Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"I Am the Resurrection" is a song by the Stone Roses and the final song on the UK version of their debut album. The last four minutes of the song is an instrumental outro. . The single was released on 30 March 1992, and reached number 33 on the UK Singles Chart
However, their next single, "Resurrection Shuffle" on Capitol Records, made them household names. The brass section included Lyle Jenkins (saxophone) and Dave Caswell (trumpet) of the Birmingham band Galliard. The song entered the UK Singles Chart on 16 January 1971, had a chart life of 14 weeks, and peaked at Number 3. [4]
"The Resurrection Shuffle" is a song by British rock band Ashton, Gardner and Dyke, released as a single in November 1970. It became their only charting hit, peaking at number three on the UK Singles Chart and number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 .
The Resurrection has received positive reviews, with some reviewers calling the album the best album the Geto Boys have ever made. In a positive review, AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote "The Resurrection outstrips every other Geto Boys record in every sense -- it is the leanest, meanest, and funkiest thing they've ever recorded."
Tupac: Resurrection is a soundtrack album for the Academy Award-nominated documentary of the same name. It was released on November 11, 2003, by Amaru Entertainment and Interscope Records . Background
Rejoice on March 31 with Easter songs and albums. Find popular Easter hymns, contemporary Christian and gospel favorite, and traditional Easter songs for church
"Come Out of That Grave (Resurrection Power)" is a song by Bethel Music and Brandon Lake, which was released as a promotional single from Bethel Music's twelfth live album, Revival's in the Air (2020), on May 25, 2020. [1] The song was written by Brian Johnson and Chris Davenport. [2] Brian Johnson and Joel Taylor handled the production of the ...
In addition to songs like "Dead Flowers (Resurrected)" and "The Heart of a Graveyard (Resurrected)," there was a "resurrected" version of a previously unheard song, "Praise the Void." The original version later appeared on the band's eleventh studio album, Exile .