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The recitation in "Beyond the Sunset" was originally a poem called "Should You Go First" by Albert "Rosey" Rowswell, the voice of the Pittsburgh Pirates for more than twenty years, and later first put to the 1936 hymn "Beyond the Sunset" by West Virginian performer Chickie Davis. [2]
"Listen to the Mocking Bird" record label. Elton Britt (born James Elton Baker; June 27, 1913 – June 22, 1972) [1] was an American country music singer, songwriter, and musician, who was best known for his western ballads and yodelling songs.
Beyond the Sunset may refer to: Beyond the Sunset, a 1989 Hong Kong film "Beyond the Sunset" (song), a 1950 song by Hank Williams; Beyond the Sunset: The Romantic Collection, a 2004 Blackmore's Night compilation album
Jessie Wanda Williams (née Crupe), known under the stage name Chickie Williams, (February 13, 1919 – November 18, 2007) was an American country musician from West Virginia who is best known for performing on the Wheeling Jamboree radio program on WVVA with her husband Doc Williams and their band the Border Riders. [1]
Brian A. Wren (born 1936 in Romford, Essex, England) is an internationally published hymn-poet and writer. Wren's hymns appear in hymnals of all Christian traditions and have been influential in raising the awareness of theology in hymns. Brian Wren is married to Rev. Susan M. Heafield, a United Methodist pastor.
Beyond the Sunset is a Blackmore's Night compilation album released in 2004 through Steamhammer. It is named after the song "Beyond the Sunset" by Blackmore’s Night from their 1999 album Under a Violet Moon. This compilation was derived from their four studio albums released at that point except for one previously unreleased track; "Once In A ...
In 1886 Hosmer and Gannett published The Thought of God in Hymns and Poems, a book which contained fifty–six pieces by Hosmer. The English hymnologist Percy Dearmer described Hosmer’s hymn, “O Thou in all thy might so far,” as “this flawless poem, one of the completest expressions of religious faith.”
Maureen first appears as a secondary character in the 1973 novel Time Enough for Love.She appears briefly in The Number of the Beast (1980) and The Cat Who Walks Through Walls (1985) and recounts her own life story, and sometimes contradictory versions of events recorded in other Heinlein stories, in 1987's To Sail Beyond the Sunset.