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These Thanksgiving songs, including tunes spanning virtually all genres (including kids' songs!), will get you into the grateful spirit. Rock this playlist while cooking and gobbling down your ...
At its core, Thanksgiving is all about being grateful. You'd be hard-pressed to find a song more awe-inspiring than Louis Armstrong's ode to all that surrounds us. See the original post on Youtube
"In Christ Alone" is considered a Christian credal song for belief in Jesus Christ. The theme of the song is the life, death and resurrection of Christ, [3] and that he is God whom even death cannot hold. The song is commonly known as "In Christ Alone (My Hope Is Found)" and "In Christ Alone (I Stand)" taking verses from the song.
Our Thanksgiving playlist of songs giving thanks includes Queen, Led Zeppelin, Louis Armstrong, Aretha Franklin, Beastie Boys and Earth, Wind & Fire.
Bob Dylan recorded the song for his 1962 debut album Bob Dylan.He recorded it again with the Band, which is included on The Basement Tapes.. Other artists to cover the song include B.B. King, Peter, Paul and Mary (as "One Kind Favor"), Lightnin' Hopkins (as "One Kind Favor"), Canned Heat (as "One Kind Favor" on Living the Blues), the Grateful Dead (as "One Kind Favor"), [4] Mike Bloomfield ...
The song has been described as including a demonstration of "the weak view of providence" in Dylan's songs, [6] that is, a view that God usually allows humans to act as they want, but occasionally intervenes when a grave injustice has been done or a special plan needs to be carried out. [6] In "Joey", this is demonstrated in the lines:
One of Davis' most well-known songs, "Death Don't Have No Mercy" was covered by Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, and Hot Tuna in the 1960s, reaching the era's young white rock audience. Its performance also took on political significance as the decade ensued with growing opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War .
When Smith started performing the song in church, a visiting United States Military officer took the song to Europe, from where its popularity spread. [1] In 1986, Integrity Music published the song on their Hosanna! Music audio cassette but credited it as "author unknown". Later that year, Don Moen released the song on his Give Thanks album. [3]