Skip to main content

Top 7 Nigerian Gospel Songs Of The Week | 1st Week Of December, 2019

Top 7 ArtWelcome to December!  We’re happily counting down days & weeks away to the end of this amazing year.

GospelHotspot’s Top 7 Gospel Songs Of the Week throws the spotlight on seasonal Gospel hits of all musical styles by fast-rising Gospel artistes for this week.

This 1st week in the Month of December has the hottest line up of topnotch Gospel tunes to grace your gospel minds this advent season.

7. Joguns – You Are My Song

Joguns – You Are My Song

Joguns comes out with a new curative piece titled “You Are My Song”, a slow contemporary highlife produced by Pchi is no doubt to make you internalize and bring to your mind and soul Shalom.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

 

6. Ihuoma Isong – The King Is Born

Ihuoma Isong – The King Is Born

The Yuletide is here and one of Nigeria’s finest voices, Ihuoma Isong comes through with a song to celebrate the birth of the King Of Glory. She titles this one “The King Is Born”.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

5. Solomon Lange – You Have Done Me Well

Solomon Lange – You Have Done Me Well

The Award-winning and Renowned gospel artiste, Solomon Lange is here with a new song titled “You Have Done Me Well”.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

4. Dr Deola – The Priceless Gift

Dr Deola – The Priceless Gift

Dr Deola releases a new single titled ‘The Priceless Gift’, a contemporary highlife song that shows express gratitude on the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ as a ‘Priceless Gift’ from God to us.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

3. Sharonee – Bigger

Sharonee – Bigger

Nigerian Gospel singer, Sharon Ajao aka Sharonee drops new single, a soft rock worship song titled ‘Bigger’.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

2. Amb. Lawrence x Min. Winifred – No One Compares

Amb. Lawrence x Min. Winifred – No One Compares

Multi-talented and fast rising Gospel artist, Amb Lawrence and an energetic anointed worship leader, Minister Winifred comes out with an Afro-beat tune titled “No One Compares”.

 

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

1. Jonathan Kome – My Confidence

Christ My Confidence is a song with a prayer in my heart, that for every soul that hears it, it may bring them to a place of oneness with Jehovah Gibbor milcha mah (Mighty in battle), for in Him their confidence lies, not minding the impossibilities that come their way. Deuteronomy 1:8, Ephesians 3:12, Romans 5:1-2, James 1:2-4, Psalms 94:17-23. – Jonathan Kome.

DOWNLOAD MP3

 

Did We Miss A Hit Song? Do you not agree with our listing? Add Your Voice, Leave Comments Below

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD NEW GOSPEL SONGS

The post Top 7 Nigerian Gospel Songs Of The Week | 1st Week Of December, 2019 appeared first on Gospel Songs 2019.



from Gospel Blog – Gospel Songs 2019
via GOSPELMUSIC

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

These funny food quotes will make you laugh like crazy

Food is not only an essential part of the daily routine but also the most exciting one. We cannot imagine our life without something yummy. How do you make ordinary eating fun and unforgettable? We bring to your attention amazing food quotes which will definitely make you smile. Image: unsplash.com (modified by author) Source: UGC Are you looking for interesting ideas to entertain your interlocutor while having lunch at work or family dinner? Then this article is definitely for you! Good food quotes Below are food quotes, aphorisms and witty statements. This is an exciting and extraordinary collection of the top "pearls of wisdom" on this topic. Here you can find funny jokes and sayings, intelligent thoughts of philosophers and original words of great thinkers and inspiring statuses from social networks, as well as many other things. The best appetite comes without food. I love calories. They are dаmn tasty. An empty stomach is the Devil's playground. Have bre

The Transitional Phase of African Poetry

The Transitional Phase The second phase, which we have chosen to call transitional, is represented by the poetry of writers like Abioseh Nicol, Gabriel Okara, Kwesi Brew, Dennis Brutus, Lenrie Peters and Joseph Kariuki. This is poetry which is written by people we normally refer to as modem and who may be thought of as belonging to the third phase. The characteristics of this poetry are its competent and articulate use of the received European language, its unforced grasp of Africa’s physical, cultural and socio-political environment and often its lyricism. To distinguish this type of poetry we have to refer back to the concept of appropriation we introduced earlier. At the simplest and basic level, the cultural mandate of possessing a people’s piece of the earth involves a mental and emotional homecoming within the physical environment. Poems like Brew’s ‘‘Dry season”, Okara’s “Call of the River Nun”, Nicol’s “The meaning of Africa” and Soyinka’s “Season”, to give a few examples,

The pioneering phase of African Poetry

The pioneering phase We have called the first phase that of the pioneers. But since the phrase “pioneer poets” has often been used of writers of English expression like Osadebay, Casely-Hayford and Dei-Anag, we should point out that our “pioneer phase” also includes Negritude poets of French expression. The poetry of this phase is that of writers in “exile” keenly aware of being colonials, whose identity was under siege. It is a poetry of protest against exploitation and racial discrimination, of agitation for political independence, of nostalgic evocation of Africa’s past and visions of her future. However, although these were themes common to poets of both English and French expression, the obvious differences between the Francophone poets and the Anglophone writers of the 1930s and 1940s have been generally noted. Because of the intensity with which they felt their physical exile from Africa, coupled with their exposure to the experimental contemporary modes of writing in F