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Po' Girl is a Canadian music group whose style derives from folk, country and jazz. The band evolved from a series of jam sessions, in 2000, between Trish Klein of The Be Good Tanyas and Allison Russell, then of Fear of Drinking. The two met up again in 2003 and named themselves Po' Girl.
His publishing of "O Holy Night" saw high levels of popularity in the United States, especially within the North. [3] Although disputed due to a lack of formal documentation, the first song played over a radio broadcast is usually attributed to inventor Reginald Fessenden's performance of "O Holy Night" on violin in 1906. [12]
Po'Girl is the self-titled debut album by the Canadian group Po' Girl. It was released June 10, 2003. It was released June 10, 2003. It was released in the United States on August 28, on HighTone Records, and in Europe on January 26, 2004 on Cadiz Music.
Allison Russell is a Canadian singer-songwriter, musician and activist.. Prior to her solo music career, Russell performed as a member of various music groups including Po' Girl, [1] Birds of Chicago, [2] Our Native Daughters [3] and Sisters of the Strawberry Moon. [4]
O Holy Night! is a 1996 Christmas album by Christian singer Sandi Patty released on Word Records. [2] [3] It is her sixteenth and second Christmas album (her first since 1983's Christmas: The Gift Goes On) with six tracks produced by Patty's long-time producer Greg Nelson and five songs selected from the 1992 Hallmark Christmas album Celebrate Christmas! produced by Fred Salem with ...
O Holy Night is a Christmas carol composed by Adolphe Adam in 1847. O Holy Night may also refer to: O Holy Night, a 1976 album by Luciano Pavarotti; O Holy Night (John Berry album), 1995; O' Holy Night (Daniel O'Donnell album), 2010; O Holy Night (Jackie Evancho EP), 2010
Music portal; Canada portal; This is a set category. It should only contain pages that are Po' Girl albums or lists of Po' Girl albums, ...
The incorrect myth that it was Adam's "O Holy Night" (which Fessenden never even said or wrote) has been perpetuated over the years by various pop-culture publications, but it's just a myth. Softlavender ( talk ) 01:15, 10 December 2017 (UTC) [ reply ]