Description: Glory Glory Hallelujah Organ Banjo, Americana Music, American Patriotic Music, royalty free mp3, flash music and royalty free sound
Keywords: Glory Glory Hallelujah Organ Banjo, royalty free mp3, flash music, royalty free sound, business music, commercial stock music, television music, film music, royalty free music downloads, royalty-free song, stock music loops, music loops, stock music, cheap royalty free music, royalty free audio, instrumental music, production music library, production music, royalty-free production music, royalty free music, royalty free music library, music library, download music clips, websites music, royalty free sounds, download music, flash music loops, license music, stock music sound effects, background music, simon music library, royalty free stripping music, royality free music com, Folk song settlers slaves worshipers religion sport country traditional hymn victory instrumental abolitionist worldwide success civil war marching armies glory The familiar "Glory, glory, hallelujah" chorus—a notable feature of both the John Brown Song, the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and many other texts that used this tune—developed out of the oral camp meeting tradition some time between 1808 and the 1850s Folk hymns like "Say, Brothers" "circulated and evolved chiefly through oral tradition rather than through print In print, the camp meeting song can be traced back as early as 1806-1808 when it was published in camp meeting song collections in South Carolina, Virginia, and Massachusetts
The tune and variants of the "Say, brothers" hymn text were popular in southern camp meetings, with both African-American and white worshipers, throughout the early 1800s, spread predominantly through Methodist and Baptist camp meeting circuits Various Armies worldwide found words for this tune and the RAF had a song based on Glory Glory it has now spread to sport everywhere and children have their own words
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