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Selah was originally formed by brother and sister, Todd and Nicol Smith, along with friend Allan Hall. Smith also worked on a solo project. His debut album Alive was released on August 10, 2004 with Curb Records. [8] The album steered from the common sound Selah offered, better known for well integrated harmonies, singing hymns and melodic ballads.
Dale Lewis reviews the album for TitleTrakk and begins, "Selah, best known for their contemporary hit "You Raise Me Up," returns with a very personal and poignant album in You Deliver Me." [ 3 ] Suzie Brock of Cross Rhythms gives the album 8 out of a possible 10 and writes, "Throughout the whole album the standard of the lead vocals and ...
Selah went on to win a Dove Award for their debut album. Their second album Press On was released in 2001, and also won a Dove Award, along with many nominations for individual songs in the album. In April 2000, Nicol Smith released her self-titled solo debut on Curb Records. [ 5 ]
The album's accompanying film of the same name features an alternative version of the song. A rendition of the New Jerusalem Choir's "Revelations 19:1" was released on the Sunday Service Choir's debut studio album, Jesus Is Born (2019). Despite being sampled within "Selah", the former was released two months later.
Bless the Broken Road: The Duets Album is an album from contemporary Christian group Selah. It features the collaboration of other artists of the genre in each song. The album was released on August 8, 2006.
A&R – Bryan Stewart; Producers – Morten Schjolin (Track 1); Allan Hall, Todd Smith, Nicol Sponberg and Jason Kyle (Tracks 2-12, additional production on Track 1).
James Christopher Monger of AllMusic writes, "Dove award-winning, contemporary gospel trio Selah have made a career out of mining the past and fusing it with the present, crafting new hymns that honor the classics, and bringing old hymns out of the shadows and into the light."
Be Still My Soul is the debut album of Selah, released in 1999.. The album consists of modern arrangements of traditional Christian hymns. [3] The first track starts out with a Kituba translation of Pass Me Not, O Gentle Savior, a language singers and siblings Nicol and Todd Smith know because of a missionary upbringing in Subsaharan Africa. [4]