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"My Home is You (live)" (Evans) - from All I Want Is You "You Bless Me" (Evans and Ben Ferrell) - from Freedom "So Good to Me" (Evans and Matt Jones) - from Freedom
Trading My Sorrows More Than Gold 2000 Trading My Sorrows Whom Shall I Fear Millennium Worship 2 2001 Undignified Your Love is Extravagant Open the Eyes of My Heart, Vol. 1 2001 Trading My Sorrows So Good To Me Walk into The Room Absolute Worship 2004 All We Want is You ORU Worship – Extraordinary 2006 Worthy To The Lord I Am Free (cover)
"Trading My Sorrows" written by Darrell Evans; performed by Darrell Evans; from Only God for Me, released 1999-06-29; live recording from 1998 at Integrity Songwriter Summit, Mobile, Alabama, USA "Every Move I Make" written by David Ruis; performed by David Ruis; from Touching the Father's Heart, released 1997-01-02
Nobody knows my sorrow Nobody knows the trouble I've seen Glory hallelujah! Sometimes I'm up, sometimes I'm down Oh, yes, Lord Sometimes I'm almost to the ground Oh, yes, Lord Although you see me going 'long so Oh, yes, Lord I have my trials here below Oh, yes, Lord Nobody knows the trouble I've been through Nobody knows but Jesus
Slave Songs of the United States was a collection of African American music consisting of 136 songs. Published in 1867, it was the first, and most influential, [1] [2] collection of spirituals to be published. The collectors of the songs were Northern abolitionists William Francis Allen, Lucy McKim Garrison, and Charles Pickard Ware. [3]
The song was first published in 1913 with the title "Farewell Song" in a six-song songbook by Dick Burnett, titled Songs Sung by R. D. Burnett—The Blind Man—Monticello, Kentucky. [2] There exists some uncertainty as to whether Dick Burnett is the original writer. In an interview he gave toward the end of his life, he was asked about the song:
Coffey Anderson (born December 15, 1978) [1] (sometimes using just his mononym Cofféy or Coffey) is an American country singer-songwriter and internet personality, originally from Bangs, Texas.
"A Murder of One" is a song by Counting Crows, released as the fourth single from their debut album, August and Everything After. [1] Frontman Adam Duritz explained the song's meaning as follows: "I can remember being eight years old and having infinite possibilities. But life ends up being so much less than we thought it would be when we were ...