WOW 1996
WOW 1996 is a compilation album of thirty contemporary Christian music that was released on November 7, 1995. This represented the first installment in a highly successful annual series named WOW Hits. The album peaked at No. 144 on the Billboard 200 chart in 1995. It also landed in seventh place on Billboard's Top Contemporary Christian album chart that year, and reached second place in 1996.[1][2] The album was certified as platinum in the year 1997 by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[3]
WOW 1996 | ||||
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Compilation album by Various artists | ||||
Released | November 7, 1995 | |||
Genre | CCM | |||
Label | Sparrow | |||
Producer | Various | |||
Various artists chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic |
Track listing
Disc one
- "Cry for Love" – Michael W. Smith
- "Children of the World" – Amy Grant
- "Heaven in the Real World" – Steven Curtis Chapman
- "God is In Control" – Twila Paris
- "Count It All Joy" – BeBe & CeCe Winans
- "Stand" – Susan Ashton
- "I Wish We'd All Been Ready" – dc Talk
- "The Great Divide" – Point of Grace
- "For Future Generations" – 4Him
- "Deep Calling Deep" – Margaret Becker
- "His Love Is Comin' Over Me" – Clay Crosse
- "When Love Comes To Life" – Out of the Grey
- "Common Creed" – Wes King
- "True Believers" – Phil Keaggy
- "No Doubt" – Petra
Disc two
- "Build My World Around You" – Sandi Patty
- "Don't Look Away" – Bryan Duncan
- "Sweet Days of Grace" – Cindy Morgan
- "Biggest Part of Me" – Take 6
- "Go Light Your World" – Kathy Troccoli
- "Send Out a Prayer" – Anointed
- "Brother's Keeper" – Rich Mullins
- "Home Run" – Geoff Moore & the Distance
- "Great Lengths" – PFR
- "Shine" – Newsboys
- "Step of Faith" – Carman
- "Concert of the Age" – Phillips, Craig & Dean
- "The Class of '95" – Wayne Watson
- "The Anchor Holds" – Ray Boltz
- "Taking My Time" – Ashton, Becker & Denté
gollark: ... also array literals, bee their bad docs.
gollark: Please also give me write access to the repo.
gollark: Oh, right, array indexing.
gollark: ```python# parsita-based pseudocode syntax parserfrom stmt import *from parsita import *from parsita.util import constantdef compose(f, g): return lambda x: f(g(x))def map_expr(x): start, end = x if end == "": return start return Op([start, end[1]], end[0])def map_unop_expr(x): return Op(x[1], x[0])def aliases(name, aliases): p = lit(name) for alias in aliases: p |= (lit(alias) > (lambda _: name)) return pclass ExprParser(TextParsers): ε = lit("") IntLit = reg("\-?[0-9]+") > compose(IntLit, int) StrLit = "'" >> reg("[^']*") << "'" > StrLit # TODO escapes (not in "spec" but could be needed) FloatLit = reg("\-?[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") > compose(FloatLit, float) Identifier = reg("[a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z_0-9]*") > Var BracketedExpr = "(" >> Expr << ")" UnaryOperator = lit("NOT") Start = FloatLit | StrLit | IntLit | BracketedExpr | (UnaryOperator & Expr > map_unop_expr) | Identifier # avoid left recursion problems by not doing left recursion # AQA pseudocode does not appear to have a notion of "operator precedence", simplifying parsing logic nicely BinaryOperator = aliases("≤", ["<="]) | aliases("≠", ["!="]) | aliases("≥", [">="]) | lit("DIV") | lit("MOD") | lit("AND") | lit("OR") | reg("[+/*\-=<>]") End = (BinaryOperator & Expr) | ε Expr = (Start & End) > map_exprparse = ExprParser.Expr.parsex = parse("1+2+3 != 6 AND NOT 4 AND x + y")if isinstance(x, Failure): print(x.message)else: print(x.value)```
gollark: <@332271551481118732> Expression parsing is done, I think.
References
- Phares, Heather (1995). "WOW 1996: The Year's 30 Top Christian Artists and Songs". Allmusic. Retrieved December 26, 2008.
- "WOW 1996". Billboard. 1995. Archived from the original on June 23, 2013. Retrieved December 26, 2008.
- RIAA official site Archived December 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on February 22, 2009.
External links
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