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"The True Meaning of Christmas" by Reverend Virgil Caldwell [5:06] "What Child Is This?" by Mom Winans [5:19] "Little Drummer Boy" by Darwin Hobbs [6:42] "Mary Had a Little Lamb" by Sharon Moore-Caldwell M.D. [4:01] "A Christmas Moment With Pop Winans" by Pop Winans [1:07] "Sweet Little Jesus Boy" by Ronald Winans & Adrian Smith [4:44]
Winans Phase 2 was formed in 1998 and recorded on Myrrh Records. It consists of Marvin Winans Jr., Carvin Winans Jr., Michael Winans Jr., and Juan Winans, the son of Carvin Sr.. Marvin Jr. started a production company called M2 Entertainment and produced songs for his mother Vickie Winans' album Woman To Woman.
"Sweet Jane" is a song by American rock band the Velvet Underground. Appearing on their fourth studio album Loaded (1970), the song was written by band leader and primary songwriter Lou Reed, who continued to incorporate the piece into live performances after he left the band. When Loaded was originally released in 1970, the song's bridge was
The group's last recording was in 1995. They have been involved in various Winans family projects where they are credited as "The Winans", e.g. November 2000's Christmas: Our Gifts To You. The eldest brother of the group Ronald Winans died on June 17, 2005, of retaining fluid. [1]
The ten-song project is a blend of traditional and urban contemporary songs. [9] Her first radio single, "How I Got Over" is Winans' personal testimony. Taking a line from an old hymn classic favorite, Winans creates a brand new song that celebrates her victories, faith and trust in God. [10]
The song was released as the lead single of the Winans' fifth album, Decisions. "Ain't No Need to Worry" is a mixture of contemporary gospel and contemporary R&B. The single peaked at number 15 on the Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart. [1]. The song was sampled by american rapper JPEGMafia, in his song "Hazard Duty Pay!", from the offline ...
Not much of the song makes much sense in the modern age, but knowing the rich history behind the elaborate song (which ends up totaling 364 gifts, by the way) puts the seemingly odd lyrics in ...
"Truckin '" is associated with the blues and other early 20th-century forms of folk music. [6]"Truckin '" was considered a "catchy shuffle" by the band members. [7] Garcia commented that "the early stuff we wrote that we tried to set to music was stiff because it wasn't really meant to be sung... the result of [lyricist Robert Hunter getting into our touring world], the better he could write ...