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A depiction of Adam and Eve, whose story West references on the song. Musically, "Everything We Need" is a gospel and R&B ballad, with elements of contemporary trap. [11] [12] [13] It is sonically minimalist, relying on a sparse arrangement. [7] [14] The song includes guitar, contributed by co-writer Bradford Lewis. [8]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 14 December 2024. This list needs additional citations for verification.
The song topped the US Christian Songs, Gospel Songs, Christian Streaming Songs, Christian Digital Song Sales, Gospel Streaming Songs and Gospel Digital Song Sales charts at the same time, following on from West's single "Follow God" (2019) as his second track to top all six of the charts and giving Travis Scott his first appearance on the ...
The song came from a conversation between Clemons and West about Jesus. A psychedelic and gospel track, the song includes samples of "Blow Job", performed by Bruce Haack. It also interpolates "We're All Water", performed by Yoko Ono. The imagery of the lyrics represents the renewal of Baptism and West prays to Jesus in his verse. On April 16 ...
Hallelujah! (gospel song) Hands On (song) Hate On Me; Haven't Seen It Yet; He (song) He Is (Brandy song) He Never Said a Mumblin' Word; He Set Me Free; He Touched Me (song) He's Got the Whole World in His Hands; Hear Me Lord; Heaven (Beyoncé song) Heaven (Emeli Sandé song) Heaven on Earth (Planetshakers song) Hell You Talmbout; Highlights (song)
All songs by Bob Dylan, except "Saved," written by Bob Dylan and Tim Drummond. "When You Gonna Wake Up" includes additional lyrics by Lee Williams. "Gotta Serve Somebody" - Shirley Caesar- 5:48 "When You Gonna Wake Up" - Lee Williams and the Spiritual QC's - 4:43 "I Believe In You" - Dottie Peoples - 5:25 "Are You Ready" - The Fairfield Four- 2:34
The Christian Songs chart is a record chart compiled by Billboard magazine. Launched on June 21, 2003, [1] the chart was ranked during the decade by overall audience impressions (the approximate number of audience impressions made for each play, as determined by BDS data cross-referenced with Arbitron listener information). [2]
It later attracted renewed interest during the American folk music revival. [2] The song was popular in the southern gospel thoroughout the 1960's and early 1970's and sung by many gospel and country acts in concert during this period, as well as several cover versions on record, including Cowboy Copas.