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Commercially the song performed well on the gospel charts in the US, peaking at number one for seven non-consecutive weeks on the Billboard Hot Gospel Songs. It also appeared on charts in the UK, France and Belgium across Europe. "Say Yes" appeared seventh on the 2014 year-end Hot Gospel Songs chart and twenty-three on the 2015 year-end chart. [2]
Allegra Frank writing for Vox described the song as "perfect" and "otherworldly good". [10] Winston Cook-Wilson for Spin wrote "The sweeping, anthemic song is a blend of styles that keeps in line both with the spirit of the original animated film's soundtrack songs and Beyonce's characterization of the Gift album."
An R&B-funk song, "Fighting Temptation" samples Uncle Louie's "I Like Funky Music" (1979). Lyrically, the song makes a reference to fighting against negativity in life as well as waiting for the right person before falling in love. It was released as the lead single from the soundtrack for The Fighting Temptations on August 18, 2003, by ...
Each song on Renaissance flows seamlessly into the next as Beyoncé reclaims her joy through an awe-inspiring combination of gospel, bounce, house, afrobeats, funk, and more. More from Billboard
The most iconic and inspirational lyrics from Beyoncé's career so far. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us. Mail ...
"Heaven" is a mournful, understated slow-tempo ballad with gospel and pop overtones. [10] [11] [12] It is instrumentally complete with a hymn-like simple piano.[13] [14] According to the sheet music published on the website Musicnotes.com, it is composed using time signature of common time in the key of A Major with a slow tempo of 52 beats per minute.
(Chorus) Sixteen carriages drivin’ away While I watch them ride with my dreams away To the summer sunset on a holy night On a long back road, all the tears I find
A soundtrack accompanied the film and was released by Music World / Columbia / Sony Music on September 9, 2003. [8] The soundtrack received generally positive reviews and proved to be more successful than the film itself. Only one song from the album, "Summertime", is not included in the movie. The song "Come Back Home" appears in the film, but ...