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Christmas Songs is the eighth studio album and first Christmas album from Jars of Clay, that was released on October 16, 2007, through Gray Matters/Nettwerk. This is the first ever release from the band through their newly created Gray Matters imprint via Nettwerk Music Group.
COGIC evangelist leader Louise Patterson, wife of the late G.E. Patterson, died Sunday evening at 84. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 ...
On 5 June 2023, the UK's Official Charts Company predicted Greatest Hits debuting on the UK Albums Chart Top 100 that week at number 6. [18] The Album entered at number 11, at number 4 on the sales chart. At number 3 on the Download Charts and number 3 on the Independent Charts. The album dropped out of the charts a week later.
Christmas Song is Mannheim Steamroller's fifth Christmas studio album and eighth overall. It was released in 2007 on CD by American Gramaphone , and features twelve Christmas songs . Steamroller co-founder Jackson Berkey does not appear on the album.
"The Bottom Line" is a song by English alternative dance band Big Audio Dynamite, released as both a 7" and 12" single from their debut studio album, This Is Big Audio Dynamite (1985). It was written, and produced by Mick Jones , his debut single with a band singing lead vocals since being fired from the Clash in 1983.
Cowboy Christmas: Cowboy Songs II is the seventeenth album by American singer-songwriter Michael Martin Murphey, his second album of cowboy songs, and his first album of Christmas music. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Track listing
"Cool Yule" is a 1953 Christmas song written by Steve Allen and introduced by Louis Armstrong. [2]It was covered by Roseanna Vitro in 1986 on her album The Time of My Life: Roseanna Vitro Sings the Songs of Steve Allen (released 1999), by Bette Midler in 2006 for her album Cool Yule, and by The Brian Setzer Orchestra on their 2005 album Dig That Crazy Christmas.
The album charted for 3 weeks peaking at #19 on Billboard's Christmas Records album chart on December 21, 1963. [5] Another repackaging and re-release followed in November 1966; this time the album was also retitled Connie's Christmas and received a new catalogue number: E-4399 for mono pressings and SE-4399 for stereo pressings. [6]