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At San Quentin. Johnny Cash at San Quentin is the 31st overall album and second live album by American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash, recorded live at San Quentin State Prison on February 24, 1969, and released on June 16 of that same year. The concert was filmed by Granada Television, produced and directed by Michael Darlow. [3]
The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago; Old Apache Squaw (I'm Just An) Old Chunk Of Coal (But I'll Be A Diamond Someday) Old Doc Brown; Old Fashioned Tree; Old Gospel Ship; The Old Rugged Cross; Old Shep; The Old Spinning Wheel; Old Time Feeling; Ole Slew Foot; On The Evening Train; On The Line; On The Road Again; On The Trail; On The Via ...
Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, The Carter Family and The Statler Brothers – The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago; Roy Clark – Medley (In The Summertime, 12th Street Rag) From Season 1, Episode 6, originally aired July 19, 1969. The Statler Brothers – "Flowers on the Wall" Johnny Cash – Working Man Blues; Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash ...
1832. (1832) Published. 1762. (1762) "A Charge to Keep I Have" is a hymn written by Charles Wesley. It was first published in 1762 in Wesley's Short Hymns on Select Passages of the Holy Scriptures. The words are based on Leviticus 8:35. It is most commonly sung to the hymn tune Boylston by Lowell Mason.
How Great Thou Art. " How Great Thou Art " is a Christian hymn based on an original Swedish hymn entitled " O Store Gud " written in 1885 by Carl Boberg (1859–1940). The English version of the hymn and its title are a loose translation by the English missionary Stuart K. Hine from 1949.
John Newton, 1778 According to the Dictionary of American Hymnology, "Amazing Grace" is John Newton's spiritual autobiography in verse. In 1725, Newton was born in Wapping, a district in London near the Thames. His father was a shipping merchant who was brought up as a Catholic but had Protestant sympathies, and his mother was a devout Independent, unaffiliated with the Anglican Church. She ...
The hymn first appeared in Songs of Praise in 1931. [2] The hymn is sometimes performed by folk singers on account of the folk origins of its tune, notably by Martin Simpson during Prom 5 (Folk day - part 2) in the BBC Proms on July 20, 2008. [3] [4] An up tempo version can be found on Blyth Power's 1990 album Alnwick and Tyne. [5]
The rendition by the Clancys and Makem has been described as "by all accounts... the most influential" of the many recorded versions. [18] The song "Restless Farewell", written by Bob Dylan and featured on The Times They Are a-Changin' from 1964, uses the melody of the nineteenth century versions of "The Parting Glass" with Dylan's original ...