Skip to main content

Cece Kings' new gospel single 'Beautiful',is to die for.

The first time I listened to this song, I actually didn't know what to expect.
Cece kings already looks beautiful and I wondered if her voice could sound beautiful as well.

More importantly, I wondered if the producer did a good job.
Then I press play and symphonies began to waft through.

'It is just starting' I said to myself.
Then, I relaxed to savour the song. Then I was weak, then I felt goose pimples, then my eyes began to well up .
I wasn't too sure if it was  the simple lyrics or her voice and the modulations she had to conquer as she sang into the soprano's stratosphere.

It was magic.
Cece Kings is really awesome and she is another big thing in  Nigeria gospel scene.

Download her song and listen to it

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

'be rest assured' is wrong. Find out why and how to pronounce 'Colonel

#ComeToClassWithKingIfey #WrongEnglishWeSpeak  Good morning beautiful earthlings of King Ifey's blog(KIB). You all are officially KIB students😀😀. Welcome to the permanent site.  You can rest assured your spoken English will get an unprecedented make-over right here on KIB. Alright let's get  down to brass tacks.  Today,  we are looking at the idiom Rest assured What does it mean

Do you say 'talk more of' or 'talk less of'? Also, how to pronounce 'parliament'

My beautiful KIB students, today,  you will be happy learning the correct way to express yourselves. Nigerians have a way of changing typical English expressions to suit them. Someone still had to argue with me that the English expression 'Better the devil you know than the devil you don't "  is so wrong and does not make sense.  He opines that angel should be there.  He forgets that English can be quite illogical to our Nigerian minds. Lol. People say things like. 'He has not even proposed talk more of walking down the aisle with me' 'He does not have a car,  talk less a house" Well these two expressions or collocations are not common in British and American English. Here are the universal conventional English collocations for Nigerian English's  'Talk more of' and 'Talk less of',  #LetAlone 'Let alone' is  used to indicate that something is far less likely or suitable than something else already mentioned. E.g ...