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"Wise Up" is a 1985 single by Christian music singer Amy Grant. It was released as the third single from her Unguarded album. The song reached The Billboard 100, as well as the Adult Contemporary and Christian music charts in the United States. "Wise Up" is an uptempo, inspirational song with a rock sound, featuring heavy percussion and guitars.
You Light Up My Life: Inspirational Songs, or simply You Light Up My Life, is the fourth studio album by the American country singer LeAnn Rimes.Released in the United States by Curb Records on September 9, 1997, when Rimes was 15 years old, it followed her third album and major label debut Blue (1996).
"Live the Life" is a 2002 song and debut single by Fundisha Johnson and features Jermaine Dupri. Co-written by Johnson and Dupri, Billboard called the song an "inspirational ditty about the ups and downs of life" with "a feel-good sound that is awfully catchy." [1] The song was first featured on the soundtrack to the film Hardball. [2]
Her Greatest Inspirational Songs is a compilation album by Amy Grant. Focusing on songs from the early years of Grant's career from 1977 to 1985. It was released after Sony BMG acquired the rights to the catalog spanning that period.
"How Do I Live" is a song written by Diane Warren. It was originally performed by American singer and actress LeAnn Rimes and was the first single from her second studio album, You Light Up My Life: Inspirational Songs (1997). [3] It also appeared on international editions of her follow-up album Sittin' on Top of the World (1998).
Patti Smith performed the song on the ABC television program Kids Are People Too, accompanied by Brooks on piano. [32] Mexican pop singer, Yuri recorded the song cover “Tú iluminas mi vida” for her first album released in 1978. Filipina singer, Angeline Quinto recorded the song for her second album Fall in Love Again released in 2012.
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That's really how the whole feel of the song came about, because when Colin brought it up, at about half that tempo, on a nylon-string guitar, it was a case of, "Well, this is a great melody, and great subject matter, but it's going to go nowhere like that. [11] Among the idiosyncrasies of the song's arrangement is Partridge's high backing vocals.