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His publishing of "O Holy Night" saw high levels of popularity in the United States, especially within the North. [3] Although disputed due to a lack of formal documentation, the first song played over a radio broadcast is usually attributed to inventor Reginald Fessenden's performance of "O Holy Night" on violin in 1906. [12]
Oh_Holy_Night_(Kevin_MacLeod)_(ISRC_USUAN1100127).oga (Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 4 min 1 s, 109 kbps, file size: 3.14 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
O Holy Night is the fourth album by American country music artist John Berry. It was released on September 26, 1995 by Patriot Records. The album peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. [1]
O' Holy Night is the 30th studio album released by Irish singer Daniel O'Donnell in 2010. It contains newly recorded versions of well-known Christmas songs. [1]
O Holy Night! is a 1996 Christmas album by Christian singer Sandi Patty released on Word Records. [2] [3] It is her sixteenth and second Christmas album (her first since 1983's Christmas: The Gift Goes On) with six tracks produced by Patty's long-time producer Greg Nelson and five songs selected from the 1992 Hallmark Christmas album Celebrate Christmas! produced by Fred Salem with ...
O Holy Night is a Christmas carol composed by Adolphe Adam in 1847. O Holy Night may also refer to: O Holy Night, a 1976 album by Luciano Pavarotti; O Holy Night (John Berry album), 1995; O' Holy Night (Daniel O'Donnell album), 2010; O Holy Night (Jackie Evancho EP), 2010
"O What a King" is a song by American contemporary Christian music singer Katy Nichole, released on October 21, 2022, as a standalone single. [1] Nichole co-wrote the song with Brandon Heath and Jeff Pardo. [2] "O What a King" peaked at number one on both the US Hot Christian Songs chart and on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart. [3]
The song has been performed in several variants, sometimes expanded to up to eleven verses, [2] but in the most common variant as sung by modern interpreters, it is reduced to four verses, removing the mention of Razin and reducing the three omens in the dream to a single one. [3] These lyrics may be translated as: