Black Abyss Babe
I live for my dreams and a pocket full of gold
Okay, quite easy I think:
Good guess but no.Blood Brothers
No. Diesel was closer - it's a direct lyric reference. The Milibands are two things (at least!) to each other, of which one is brothers. What is the other?BQOBD?
No - not sure how you got to that but the only thing that springs to mind is the bit about treating our fellow men with respect. Which is a bit fake in their case. What are they to each other, apart from brothers?Is it The Legacy?
Not Total Eclipse.Well I knew nothing about them prior to a Wikipedia search, but since I saw something climate change I’m going to guess “Total Eclipse”.
"They both ..." then you go wrong. It's not "Reach Out" but I believe you have now identified the episode in question.They both attempted to reach out to the whole spectrum of the Labour Party, didn't they?
You're closer in one respect but you've got away from the fact they are brothers - that's important too .The Duellists?
Both wrong. But although your two suggestions are mutually exclusive (ie there is union suggested with one, division with the other) you're actually thinking along the right lines with both. What did they do in 2010? Remember this is a direct lyric reference.The Wicker Man ("Brothers and their fathers joining hands and make a chain"... more or less their position on the photo). Or "Paschendale" ("the body of ours and our foes"... which might be a bit much here)
Basically describes this whole thead, but no.The Great Unknown?
Neither of these is correct either.Lord of Light? ("We are part of some strange plan
Why the slaughter of the brotherhood of man")
Empire of the Clouds? ("Sailors of the sky, a hardened breed
Loyal to the king, and an airship creed")
Good! Hold that thought because it should take you straight to a song lyric. Keep looking!I get it is about two British brothers running for an election against each other, but...
Pfff, I skim-read all lyrics to the last three albums in 15 minutes and still missed that one...NO WAIT! “The Man of Sorrows” - ‘with a brother against brother.’