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* I read a review (sorry, someone else needs to edit this post to properly cite the reference) noting that Gemini is twins, and suggesting that separation (or invisible, maybe inevitable) connections might be recurring ''[[Tomorrow's Harvest]]'' theme. (e.g., "[[Split Your Infinities]]", [http://www.brainwashed.com/common/htdocs/discog/loci1.php?site=coil08 Last Rites Of Spring/"Twin gods of death at the end of the tunnel"], Beckett's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Trio_(play) Ghost Trio], Virgil's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeneid#Themes Aeneid], & Dante's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Comedy#Thematic_concerUzns Divine Comedy])
 
* I read a review (sorry, someone else needs to edit this post to properly cite the reference) noting that Gemini is twins, and suggesting that separation (or invisible, maybe inevitable) connections might be recurring ''[[Tomorrow's Harvest]]'' theme. (e.g., "[[Split Your Infinities]]", [http://www.brainwashed.com/common/htdocs/discog/loci1.php?site=coil08 Last Rites Of Spring/"Twin gods of death at the end of the tunnel"], Beckett's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Trio_(play) Ghost Trio], Virgil's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeneid#Themes Aeneid], & Dante's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Comedy#Thematic_concerUzns Divine Comedy])
 
**Many others' comments focus on palindromes, suggesting cycles in the tracks' sequence.
 
**Many others' comments focus on palindromes, suggesting cycles in the tracks' sequence.
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* The track, and therefore the album begins with a short trumpet vignette. In the Bible, the Book of Revelation says that the end of times -  the apocalypse - would be heralded by seven angels sounding seven trumpets. This fits in with the themes and motifs of the album, in particular the apocalypse, as the 7-note opening trumpet vignette is immediately followed by 7 distinct string chords.
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* The track, and therefore the album begins with a short trumpet vignette. In the Bible, the Book of Revelation says that the end of times -  the apocalypse - would be heralded by seven angels sounding seven trumpets. This fits in with the themes and motifs of the album, in particular the apocalypse, as the trumpet vignette is immediately followed by seven distinct chords.
 
* Narratively, this track may be heralding an impending apocalypse, which is presented by "[[Reach For The Dead]]".
 
* Narratively, this track may be heralding an impending apocalypse, which is presented by "[[Reach For The Dead]]".
 
* [https://forum.watmm.com/topic/83658-tomorrows-harvest-today/?p=2573936 Embers] observed the following quote: "''From the Twins come less laborious callings and a more agreeable way of life, provided by varied song and voices of harmonious tone, slender pipes, the melodies inborn in strings and the words fitted thereto: those so endowed find even work a pleasure. They would banish the arms of war, the trumpet's call, and the gloom of old age: theirs is a life of ease and unfading youth spent in the arms of love. They also discover paths to the skies, complete a survey of the heavens with numbers and measurements, and outstrip the flight of the stars: nature yields to their genius, which it serves in all things. So many are the accomplishments of which the Twins are fruitful.''" - Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st century AD), a Roman poet and astrologer, said of the Gemini twins in his poem ''Astronomica''.
 
* [https://forum.watmm.com/topic/83658-tomorrows-harvest-today/?p=2573936 Embers] observed the following quote: "''From the Twins come less laborious callings and a more agreeable way of life, provided by varied song and voices of harmonious tone, slender pipes, the melodies inborn in strings and the words fitted thereto: those so endowed find even work a pleasure. They would banish the arms of war, the trumpet's call, and the gloom of old age: theirs is a life of ease and unfading youth spent in the arms of love. They also discover paths to the skies, complete a survey of the heavens with numbers and measurements, and outstrip the flight of the stars: nature yields to their genius, which it serves in all things. So many are the accomplishments of which the Twins are fruitful.''" - Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st century AD), a Roman poet and astrologer, said of the Gemini twins in his poem ''Astronomica''.

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