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Paul Joseph Baloche [1] (/ b ə ˈ l ɒ ʃ / bə-LOSH; born on June 4, 1962) is an American Christian music artist, worship leader, and singer-songwriter. A native of Maple Shade Township, New Jersey , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Baloche was the worship pastor at Community Christian Fellowship in Lindale, Texas , for 26 years.
On 5 January 1948 Bernard Hilda recorded the song with his Orchestra. On the other side of the disk, he recorded "C'est si bon". On 20 May 1948 Henri Betti performed the song on the piano on the radio program Un quart d'heure avec where he also performed "Dictionnaire" (lyrics by Jacques Pills) and "La Chanson du Maçon" (lyrics by Maurice Chevalier and Maurice Vandair).
A Greater Song is a live album by Paul Baloche released in 2006. The album was recorded at Community Christian Fellowship in Lindale, Texas, where he served as the Worship Pastor at the time.
Barry Westman of All About Worship wrote that the album contains "a batch of fresh, powerful, creative new songs for the church". [2] Allmusic ' s Robert Ham wrote that the "songs build and build until they overflow with choruses that sound amazing when sung by a huge group of people", and stated that "Loud or soft, Baloche knows how to pull at the spirit, calling for listeners to lift up ...
"What Can I Do" (The Black Belles song), 2010 "What Can I Do" by Gotthard from Human Zoo, 2003 This page was last edited on 14 March 2023, at 10:36 (UTC). Text ...
Pages in category "Songs written by Paul Baloche" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Paul Baloche – lead vocals, acoustic guitars; Chris Springer – acoustic piano, keyboards; Ari Heinekanen – Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3 organ Austin Deptula – programming, loops, strings
CompassionArt is a studio album by the songwriters' charity of the same name. [1] It features the entire CompassionArt song writing team, Paul Baloche, Chris Tomlin, Tim Hughes, Matt Redman, Darlene Zschech, Israel Houghton, Michael W. Smith, Graham Kendrick, Andy Park, Steven Curtis Chapman, Stu Garrard and charity co-founder Martin Smith, [2] [3] along with several other collaborators.