Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"I Made It" is a gospel song that lasts five-minute, 40-second. [4] [7] Instrumentation is provided by piano, organ, vibraphone, glockenspiel, harmonica, and a guitar.They were played by Tribbett, Fair, Paul Jackson, Jr., and Frank Brunot.
Tribbett was born on January 26, 1976, in Camden, New Jersey.He was raised in Apostolic Pentecostal El Bethel church in Camden, New Jersey. His father is Bishop Thomas Tyrone Tribbett, a former pastor, and his mother is Neicy Tribbett, a minister as well as a disc jockey in the Philadelphia and New York area.
Victory Live! is the third American gospel music album released by Tye Tribbett & Greater Anointing on Columbia Records in May 2006. It was recorded live on Saturday, December 3, 2005 at Philadelphia's Deliverance Evangelistic Church.
Stand Out is the fourth album by American gospel music artist Tye Tribbett and the final album to feature his choir Greater Anointing (G.A.) before the choir was retired in 2009. The album is the group's second live recording.
After graduating from West Chester University, he began his career as opening act for Tye Tribbett, recorded with him on his Greater Than (2013), and was included in Tribett's anthology Wow Gospel 2018. [2] His relationship with Tribett was described as "apprentice". [1] He also showed a "love for Marvin Gaye-styled rolling grooves," [3]
"SEC Nation" viewers can hear the new version of the song before the first "SEC Nation" of the 2024 season. Eden will also release the song on all music platforms on Friday, Aug. 30 at midnight.
The Prince of Egypt: Inspirational [1] was one of three albums produced alongside the release of DreamWorks's 1998 film, The Prince of Egypt.This album, including songs written and inspired by the film, featured contemporary Christian music and gospel artists, and was released on November 17, 1998.
Jimmy Douglass and Timbaland mixed the song at Manhattan Center Studios in New York City. Timberlake arranged the vocals and was a backup singer alongside Timbaland, Marsha Ambrosius, Tye Tribbett and Greater Anointing. [2] The ad lib "Cry me, cry meeee" at the end of the song was among Ambrosius's contributions. [8]