20 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Praise"

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01:25
Hymn tune Lauda Anima (Praise, My Soul, the King of Heaven)
Author: Melody: John Goss (1800-1880); setting & sound file: Rabanus Flavus (Peter Gerloff)
00:00
73:39
Mpumc praiseteam 6-9-16.
Author: Simunye
00:00
00:53
Someone in the back of the church is listening to the worship service.
Author: Kenseals
00:00
00:05
Recorded 7 voices of me for an joyfull yeah! looking forward to hwt!.
Author: Druki
00:00
02:20
Man in the streets of manchester praising the lord and the bible. Recorded with an iphone on the streets of manchester in 2015.
Author: Andreasherzog
00:00
00:34
Overdubbed whispering. Very intense. This sample loops seamlessly. Recorded, edited and mixed using audacity and zoom h2.
Author: Unfa
00:00
00:02
Author: qubodup
00:00
00:03
Author: qubodup
00:00
00:01
Author: qubodup
00:00
02:38
The God of Abraham Praise performed by the Concert Band of the United States Air Force Band. Track 53 from Esprit de Corps (1997).
Author: Untitled
00:00
01:07
Velichanie_Obikhod (Song of Praise)
Author: Moscow Patriarchal Choir of the Russian Orthodox Church
00:00
00:05
Patting a horse to praise them.
Author: Topschool
00:00
00:51
China’s first official anthem was used in the last months of the Qing dynasty. The anthem was by Bo Tong, a high-ranking officer of the Imperial Guard and Yan Fu, commander of the Qing Navy. Guo Cengxin, Master of Ceremonies, made some minor adjustments and arranged the music. The primary purpose of the anthem was to advocate the Qing Dynasty and create a sense of well-being among the Chinese. The anthem was officially adopted on October 4, 1911, but was used for centuries beforehand in official Qing dynasty functions, going back to when Emperor Kang Xi was crowned in 1675. It’s official use as China’s royal anthem was short-lived, as the Wuchang Uprising, meant to end China’s imperial era, started six days after the anthem was officially adopted. The Republic of China was created on January 1, 1912 and the emperor abdicated on February 12. As such, the anthem did not gain much notoriety in China. “Gong Jin’ou” was made the anthem again in 1917 for 12 days when a former Qing general started a coup and reinstated the Qing Dynasty. Since this was used as a praise to the emperor, this is also a royal anthem. This song was banned in Communist China after 1949, but the ban is now lifted (probably after 1978).
Author: Lyricist: 嚴復 (Yan Fu) Composer: 溥侗 (Bo Tong)
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00:54
Someone sitting in the back of the church is singing along to the church worship.
Author: Kenseals
00:00
01:59
Please use n enjoy. . . Praise buddha :d.
Author: Untitled
00:00
05:23
Very devout american radio amateur from ohio praise the lord. He is happy that his friends and family have come through the corona crisis well. It must be very helpful to use radio signals to reach the lord.
Author: Klankbeeld
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00:13
I'm using a wired karaoke microphone and recorded it on audacity. Clapping and people cheering are coming from my hands and my voice, respectively. Each clap is recorded manually (some are near the mic and some are far away) and as well as the cheering voice. I recorded it at my living room. Recorded and uploaded on december 2017. People clapping at first then audience praise at the last.
Author: Riancodgamer
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