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Jackie Hill Perry (née Jackie Hill, born June 21, 1989) is an American poet, writer, and hip hop artist who initially garnered popularity for her performances of spoken word pieces such as "My Life as a Stud", "A Poem About Weed", and "Jig-a-Boo" at the Passion 4 Christ Movement (P4CM).
WGTB-CD is owned by Victory Christian Center, a charismatic megachurch in Charlotte, which also owns a network of gospel music stations fronted by WOGR (1540 AM) in Charlotte. Together, they form the Word of God Broadcasting Network, and operate from studios on the campus of the church's middle school on Carrier Drive (near the I-85 –Beatties ...
Rogers has been nominated in the category Best Spoken Word Recording at the Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards, the Aboriginal Peoples Choice Music Awards and the Native American Music Awards. [3] She has also been featured at the Vancouver Youth Poetry Slam, where she performed her spoken word poem "Opposite Directions" in 2013.
In early 1980, Swaggart denounced Contemporary Christian Music through his publication The Evangelist, [citation needed] and WAME changed to "teaching programs and middle-of-the-road, family-oriented music." [16] By 1980 half the programming was "spoken word". [17] Popular DJs in WAME's Christian days were Danny Dyer, Teresa Gardner and Bob ...
Lessons from Langston Hughes. Ward, 47, was born in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. When he was 5, his family moved to Rich Square, a 3-mile-square town about an hour’s drive northeast of Rocky Mount.
An ambient album with Scott's signature poetry/spoken word on top. Many of the poems were taken from his Boundaries series. Empty Orchestra: 1994: Twitch Records: An instrumental album whose title comes from the English translation of the Japanese word "karaoke". [4] The Butterfly Effect: 1992: Blonde Vinyl: This album introduced Scott's music ...
WRCM (91.9 FM) is a listener-supported, non-commercial radio station licensed to Wingate, North Carolina and serving the Charlotte metropolitan area.It airs a Contemporary Christian radio format and identifies itself as "K-LOVE".
On October 13, 1980, WQCC switched to "varied types of Christian music, from hymns to gospel to rock" along with teaching and Christian-oriented news. [20] The Lyon family sold the radio station in 1983. WQCC upgraded its signal from 1,000 watts. On October 3, 1986, Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt officially turned on the 10,000-watt transmitter. [21]