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In 2017, Billboard ranked "You're Not Alone" number 64 in their list of "The 100 Greatest Pop Songs of 1997", praising it as "one of the year's most striking pop singles, with club energy and trip-hop atmospherics, based around Olive's soulful siren call and synths that streak across the production like an electrical storm."
1994 30 Great Gospel Songs; 1995 Georgia Live; 1996 40th Anniversary Reunion: Perfecting the Crown; 1996 Beyond the Clouds; 1997 You're Not Alone; 1997 Southern Classics Volume 1; 1997 Kingsmen Standards Volume 1; 1998 The Old Time Way; 1998 Kingsmen Standards Volume 2; 1999 Southern Classics Volume 2; 1999 Shelter; 1999 Not Quite as Big, But ...
"In Christ Alone" is a popular modern Christian song written by Keith Getty and Stuart Townend, both songwriters of Christian hymns and contemporary worship music in the United Kingdom. The song, with a strong Irish melody, is the first hymn they penned together. [1] [2] The music was by Getty and the original lyrics by Townend. It was composed ...
Written and produced by Young, the track runs at 84 BPM and is in the key of D-sharp major. [6] Young's range in the song spans from the notes Eb3 to C5. [7] According to an interview with Power 88 FM radio, the song was inspired after Young read a news report online about a Sudanese woman, who was sentenced to death for her Christian beliefs, but was later rescued. [8]
Louisiana’s prison system routinely holds people weeks and months after they have completed their sentences, the U.S. Department of Justice alleged in a lawsuit filed Friday. The suit against ...
You Are Not Alone (Kinetics & One Love album), 2012; You Are Not Alone (Mavis Staples album) or the title song, 2010; You're Not Alone (Andrew W.K. album) or the title song, 2018 ...
From January 2008 to July 2008, if you bought shares in companies when Richard C. Holbrooke joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -60.3 percent return on your investment, compared to a -15.2 percent return from the S&P 500.
He’s Dismas at Christmas. A penitent thief returned a ceramic baby Jesus to a Colorado fire station with a chicken-scratch note that asked for forgiveness for the “dumb mistake.”