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  1. Read left school at 16, and at the age of 17, he became an adherent of Germanic neopaganism and began studying Germanic paganism. Music career. In 1987, Read joined Tony Wakeford's Sol Invictus along with Karl Blake. Read recorded three albums and an EP with Sol Invictus before leaving to form the band Fire + Ice in 1991.

  2. Feb 7, 2013 · Why did you leave Sol Invictus? To go and study paganism in Germany. When I came back to England at the beginning of the nineties, Douglas and David asked me: “Why don’t you release an album?” I’d never thought about it, but I found the idea interesting. I composed a few songs, found some musicians and I founded Fire+Ice.

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  4. When did Fire + Ice (Ian Read)'s first album release? What is the most popular album by Fire + Ice (Ian Read)? When did Fire + Ice (Ian Read) start making music?

  5. Ian left because he went to Germany for a while, and he now has his own group called Fire and Ice. Karl Blake is stiIl in Sol but because he is doing a course at University, he is now taking a back seat for a while, although we both hope to work together in the future.

  6. Asked to leave Death In June due to musical and political differences after the recording of Burial in 1984 (Wakeford was a member of the fascist, right wing British National Front party at the time) he went on to record one album with white power music collective Above the Ruins whose members are rumored to have included Liz Grey, Ian Read of ...

  7. Dec 27, 2023 · Sol Invictus, also known as the invincible sun or the unconquered sun, was the official sun god of the late Roman Empire. He was a later version of the classic sun god Sol, and he was dusted off and revived as “Invictus” in AD 274 under the emperor Aurelian. Aurelian attempted to use Invictus Sol as his chief god of the Empire.

  8. Apr 17, 2023 · The Temple of the Sun, also known as the Temple of Sol Invictus, was a major temple in ancient Rome dedicated to the worship of the sun god Sol Invictus. It was the fourth-known temple dedicated to the Sun in Rome. The other three were in the Circus Maximus, on the Quirinal Hill (i.e. one of the Seven Hills of Rome), and in Trastevere.

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