Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A City Called Heaven is an album by trumpeter Donald Byrd featuring performances recorded in 1991 and released on the Landmark label. [1] [2] [3] Reception.
Freedom Highway is a 1965 album by The Staple Singers (Epic LN24163/ BN26163). [1] [2] [3] The title song was written for the 1965 Selma to Montgomery march for voting rights and reflects not only on the actions of the activists but what suffering they had endured to get there, even referencing the murder of Emmett Till at Tallahatchie River.
Mahalia Jackson (1911 – 1972) was the preeminent gospel singer of the 20th century, her career spanning from about 1931 to 1971. She began singing in church as a child in New Orleans, then moved to Chicago as an adolescent and joined Chicago's first gospel group, the Johnson Singers.
A City Called Heaven: Chicago and the Birth of Gospel Music. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0252080692. Mungons, Kevin and Douglas Yeo, Homer Rodeheaver and the Rise of the Gospel Music Industry. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2021. ISBN 978-0252085833. Stevenson, Arthur L. The Story of Southern Hymnology.
Musicians. Donald Byrd – trumpet; Isaac Hayes – piano, Fender Rhodes, vibraphone, percussion, synthesizer; Ronnie Garrett – bass guitar; William Duckett – electric guitar ...
"Happy Days In New York City" by Lobo "The (Happy) Heaven of Harlem" (from the musical comedy Fifty Million Frenchmen) "Hard Knock Life" by Jay-Z "Hard Times in New York Town" by Bob Dylan "Hard to Live (in the City)" by Albert Hammond Jr. "Harlem" by Glassjaw "Harlem" by Baron Longfellow "Harlem" by Bennie Moten "Harlem" by Bill Withers
"Pig City" by Spiral Stairs [14] "Pig City" by The Parameters "Queensland University" by Custard "Rosalie" by Gaslight Radio "See You Again" by Catfish "Snake Skin Lady" by Robert Forster "Spring Rain" by the Go-Betweens "Streets of Your Town" by The Go-Betweens [9] "Thought I Was Over You" by Jack Frost "Trees of Brisbane" by Charles Jenkins [15]
The Kelly Brothers were a 1960s Chicago gospel quartet, which also sang R&B as the King Pins.The group comprised brothers Curtis, Robert and Andrew Kelly with the fourth part sung by Charles Lee or Offe Reece.