Message from Angus Buchan on October 8, 2020.I just want to say to the people of South Africa, in the Name of The Lord Jesus Christ, that we need to stand firm.We are experiencing, as the farming community of South Africa, the most horrific, most brutal murders that have ever been conceived… .....South Africans and other believers please call on GOD in prayer to stop the ongoing murder of our farmers. May GOD thwart and bring to naught these evil actions and schemes in our country. May GOD raise up a people to power that have the interests of all the citizens in South Africa. In the name of Jesus we pray. ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tmh4wQpE-Lo
Philippians 3:20
“But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ,”
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMBoys7fcuE
Especially for all the romantics!
I do not own this music and derive no financial benefit. Simply a platform for the talented artist. Thanks YouTube.
Story behind the song.
The Sinful Story Behind “Bésame Mucho,” The Most Famous Mexican Song
By: Alonso Martínez, Storyteller - May 29, 2019
When Consuelo Velázquez wrote “Bésame mucho,” she hadn't even had her first kiss.
Wishes wander in our dreams. Wishes are our deepest desires, those we haven’t
really formulated in our reality, but that our minds have perfectly developed. A
kiss in our youth is interpreted in our mind as though we had just climbed the
tallest mountain. The love stories we hear or see around us only feed our desire
to experience them ourselves. This is probably what Consuelo Velázquez felt in
her youth when she wrote the iconic song “Bésame mucho,” since, at the time, she
had never kissed anyone.
Despite the fact that she hadn’t experienced that pleasant but also common
moment in everyone’s life, Velázquez managed to create what’s probably the best
song about kissing. It has everything: the desire and longing to connect with
that person we love in an endless kiss. Her rhymes are simple, but the message
and the narrative she built are both powerful and extremely evocative.
Though it’s believed she wrote “Bésame mucho” before her 20th birthday, the
first formal record of the song is from 1940, when she was already 24 years old.
According to investigator Tony Burton, when Consuelo Velázquez was asked who had
been the inspiration for such an emotional song, she said she hadn’t actually
kissed anyone before and that it had come from her imagination and her own
desires. Not only that, she declared she had been educated to believe kissing
was a sin.
Consuelo Velázquez was born in Mexico City in 1916. Then, when she was only four
years old, she and her family moved to Guadalajara, where she found her passion
for music. Eventually, she went back to Mexico City to become a professional
pianist and composer. Besides “Bésame Mucho” (considered the most covered song
in Spanish), Consuelo Velázquez is also the author of other iconic Mexican
songs like “Déjame quererte,” “Pasional,” and “No me pidas nunca.”
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Toh9QKMvoLc
This is "Amazing Grace" sung to the melody of "House of the Rising Sun". Guitar was played by Mr. Roger Hicks. Posted by Kyle Chisholm in November 2015. Lyrics added to video for your viewing pleasure. Our God is greatly to be praised! Worthy, worthy. Subtitle timing is still a work in progress for me - please forgive the little glitches.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6OALYhlGLA