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American gospel-blues musician Blind Willie Johnson recorded "John the Revelator" in 1930. Subsequently, a variety of artists, including the Golden Gate Quartet , Son House , Depeche Mode , Jerry Garcia Band , The White Stripes , The Forest Rangers , The Sword , The Silencers (band) , Santana (band) have recorded their renditions of the song ...
And if he's drowned in the deep salt sea I'll be true to his memory And if he's found another love And he and his love both married be Then I wish them health and happiness Where they now dwell across the sea He picked her up all in his arms And kisses gave her one two and three Saying weep no more my own true love I am your long lost John Riley.
The lyrics present a stereotypical Petrarchan lover, and appear to form a personal plea to Elizabeth I. Essex is known to have addressed poems to the Queen. [9] The song appeared before Essex's greatest failure, his period as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland which led to his ill-fated coup d'état, but he had previous fallings-out with her.
He added, "On Revamp, I wrote out a wish list of people that I would love and asked them and to my surprise most of them said yes and we have quite an astonishing eclectic crew." [2] Of Taupin's Restoration record, John said, "Restoration was Bernie's project and he's a huge country fan. He came up with an astonishing list of country performers ...
In the film, it has four sections. It begins with a 4/4 interlude sung by actors dressed as Bavarian villagers who have found "a new leader to restore Germany's former glory." The version in the stage musical and the later film have additional verses, some of which occur in the reprise after the song "Heil, Myself".
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Donald Trump has said he won’t take refugees from “infested countries” and promised to restore the controversial “Muslim travel ban” from his first term as president.. Trump made the ...
John Goss "Praise, my soul, the King of heaven" is a Christian hymn.Its text, which draws from Psalm 103, was written by Anglican divine Henry Francis Lyte. [1] First published in 1834, it endures in modern hymnals to a setting written by John Goss in 1868, and remains one of the most popular hymns in English-speaking denominations.