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E1 Music released "Say Yes" as the album's third single on June 2, 2014. "Say Yes" marks the third time the trio collaborated as solo artists following the disbandment of their group in 2006. Musically, "Say Yes" is an uptempo gospel and pop song, which takes influence from dance music.
Yes, Lord! is the hymnal used by the Church of God in Christ. It was published in 1985 by the COGIC Publishing Board under the leadership of a on Bishop J.O. Patterson, Sr. List of Hymns
Music. Art Garfunkel performed the song live during his 2016–2020 In Close-Up tour as the encore song. [7]Belgian hardcore DJ DRS uses this prayer in the introduction of his Thunderdome set in 2022.
And she declares in the second verse that she won’t change who she is just to please other people: “Now I’m so done with caring / What you think, no I won’t hide / Underneath your own ...
Horatio Gates Spafford (October 20, 1828, Troy, New York – September 25, 1888, Jerusalem) [1] was an American lawyer and Presbyterian church elder. He is best known for penning the Christian hymn "It Is Well With My Soul" following the Great Chicago Fire [2] and the deaths of his four daughters on a transatlantic voyage aboard the S.S. Ville du Havre.
And she declares in the second verse that she won’t change who she is just to please other people: “Now I’m so done with caring / What you think, no I won’t hide / Underneath your own ...
"Yes" is the debut single of English music duo McAlmont & Butler, released on 15 May 1995 and later included on their debut album, The Sound Of... McAlmont & Butler . The soul ballad [ 2 ] was their first UK hit, peaking at number eight on the UK Singles Chart , and remains their most successful single, selling over 200,000 copies in the United ...
Magnify the Lord - a 21st Century Anglican Hymnal (2020) [29] Episcopal Church in the United States of America [30] New Version of the Psalms of David (1756) [31] The Whole Book of Psalms (1793) [32] Hymns, Selected from the Most Approved Authors, for the use of Trinity Church, Boston (1808) [33] Church Poetry (1823) [34]