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CCLI maintains a list of songs that are in the public domain. [10] If all of the songs that an organization uses are in that list, then the organization does not need to pay the CCLI license fee. As of March 2015, CCLI's list contained nearly 24,000 public domain songs.
In Christ Alone" appeared on CCLI's "Top 25 CCLI Songs" American songs list for the first time in the February 2008 report although it had appeared in the CCLI chart for Canada, Australia and New Zealand prior to that. In 2008, the song was included in the release of Christian Worship: Supplement for the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod ...
[citation needed] He has appeared on Songs of Praise and worked with other Christian musicians, including Keith Getty, Lou Fellingham and Phatfish. [citation needed] In 2005, Cross Rhythms magazine described Townend as "one of the most significant songwriters in the whole international Christian music field". [3]
"Holy Is the Lord" is a song by Chris Tomlin, featured on his album Arriving, ... and number seven on CCLI's Top 25 Worship Songs List, as of August 2007. [2]
Currently it is No. 24 on the list. [1] CCLI UK report it as the fifth most popular printed, projected or recorded song in mid-2006. [2] In Australia this song was the seventh most used song by the beginning of 2007 [3]
Among our list of the best karaoke songs, we've got the classics you know and love from the best female country singers, pop and rock hits that'll have the whole room dancing, ...
Name of song, writer(s), original release, and year of release Song Writer(s) Original release Year Ref. "45 Revolutions Per Minute" [a] John Fogerty: Pendulum (40th Anniversary Edition) 2008 [1] "Bad Moon Rising" John Fogerty Green River: 1969 [2] "Before You Accuse Me" Ellas McDaniel † Cosmo's Factory: 1970 [3] "Bootleg" John Fogerty Bayou ...
The song's popularity has reached far beyond the band's; CCLI places the song among the 30 most-sung worship songs in the United States [1] and has been called a "modern worship classic". [2] According to Martin Smith, the author of the song: "That song just wrote itself in about five minutes. The same chords the whole way through the song.