siverek and in Onikişubat, Turkey, leave twelve people dead and thirty-five others injured.
- Romuald Wadagni wins the Beninese presidential election.
On this day
April 28: Workers' Memorial Day; Heroes' Day in Barbados
- 224 – The ancient Iranian Parthian Empire fell to the Sasanids after its forces were defeated at the Battle of Hormozdgan.
- 1611 – The University of Santo Tomas (seminary building pictured) in Manila, one of the oldest existing universities in Asia and one of the world's largest Catholic universities by enrollment, was founded.
- 1972 – Scottish trade unionist Jimmy Reid condemned the capitalist "rat race" in his inaugural address as Rector of the University of Glasgow.
- 1996 – A spree shooter carried out the Port Arthur massacre, killing 35 people, and injuring 37 in Tasmania, prompting stricter gun laws in Australia.
- Rhys ap Gruffudd (d. 1197)
- Hertha Ayrton (b. 1854)
- Harper Lee (b. 1926)
- Anthony Volpe (b. 2001)
Today's featured picture
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Collard is a group of loose-leafed cultivars of Brassica oleracea, a plant species comprising many other common vegetables, including cabbage and broccoli. Part of the Acephala group (or the "kale group"), collard is also classified as the variety B. oleracea var. viridis. It is grown as a food crop for its large, dark green, edible leaves, which are cooked and eaten as a vegetable. It has been cultivated as food since classical antiquity. This photograph shows a bundle of collard greens from an organic-food cooperative. Photograph credit: Evan Amos
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