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2004 – Jay Jay Bell and Friends, "Leave It There [109] [110] on the album Lord Send Me, I'll Go [111] 2004 – Ray Skjelbred, "Take Your Burden to the Lord" [112] on the album Plays Blues & Boogie Woogie [113] 2005 – The Grace Thrillers, "Take Your Burden to the Lord" [114] on the albums He Brought Me Out [115] and Old Favourites [116]
The lyrics also show a trend toward those more commonly associated with "Children, Go Where I Send Thee." For instance, the line "Two, two, the lily-white boys clothed all in green" in Grainger's recording has become "One was the little white babe all dressed in blue" in the Bellwood Prison Camp recording.
The spiritual "Children, Go Where I Send Thee" has a similar format, counting down from ten or twelve biblical references. "Echad Mi Yodea" ("Who Knows One?"), a Hebrew song sung at the end of the Jewish Passover seder, has a very similar structure, counting up to thirteen using biblical and religious references.
Now I lay me down to sleep is a Christian children's bedtime prayer from the 18th century. Text
In the King James Version of the Bible it is translated as: 20: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen. The modern World English Bible translates the passage as: 20: teaching them to observe all things that I commanded you.
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And I’ll Go Sonny Curtis: November 17, 1965 Heartaches and Harmonies (track 37) 2:17 Other versions released on numerous CDs, e.g., track 16 on The Price of Fame: Angel of Darkness Phil Everly / John Durrill 1987 Some Hearts: 3:48 Angels from the Realms of Glory: James Montgomery / Henry Thomas Smart / Edward Shippen Barnes
"Here’s what I would say — college kind of came to me this year. I didn’t necessarily go and seek it out," Belichick said. "I'd say that [those conversations] started to make me a lot more ...