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"Sacrilege" is the first single from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' fourth album Mosquito released on February 25, 2013 as a digital download. [1] It was recorded at Sonic Ranch Studios in Tornillo , Texas and produced by TV on the Radio 's Dave Sitek and English record producer Nick Launay .
The song also appears on the 2006 album Hallelujah Live, credited to Lind with Nilsen, Fuentes and Holm, which also reached the top of the Norwegian VG-lista. [185] International group Il Divo released a Spanish-language adaptation with different lyrics on their album The Promise (2008), which topped the charts in the UK.
Sing Alleluia forth in duteous praise, O citizens of heaven, and sweetly raise An endless Alleluia. Ye next, who stand before th' Eternal light, In hymning choirs re-echo to the Height An endless Alleluia. The Holy City shall take up your strain, And with glad songs resounding wake again An endless Alleluia. In blissful antiphons ye thus rejoice
The Oxford English Dictionary defines hallelujah as “a song or shout of praise to God,” but biblical scholars will tell you it’s actually a smash-up of two Hebrew words: “hallel” meaning ...
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Tell Me What Rockers to Swallow is a music DVD released by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs on October 25, 2004, through Polydor.The main feature of the DVD is the band's live performance at The Fillmore in San Francisco on March 17, 2004, with bonus songs recorded during the previous day's performance.
"Cheated Hearts" is a single by New York–based alternative rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs. It is taken from their second album Show Your Bones. The song was first released as a live performance from their DVD, Tell Me What Rockers to Swallow in 2004, but was released as a single two years thereafter. The track was voted the 10th best song of 2006 ...
The earliest form of Alleluia, dulce carmen is found in manuscripts of the 11th century kept at the British Museum. [1]It was traditionally sung in Gallican liturgies, such as the rite of Lyon, or English liturgies, such as the use of Sarum, in "clausula Alleluia", as a farewell to the Alleluia in the week before the Sunday of Septuagesima, until the first Vespers.