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"The Voice" was composed, and lyrics written, by Brendan Graham, who had also written and composed "Rock 'n' Roll Kids", the Irish winner of the 1994 contest. [1]Lyrically, "The Voice" is a very Celtic-inspired song, with the singer portraying herself as "the voice" which watches over the world, describing "her" effects on the elements, such as the wind, the seasons, in a similar way to Mother ...
O Little Town of Bethlehem, Christmas song, voice, violin, and piano (text "from the Hymnal"), Harold Flammer, 1920 Romeo in Georgia, male voices, R. L. Huntzinger/Willis Music, 1938 [ 18 ] School songs for Ohio University [ 19 ]
"The Voice Within" was released as the fifth and final single from Stripped on October 27, 2003, by RCA Records. Upon its release, "The Voice Within" received mainly positive reviews from music critics, who called it an inspirational ballad and praised Aguilera's strong vocals on the track, comparing it to Mariah Carey's work. Commercially ...
Five finalists. One winner. The Voice’s two-night live finale kicked off Monday with an evening of strong performances as the remaining hopefuls unleashed their talents onstage with the goal of ...
"Voice of Truth" is a song recorded by Casting Crowns [1] and written by Mark Hall and Steven Curtis Chapman. [2] It was the third song released from Casting Crowns' 2003 debut album, Casting Crowns. "Voice of Truth" reached number one on the US Billboard Hot Christian Songs chart in 2003 and remained in the top spot for 14 weeks.
Five years ago, Beyoncé famously included “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in her now-landmark “Homecoming” set at Coachella and the song was first included ahead of the big game in 2021. But ...
The album received positive reception by writers and critics. In April 1969, Billboard magazine called it a "beautiful" and "inspiring" album. The publication also highlighted Wynette's singing, calling her vocal performance to have a "touch and go teardrop voice". [2] Biographer Jimmy McDonough called it "a riveting collection of gospel numbers".
Today, “Strange Fruit” by Billie Holiday, “A Change is Gonna Come,” Sam Cooke and “What’s Going On,” Marvin Gaye remain relevant to Black America.