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"100 Grandkids" is a song recorded by American rapper Mac Miller for his third studio album GO:OD AM (2015). It was released on August 7, 2015, by Warner Bros. Records as the lead single from Miller's major label debut album. The song is divided into two parts: "Grandkids", produced by Sha Money XL, and "100 Grand" produced by ID Labs.
The lyrics here feature a similar refrain of "Rise and Shine and Give God the Glory, Glory," which is used in the Arky camp song. Rise and Shine (And Give God Your Glory, Glory) also known as The Arky, Arky Song (Children of the Lord) is a humorous children's camp song about Noah's Ark.
Jesus teaching the children, outside Saint John the Baptist Catholic Church, Draper, Utah. A Christian child's prayer is Christian prayer recited primarily by children that is typically short, rhyming, or has a memorable tune. It is usually said before bedtime, to give thanks for a meal, or as a nursery rhyme.
[13] Finally, asking people to be kind and unselfish, Esmeralda sings, "Please help my people, the poor and downtrod/I thought we all were the children of God.” [43] In The Gospel According to Disney, author Mark I. Pinsky drew similarities between "God Help the Outcasts" and the Christian hymn "His Eye Is on the Sparrow," as both songs ...
1998 Children's Music Album of the Year for Sing Me to Sleep Daddy (artist) 1998 Special Event Album of the Year for God With Us: A Celebration of Christmas Carols and Classics (artist) 1998 Enhanced CD of the Year for Live the Life – Maxi Single (artist) 1999 Artist of the Year; 1999 Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year for Live the Life ...
A version for children appears on the 1984 Cabbage Patch Kids album "A Cabbage Patch Christmas". Woody Guthrie rewrote the lyrics to the song in 1949 and adapted the song to become “Come When I Call You.” Written about the ravages of war in the aftermath of World War II, the song would go unpublished until the late 90s.
The song resembles, to a slight extent, several repetitions of the opening measures of William Byrd's renaissance composition, "The Barley Break", which Byrd intended to imitate country children playing a folk game. [citation needed] Similarly, Brackett is claimed to have come up with the song as an imitation of what folk music sounds like.
"Praying" is a pop piano ballad [13] written by Kesha, Ryan Lewis, Ben Abraham, and Andrew Joslyn that features elements of gospel [15] and soul music. [14] The song was produced by Lewis [15] and is written in the key of G minor, with a moderately slow tempo of 74 beats per minute. [16]