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One More Song for You is the 26th studio album by the Christian music group The Imperials, released in late 1979 on DaySpring Records. [2] It was the first of two albums that the group collaborated with well-known musician/producer Michael Omartian, moving them to a more contemporary pop sound, with the second being their next album Priority (1980).
In early 2020, the song was rerecorded and reissued as in an orchestral incarnation as well as in several other versions as the lead single for the second Cutting Crew compilation album, Ransomed Healed Restored Forgiven, [9] accompanied by a new music video uploaded to YouTube, [9] through the official account of the band's new label, August Day.
"Am I Forgiven" is a song by British female singer-songwriter Rumer. Produced by award-winning UK TV and musical composer Steve Brown, it was released as the third single from her debut album Seasons of My Soul on April 29, 2011.
The music video for "I Have Forgiven Jesus", which was directed by Bucky Fukumoto [4] [78] via The Directors Bureau, [79] was released online in November 2004. [79] [80] Its images were later used on the covers of the song's single release. [1] The video was later released as bonus material on Morrissey's 2005 live DVD Who Put the M in Manchester?.
"Forgiven" is a song by American Christian rock band Sanctus Real, which was released to radio on October 23, 2009. [5] The song is the first single from the band's fifth studio album Pieces of a Real Heart , which was released in March 2010. [ 6 ]
"Alone and Forsaken" is one of the few songs that Williams ever wrote and sang that sounds more like a folk song than a country song. [citation needed] In the half-spoken verses, Williams reflects upon meeting his love, when "the pastures were green and the meadows were gold", but "her love, like the leaves, now have withered and gone". The ...
"I'm Sorry" is a song written and recorded by American country-folk singer-songwriter John Denver and released in 1975. It was the final number-one pop hit released during his career. The flip side of "I'm Sorry" was "Calypso", and, like its A-side, enjoyed substantial radio airplay on Top 40 stations. "I'm Sorry" is an apology for forsaken ...
The progression is also used entirely with minor chords[i-v-vii-iv (g#, d#, f#, c#)] in the middle section of Chopin's etude op. 10 no. 12. However, using the same chord type (major or minor) on all four chords causes it to feel more like a sequence of descending fourths than a bona fide chord progression.