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Get Your Rocks Off may refer to: "Get Your Rocks Off", a 1967 Basement Tapes song by Bob Dylan and the Band; Messin', titled Get Your Rocks Off in the US, a 1973 album by Manfred Mann's Earth Band; Get Your Rocks Off, a 2002 album by Eddie and the Hot Rods "Get Your Rocks Off", a 2014 episode of the television series Sex Sent Me to the ER
In his book Hymns That Have Helped, W. T. Stead reported "when the SS London went down in the Bay of Biscay, 11 January 1866, the last thing which the last man who left the ship heard as the boat pushed off from the doomed vessel was the voices of the passengers singing 'Rock of Ages'". [14] This hymn was regarded as one of the Great Four ...
The earliest known recordings of the song were by Henry Whitter on Okeh Records (OKeh 40063) in 1924 and Vernon Dalhart & Co. on Edison Records (Edison 51608) in 1925. [2] In the Reader's Digest Children's Songbook, published in 1985, the song is adapted with new words by Dan Fox and his son, Paul. The lyrics tell of the things "she" will do in ...
Dottie Rambo (March 2, 1934 – May 11, 2008) was an American gospel singer and songwriter. She was a Grammy winning solo artist and multiple Dove award-winning artist.Along with ex-husband Buck and daughter Reba, she formed the award-winning southern Gospel group, The Rambos.
Messin' is a rock album released in 1973 by Manfred Mann's Earth Band. "Buddah" also appeared on the Vertigo budget sampler double album Suck It and See, along with tracks by then-labelmates Kraftwerk, Jade Warrior and the Sensational Alex Harvey Band, amongst others.
The lyrics to the hymn were written by Johnson in 1853, five years after Brigham Young preached on Ensign Peak as the Mormon pioneers first arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. [2] Even though Johnson's journal contains more than 700 hymns, "High on the Mountain Top" is his most notable contribution to LDS music. [3]
1999: Recorded Music Packaging - The Jesus Record (posthumous) Nominations. 1983: Song of the Year - "Sing Your Praise to the Lord" 1989: Contemporary Recorded Song - "Awesome God" 1991: Song of the Year - "Awesome God" 1991: Inspirational Recorded Song - "Bound to Come Some Trouble" 1991: Rock Recorded Song - "Higher Education and the Book of ...
The song is considered a Christmas carol, as its original lyrics celebrate the Nativity of Jesus: Go tell it on the mountain, over the hills and everywhere; go tell it on the mountain, that Jesus Christ is born. An alternative final line omits the reference to the birth of Christ, instead declaring that "Jesus Christ is Lord". [2]