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Luke's comparable account, Luke 22:63–65 is of the High Priest's guards beating and mocking Jesus. In the Passion of Christ, the episode precedes the Mocking of Christ and the Crowning with Thorns, which according to the Gospels happened at the same time or immediately afterwards. Unlike the flogging, these were not part of the normal Roman ...
Shhh is the fifth studio album by British band Chumbawamba.It was originally written and recorded as Jesus H. Christ, an album that relied heavily on samples. [3] The band was unable to procure rights to a number of the songs they sampled, however, and the album was largely re-worked to defend artistic intent and criticize censorship. [4]
Musicians. Joe Bonamassa – guitar, vocals; Blondie Chaplin – guitar; Anton Fig – drums, percussion; Beth Hart – piano, vocals, liner notes; Carmine Rojas – bass guitar; Arlan Schierbaum – keyboards
Psalm 69 was ranked No. 80 on the Rolling Stone's "Top 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time" list, with author Suzy Exposito concluding that "the result of the album was a manic drag race into a swampy hellmouth of thrash Americana – and it worked". [27] The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. [28]
Recipe for Hate is the seventh studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on June 4, 1993.It was their last album on Epitaph Records for nine years (until 2002's The Process of Belief) and the band had switched to Atlantic Records, who re-released the album several months after its release.
Original LP release This is the order on the original Verve album. On the Street Level vinyl re-issue in 1977, Norman claimed that he always wanted the album to open with "I've Got to Learn to Live Without You" and subsequent re-releases had it first and "Why Don't you Look into Jesus" third. Side 1 "Why Don't You Look into Jesus" – 4:03
Being Slayer's tenth studio album, Christ Illusion was originally scheduled for release on June 6, 2006, [6] the sixth day of the sixth month of the sixth year of the 2000s decade. This connotation with the Book of Revelation 's Number of the Beast was being used as a marketing ploy to hype a number of media releases at the time, most notably ...
The song was orchestrated by Don Bagley and Bob Harris and produced by Graham Nash, [4] with a production designed for radio airplay. [citation needed] The last-minute addition of “Jesus Was a Cross Maker” to Sill's debut album necessitated the removal of two songs, “The Pearl” and “The Phoenix,” which later appeared on her 1973 album Heart Food.