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A New Day Has Come is the eighteenth studio album and seventh English-language album by Canadian singer Celine Dion, released by Sony Music on 25 March 2002. It was her first new studio album since her 1998 Christmas album These Are Special Times.
"Surrender" is a late 1970s teen anthem, describing the relations between the baby boomer narrator and his G.I. Generation parents. His mother frequently warns him about the girls he will meet, as he will never know what diseases he will catch from them, as exemplified by a rumor about "a soldier's [penis] falling off" as a result of "some Indonesian junk that's going around".
"I Surrender" (Celine Dion song), 2002 "I Surrender" (Clea song), 2006 "I Surrender (To the Spirit of the Night)", a 1987 song by Samantha Fox "I Surrender" (David Sylvian song), 1999
The hymn's chorus repeats "I surrender all" three times, and an additional two times in the men's part. The entire hymn, if sung with each refrain and second-voice part, contains the word "surrender" 30 times, and the word "all" 43 times. [8] The hymn's first stanza stresses complete surrender: "All to him I freely give".
An instrumental 1930s-esque Jazz cover of this song was recorded for the 1996 movie Kansas City as part of the soundtrack. This song was also the comical introduction to the pre-code film, The Tip Off 1931, in which actor Eddie Quillan is a window singer at a radio repair shop. He mouths the song while it is being played over a new "Human Voice ...
[10] [11] Along with Williams, artists who featured in the original soundtrack also performed the tracks. [11] The same day, the song "I See a Victory" was released as a promotional single from the album. [12] On October 20, 2016, the studio versions of the songs "Runnin'" [13] and "Surrender" was released as the second and third single from ...
But that was before Celine was known and filmmakers and marketing people had not done what they should have done for Celine and [her] songs. So I felt I owed her a Titanic chance, but I could [still] have used Sissel there." [329] Instead, Kyrkjebø completed much of the score for the soundtrack album, Titanic: Music from the Motion Picture. [325]
The song peaked at No. 13 on the Christian Songs Billboard chart and appeared on the 2012 year-end Christian Songs chart at No. 27. [3] The song's bridge features lines from the popular hymn "I Surrender All" by Judson W. Van DeVenter and Winfield Scott. [4] [5] This song was also listed at No. 12 on Worship Leader's Top 20 Songs of 2014. [6]