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CCLI maintains a list of songs that are in the public domain. [10] If all of the songs that an organization uses are in that list, then the organization does not need to pay the CCLI license fee. As of March 2015, CCLI's list contained nearly 24,000 public domain songs.
In Christ Alone" appeared on CCLI's "Top 25 CCLI Songs" American songs list for the first time in the February 2008 report although it had appeared in the CCLI chart for Canada, Australia and New Zealand prior to that. In 2008, the song was included in the release of Christian Worship: Supplement for the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod ...
The song was released on May 20, 2022, as a promotional single from their collaborative live album, Kingdom Book One (2022). [1] The song was written by Chandler Moore, Jacob Poole, Jonathan Jay, and Kirk Franklin. [2] "Kingdom" debuted at number 17 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart, [3] and at number six on the Hot Gospel Songs chart. [4]
The song's popularity has reached far beyond the band's; CCLI places the song among the 30 most-sung worship songs in the United States [1] and has been called a "modern worship classic". [2] According to Martin Smith, the author of the song: "That song just wrote itself in about five minutes. The same chords the whole way through the song.
The song eventually caught the attention of executives at Integrity Music. When Integrity's Hosanna! Music copyrighted the song in 1986, the author was unknown. [7] After the Give Thanks album was released, the song was brought to the attention of Smith, who contacted Integrity with authorship information. Integrity later included songwriting ...
It was originally featured on Tomlin's album Arriving, that reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Christian Songs chart. It is also featured live on Tomlin's Live from Austin Music Hall album. As of November 2014, it was the fifth most popular worship song, according to CCLI's top 25 worship songs chart. [1]
The song gained popularity. [6] It hit number one on the United Kingdom CCLI charts by 2006, and in January 2009, it was still number one in the UK, number two in Australia, number seven in Canada, and number 15 in the United States. [7]
It reached number thirteen on CCLI's top five hundred worship songs list of 2005, [1] and number seven on CCLI's Top 25 Worship Songs List, as of August 2007. [2]