The Statler Brothers - How Great Thou Art
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- Опубліковано 12 кві 2010
- The Statler Brothers sing "How Great Thou Art" from their "An Evening With The Statler Brothers" TV show. This is the one that has Lew DeWitt on it, it was taped shortly before he got too sick to travel with the Statlers any longer.
I won’t be the first or last on this thread to say it, but Lew Dewitt was an incredible talent who was lost far too young. What a voice.
It is heart breaking that Lew became ill and died so young .A voice that will never be matched.
Yes he was
Absolutely 💯
I feel blessed to have seen them once before Lew quit touring. They were still a wonderful group but never quite the same without him.
Lew had the most pure tenor voice ever. He harmonized so well and his voice blended so perfectly with the other 3. So many tenors are so piercing with their voices and almost dominate the others. Lew's voice was so complimentary and beautiful. Lew was only the lead when he was supposed to.
First time I heard them sing this song, I was driving. Turned the radio up. The DJ said that is so good, he just had to play it again, and he did. I bought the album that day 😁.
In 1885, Carl Boberg, a Swedish editor and future politician, was walking home in the bayside town of Mönsterås, located on Sweden’s south-eastern coast. A thunderhead appeared on the horizon. Lightning flashed. Thunderclaps shook the air, sending Boberg running for shelter.
When the storm began to relent, he rushed home. He opened his windows to let in the fresh bay air, and the vision of tranquility that greeted him stirred something deep in his soul. The sky had cleared. Thrushes sang, and in the distance, the resonant knell of church bells sounded. With the juxtaposition between the roaring thunderstorm and such bucolic calm as background, Boberg sat down and wrote “O Store Gud”-the poem that, through a winding series of events would become “How Great Thou Art.”
After being published in a local newspaper, an unknown Swede put “O Store Gud” to the tune of a Swedish folk song, whose name has also been lost to history. In the late 1800s several versions were published, but it wasn’t until the early 1900s that “O Store Gud,” which translates literally to “O Mighty God,” hopped the Swedish border.
In the first decade of the 20th century the song was translated into German. A handful of years later a Russian version appeared. The first English language version wouldn’t be penned until 1925. But this English iteration, translated by the Swedish-American E. Gustav Johnson, is a far cry from the song we know today. It took another quarter century, a British missionary, and a new translation before the song developed into its now recognizable form.
In the early 1930s, Stuart K. Hine, an English missionary, first heard the Russian version of “O Store Gud” while in the Ukraine. For years he and his wife sang the song with locals before he finally sat down and translated it into English. Translation is of course more art than science, and Hine took some liberties, most particularly with the title, which in 1949 he rechristened “How Great Thou Art.”
Hine published his English translation alongside the Russian version in Grace and Peace, a magazine that he published and was circulated to missionaries in over 15 countries. The story of “How Great Thou Art” might have ended here, in relative obscurity, were it not for a British-American theologian traveling to India, a singing cowboy, and a popular American evangelist on a self-described crusade.
When J. Edwin Orr, a British-American theologian and evangelist, travelled to India in 1954, music was the farthest thing from his mind. He was there to preach. But while there he heard an English version of “How Great Thou Art” sung by a Naga choir from the state of Assam in north-eastern India. He was so impressed by the song he brought it back to America and had it performed at a conference for college students where he was speaking.
In attendance at that fateful conference were the children of Tim Spencer, a singing cowboy and actor who had found fame singing in the Sons of the Pioneers alongside Bob Nolan and Roy Rogers. At that time, Spencer owned Mana Music, Inc, a publisher of Christian music. He quickly arranged to buy the rights to the song and then did what all good publishers do-he started pushing the song.
As late as 1954, “How Great Thou Art” remained all but unknown in the U.S., but with Mana Music’s backing the song eventually landed in the hands of George Beverly Shea, famed soloist in Billy Graham’s travelling crusade. Graham reportedly loved the song and quickly made it his evangelical crusade’s signature song. Given Graham’s reach, Shea all but introduced the song to the nation. He sang it live on radio, before stadiums filled with thousands of people-and during nationally televised events like the 1957 Madison Square Garden Crusade, which ran for 16 weeks and was viewed by an estimated 96 million people.
Then came Elvis. Though Shea and other popular artists like Tennessee Ernie Ford and Loretta Lynn recorded versions before him, Elvis’s recordings-his more restrained studio version from 1967 and his slightly looser live version from 1974, both of which earned him Grammys-are generally considered the canonical versions against which all others are compared. That said, many people today think first of Carrie Underwood’s chart-topping rendition from 2011.
Regardless of your favorite recording, when we reflect upon the various chance encounters and serendipitous occurrences that combined to birth “How Great Thou Art” and bring it to prominence, it’s hard not to be awed by the sheer improbability of it all; fate, dumb luck, God’s grace, call it what you will, the path from “O Store Gud” to “How Great Thou Art” is nothing if not unlikely. And still today is sung at Church of Sweden!
This is what Gospel and Country Music is all about. The true talent to sing a beautiful song with nothing taking away anything. The Statler Brothers were and will always be a big part of the reason that I love Music, true country and gospel at it's best
I grew up listening to these fellows. They are my favorite by far. Every harmony is so spot on. We miss them.
I wish I had found this Beautiful Sound earlier ❤❤❤❤
My mom always cranked this song every time she listened to the CD's. She was put on hospice on July 27th of 2016. She lived for another 3 weeks, and in the hour of her passing, I played her this song! She went as peaceful as can be! Every sunday, I am in my office, I have her candle burning, along side her Urn, and I play this a couple times.Thank you for all your GREAT music!
Hello how are you doing
bless her heart
Lew and Harold are reunited again and singing before the Throne of GOD !
so sad that DeWitt became too ill to keep touring and died so young. Never be anyone else like him.
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
You are so right, I could listen to Lew day and night.
They are all great and my favorites ❤
Harmony that can't be matched, never mind will, no one can match a sound like this. I grew up listening to their music and just in complete awe at the harmony they have. Trully one of the greatest bands ever and this is the best version of this song ever.
I totally agree☺️❤️
Miss the Statler Brothers so much
This is what we sang for my dad when he passed…..he absolutely loved this song❤️❤️💔💔💔💔
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
NOBODY DID THIS SONG LIKE THE STATLERS.
This is the most beautiful song, it comforts me.
Elvis
Nobody did ANY song like the Statler Brothers.
They do this wonderfully, but the true impact of this song can not even come close to that of George Beverly Shea.
Hello how are you doing
Rest in peace Harold Reid! A great bass singer!
In my mind he's the best. I'm sure he and Lew are in heaven singing for the God they lovingly shared with the world in song.
Indeed
Rest in Peace Harold, gone but never forgotten!! One of the best!
this has always been my favorite version of this song. God bless the Statler brothers
Hi
One of the best quartets ever! Never get tired of listening to them!!
No group could be as good thank you
Fly high in the heavens with our GOD, Harold Reid!
Is that true
Oh Harold how sad to hear this. But you are in the arms of our Lord and he is there with you.
Hello how are you
Another bass for the heavenly choir
@@ritagreening5149 hi Rita
Rest in peace, Harold. The Statlers were always one of my favorites. This is one of my favorites of their songs.
Harold just died today, what a loss, but heavens gain..♥ ♥
so sad. So glad we got to see them every Jan until they retired. They were sing at the GRAND THEATRE IN GALVESTON TX.
@@neldajohnson6879 aàaaàaaaaa
Sad to learn of this. Thanks.
I Loved there music so much
They did a very good man god want him to come a sing with his angels he know he was sick an had to come home
Rest in peace Harold. Your singing with God now.
Just not sure why 668 people would dislike this group or this song. That was my daddy’s favorite song. We played that at his funeral. He was 84 and still sang this song. What an enjoyment these guys gave us. ❤️❤️
People who do not have a relationship with God nor an appreciation of quality music..
When they sing it goes to my very soul and makes me feel at piece. I play their songs over and over.
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
This is so beautiful. The melody was played at our Mother’s Funeral and I cried all the way thru it.
Hi Teresa
My mother would not have liked it, because she was an atheist, but I love it
8 years ago today we laid my beautiful Grandma to rest. This was her favorite song.
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
what a terrific song , and you hardly hear anymore. He is great , He has done so much
and we don't recognize it
I miss Lew. All of the guys are super talented, including Jimmy Fortune. However there was just something about Lew . A little touch of sorrow in his voice. Great performer and a criminally underrated songwriter as well.
Lew Dewitt had a beautiful voice---he really made the group really sound amazing.
The greatest group singing the greatest hymn.
This is, for me, the one and only ultimate recording of this beloved gospel song. It was my father's favorite and and I offered it up as the last song loved ones sang at his funeral, and in my mind he was strong, sitting in his favorite chair singing, eyes closed, singing loud an lovingly to the God he adored. Wish I could tell these wonderful singers how he an I are for the talent and love they infuse into every song they performed.
My dad loved these guys. I have happy memories of listening to them (and singing along). Sometimes I just have to go back 40-45 years and listen to them.
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
How great is this song and their harmonius voices!
Hi
The Statler Brothers have always been a religious experience for me.
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Beautiful music....and of course the Lyrics are unsurpassed !! Overall what really "seals it for me"...are the Harmonies!!
The very best harmony I have ever heard. They were in a class all by themselves. I love literally all of their songs. Their roots really shine on the old gospel standards. I remember watching their TV show where the highlight was the gospel number sung with just the piano player.
The first time I ever heard the Statler Brothers was over 50 years ago when they opened for a Johnny Cash concert. I knew then they were great and listened to them to this day. Miss you Harold and Lou.....RIP
Harold and Lew singing together again. I wish I could hear them.
Had a BIG TME day
Love Lew!
The tenor and the bass. One day all four, and we'll be there to hear them singing all together again. They made sweet music on earth and will continue, even sweeter, in heaven.
Actually, all five!
I feel the same way!
My favorite hymn of all time. It always brings tears to my eyes. R. I. P. Mr. DeWitt.
My father, who has been gone for 16 years used to sing this. It always reminds me of him. He, too, had a beautiful voice. We played this at his funeral. They Statler Brothers sing this beautiful hymn. My favorite version
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
I absolutely loved this song and no one can do it better than the Statler Brothers!,,!
Its a Swedish hymn from 1860 and sung every christmas in Scandinavian churches! ua-cam.com/video/uWOFkA5ZAls/v-deo.html
They do this song so beautifully.
Harold is living with his Heavenly Father now, perhaps even singing this song right now.
7
RIP
Lew DeWill has a beautiful voice--so sad he passed away so young.
* Lew DeWitt!!
No words are available to us to describe the beauty and majesty of this message. Be thankful ..... every day.
The Statler Brothers will always be number one in gospel music for me! I love them all for sharing their talent.
Hi Linda
In 1885, Carl Boberg, a Swedish editor and future politician, was walking home in the bayside town of Mönsterås, located on Sweden’s south-eastern coast. A thunderhead appeared on the horizon. Lightning flashed. Thunderclaps shook the air, sending Boberg running for shelter.
When the storm began to relent, he rushed home. He opened his windows to let in the fresh bay air, and the vision of tranquility that greeted him stirred something deep in his soul. The sky had cleared. Thrushes sang, and in the distance, the resonant knell of church bells sounded. With the juxtaposition between the roaring thunderstorm and such bucolic calm as background, Boberg sat down and wrote “O Store Gud”-the poem that, through a winding series of events would become “How Great Thou Art.”
After being published in a local newspaper, an unknown Swede put “O Store Gud” to the tune of a Swedish folk song, whose name has also been lost to history. In the late 1800s several versions were published, but it wasn’t until the early 1900s that “O Store Gud,” which translates literally to “O Mighty God,” hopped the Swedish border.
In the first decade of the 20th century the song was translated into German. A handful of years later a Russian version appeared. The first English language version wouldn’t be penned until 1925. But this English iteration, translated by the Swedish-American E. Gustav Johnson, is a far cry from the song we know today. It took another quarter century, a British missionary, and a new translation before the song developed into its now recognizable form.
In the early 1930s, Stuart K. Hine, an English missionary, first heard the Russian version of “O Store Gud” while in the Ukraine. For years he and his wife sang the song with locals before he finally sat down and translated it into English. Translation is of course more art than science, and Hine took some liberties, most particularly with the title, which in 1949 he rechristened “How Great Thou Art.”
Hine published his English translation alongside the Russian version in Grace and Peace, a magazine that he published and was circulated to missionaries in over 15 countries. The story of “How Great Thou Art” might have ended here, in relative obscurity, were it not for a British-American theologian traveling to India, a singing cowboy, and a popular American evangelist on a self-described crusade.
When J. Edwin Orr, a British-American theologian and evangelist, travelled to India in 1954, music was the farthest thing from his mind. He was there to preach. But while there he heard an English version of “How Great Thou Art” sung by a Naga choir from the state of Assam in north-eastern India. He was so impressed by the song he brought it back to America and had it performed at a conference for college students where he was speaking.
In attendance at that fateful conference were the children of Tim Spencer, a singing cowboy and actor who had found fame singing in the Sons of the Pioneers alongside Bob Nolan and Roy Rogers. At that time, Spencer owned Mana Music, Inc, a publisher of Christian music. He quickly arranged to buy the rights to the song and then did what all good publishers do-he started pushing the song.
As late as 1954, “How Great Thou Art” remained all but unknown in the U.S., but with Mana Music’s backing the song eventually landed in the hands of George Beverly Shea, famed soloist in Billy Graham’s travelling crusade. Graham reportedly loved the song and quickly made it his evangelical crusade’s signature song. Given Graham’s reach, Shea all but introduced the song to the nation. He sang it live on radio, before stadiums filled with thousands of people-and during nationally televised events like the 1957 Madison Square Garden Crusade, which ran for 16 weeks and was viewed by an estimated 96 million people.
Then came Elvis. Though Shea and other popular artists like Tennessee Ernie Ford and Loretta Lynn recorded versions before him, Elvis’s recordings-his more restrained studio version from 1967 and his slightly looser live version from 1974, both of which earned him Grammys-are generally considered the canonical versions against which all others are compared. That said, many people today think first of Carrie Underwood’s chart-topping rendition from 2011.
Regardless of your favorite recording, when we reflect upon the various chance encounters and serendipitous occurrences that combined to birth “How Great Thou Art” and bring it to prominence, it’s hard not to be awed by the sheer improbability of it all; fate, dumb luck, God’s grace, call it what you will, the path from “O Store Gud” to “How Great Thou Art” is nothing if not unlikely.
This is great. Have never seen this one. No one on this earth can sing this song better than the Statlers. It's wonderful to see Lew looking well. May he rest in peace. Thank you very much for this post. Very much appreciated.
Hello how are you
@@christiandonaldson31 AS
I miss this group. It is no wonder they were voted the best group of the century. When they retired it broke my heart. Oh, these songs of inspiration......
Darrell Burnham amen a great American band
Love to hear group sang, always will. Lloyd Crites 2018
To Darrell Burnham-amen, b rother, they are my favorite vocal group. I, too , was sad- dened by the fact that they a re no longer performing. Wo uld have loved to meet them in person. It's a tragic sham e Lew suffered from Crohn's Disease. I no doubt he'd've s tayed 'til the end taking the bows they so richly deserve d. As you know Lew person- ally handpicked Jimmy to b- e his successor. Long live th e Statler Brothers!.
Me too
Darrell Burnham y
As a Believer in Jesus' shed blood as payment for our sins,I guarantee you that Harold does rest in Peace!
All the guys know Jesus as their Savior!!
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
I love this done by the original Statlers.Says a lot how I need to start my day.
Hi Betty
No one has a voice as beautiful as Lew DeWitt
Hello how are you
This is rare brothers coming together with such talents and sharing it with the world thanks so much to you all God bless you all always.
One of the greatest songs ever written/sung.
Praising God with the Statler's in 2019 and telling the world How Great My God Is !!!!!!!!!!!!!!?
I agree with you! God bless everyone...
Lew had such a beautiful voice.. He was very nice too
No greater thought,standing before GOD,singing or saying to him,HOW GREAT THOU ART.
This was on the first album I bought and I came to the Lord! Has blessed my heart for over 50 years!
I HAVE LOVED THE STATLER BROTHER THE FIRST TIME A HEARD THEM ALL THOSE YEARS AGO
Praises be always to Jesus Christ
My mother is 100 and has pneumonia. Playing religious music like How Great Thou Are and familiar music from the past like Blueberry Hill, a sentimental song my mom loves. is very comforting too. This music helps put my mom to sleep which she needs to heal.
God works in mysterious ways, whichever, it always works!
Hello how are you
@@andreackerman7023 hi
Lew was always my favorite...maybe because I always sang harmony as he did. My father loved this song, and especially this rendition. It was the last song we sang at his funeral. He once told me of attending a church service at the church's camp. As the final notes drifted off into the distance, he had this wonderful feeling of peace and tranquility...I hope he found it as we sent him to meet God, free of the disease and dysfunction that plagued his human body.
Hello how are you doing my friend
I was honored to spend some time with Harold and Don one day in Clifton Forge'VA. Both were true gentlemen in every since of the word and they made me feel like they had known me for years. I miss the Statlers and I'm really am going to miss Harold. Rest easy my friend... Barry
I totally love this group. RIP Harold
Many years ago I was 18 years old the Statler Bro’s music was introduced to me.I had never heard anything like it before. The music was on an LP record, it’s a wonder I didn’t wear it out. I just played and played . Now I’m 64 years old and have just listened to it again. Their voices haven’t changed at all. The harmony they would sing together was simply beautiful, something that has stayed with me. Hearing this tonight has bought back many memories. Would love to have a CD of their music. Thoroughly enjoyed listening to this music laying in bed.❤️God blessed them with Angelic voices.
Hello how are you
This is FANTASTIC and I have grown up to them singing. Thank you Boys for all the GREAT Songs you guys have giving to us all!
This is probably my favorite performance of this awesome hymn.
In 1885, Carl Boberg, a Swedish editor and future politician, was walking home in the bayside town of Mönsterås, located on Sweden’s south-eastern coast. A thunderhead appeared on the horizon. Lightning flashed. Thunderclaps shook the air, sending Boberg running for shelter.
When the storm began to relent, he rushed home. He opened his windows to let in the fresh bay air, and the vision of tranquility that greeted him stirred something deep in his soul. The sky had cleared. Thrushes sang, and in the distance, the resonant knell of church bells sounded. With the juxtaposition between the roaring thunderstorm and such bucolic calm as background, Boberg sat down and wrote “O Store Gud”-the poem that, through a winding series of events would become “How Great Thou Art.”
After being published in a local newspaper, an unknown Swede put “O Store Gud” to the tune of a Swedish folk song, whose name has also been lost to history. In the late 1800s several versions were published, but it wasn’t until the early 1900s that “O Store Gud,” which translates literally to “O Mighty God,” hopped the Swedish border.
In the first decade of the 20th century the song was translated into German. A handful of years later a Russian version appeared. The first English language version wouldn’t be penned until 1925. But this English iteration, translated by the Swedish-American E. Gustav Johnson, is a far cry from the song we know today. It took another quarter century, a British missionary, and a new translation before the song developed into its now recognizable form.
In the early 1930s, Stuart K. Hine, an English missionary, first heard the Russian version of “O Store Gud” while in the Ukraine. For years he and his wife sang the song with locals before he finally sat down and translated it into English. Translation is of course more art than science, and Hine took some liberties, most particularly with the title, which in 1949 he rechristened “How Great Thou Art.”
Hine published his English translation alongside the Russian version in Grace and Peace, a magazine that he published and was circulated to missionaries in over 15 countries. The story of “How Great Thou Art” might have ended here, in relative obscurity, were it not for a British-American theologian traveling to India, a singing cowboy, and a popular American evangelist on a self-described crusade.
When J. Edwin Orr, a British-American theologian and evangelist, travelled to India in 1954, music was the farthest thing from his mind. He was there to preach. But while there he heard an English version of “How Great Thou Art” sung by a Naga choir from the state of Assam in north-eastern India. He was so impressed by the song he brought it back to America and had it performed at a conference for college students where he was speaking.
In attendance at that fateful conference were the children of Tim Spencer, a singing cowboy and actor who had found fame singing in the Sons of the Pioneers alongside Bob Nolan and Roy Rogers. At that time, Spencer owned Mana Music, Inc, a publisher of Christian music. He quickly arranged to buy the rights to the song and then did what all good publishers do-he started pushing the song.
As late as 1954, “How Great Thou Art” remained all but unknown in the U.S., but with Mana Music’s backing the song eventually landed in the hands of George Beverly Shea, famed soloist in Billy Graham’s travelling crusade. Graham reportedly loved the song and quickly made it his evangelical crusade’s signature song. Given Graham’s reach, Shea all but introduced the song to the nation. He sang it live on radio, before stadiums filled with thousands of people-and during nationally televised events like the 1957 Madison Square Garden Crusade, which ran for 16 weeks and was viewed by an estimated 96 million people.
Then came Elvis. Though Shea and other popular artists like Tennessee Ernie Ford and Loretta Lynn recorded versions before him, Elvis’s recordings-his more restrained studio version from 1967 and his slightly looser live version from 1974, both of which earned him Grammys-are generally considered the canonical versions against which all others are compared. That said, many people today think first of Carrie Underwood’s chart-topping rendition from 2011.
Regardless of your favorite recording, when we reflect upon the various chance encounters and serendipitous occurrences that combined to birth “How Great Thou Art” and bring it to prominence, it’s hard not to be awed by the sheer improbability of it all; fate, dumb luck, God’s grace, call it what you will, the path from “O Store Gud” to “How Great Thou Art” is nothing if not unlikely. ua-cam.com/video/uWOFkA5ZAls/v-deo.html
I remember when the Statler's were on the Johnny Cash show and they were great. Loved every song they ever sang ~ Chuck Feb 8, 2020
They could sing anything. I grew up hearing their old songs, I especially like Do You Remember These. Harold was my favorite of the group. They had a variety show on tv, the late 1970s, I think. It only lasted one season, and I always watched it.
Hello how are you
I saw this group when they played the Princeton County Fair 1965. It was a very early gig for them with Johnny Cash. I knew they were stars immediately! I bought their hit as soon as it it the store, “Counting Flowers on the Wall”. I played it hundreds of times. They were totally fabulous! I was sad to hear that they retired.
Hello
Lew DeWitt was one of my Mother-In Law’s favorite singers, Lew performed at several small concerts, which We were able to attend and We left the concert with signed picture and one of his guitar picks which he threw and it landed at my feet!!!!
Lew DeWitt: best tenor in country music. Miss them.
Best tenor EVER! I miss him.
Ferrantti
Lew DeWitt 1938 - 1990 !! RIP /CD
I wholeheartedly agree!! He never "oversang" but blended in with the others. His voice had such a poignant sound, sometimes like a heartfelt cry. I love Lew DeWitt and The Statler Brothers; NO one will ever truly take Lew's place. :)
I agree with you 100%
I sure do miss these men performing- they were the greatest quartet I know and this is one of my favorite songs of theirs.
Hello
The world today needs this. All the greatest music and artists ever created have come and most niw are gone from this earth, but their music remains. As time goes by, their songs are heard fewer and fewer times, as the world around us is crumbling into chaos.
Man! Lew's voice really did shine!
the stalkers was great
@@ronaldfriar9476 the Statlers
Hello
I have cancer and listen to this beautiful song makes me feel so wonderful this made my day.
Thank you brothers😘
Incredible. Beautiful song and amazing talent
I have always loved to listen to them singing they were all so great Rest in Piece Harold one of the greatest groups ever
Hello!!! How are you doing today, please pardon me for intruding into your privacy but I just wanted to know if you’re a fan ? Have a great day… Stay Safe!
@@gregnormal5101 they are the best to bad after they retired Harold died I have always loved there music I have several of there cds play them all th time when i am in my car
@@karenrenner2237 Hey! That’s very good to know, I just can’t stop myself from listening to this song anytime am alone! If I may ask which of all their songs is your favorite? Have a great day… Stay Safe
Still, and always, one of the greatest praise songs
The world needs this,thank you. May the Lord bless you and your’s. We serve a Almighty God! Jeremiah 32:27 is true!
Facts, the Lord God of all flesh. There is nothing too hard for him.
these guys could sing! thank you for giving us a reason to love and live for so many years!!!
Saw this group at the county fair in Spencer Iowa and they closed with this song. Perfectiimundo! 👏🏼👍💕😊
I saw them at the Nebraska State Fair in the late 1970's. The crowd would have stayed all night for encore after encore, but Harold said, "Folks, I'm about to hot to death! This has GOT to be our last song."
Hello
They were always a class act, no long hair or holes in their jeans, true entertainers.
I was fortunate enough to get to see them in concert a couple of years before they retired. Still feel lucky to have seen them.
I miss these guys so much. Once in awhile I can't help but go down memory lane and put on a statler bros. cd. Well done guys well done
although i've lived in denver for the last 39 years some of my best memories are my 77 pontiac grand prix driveing at nght listening to the statler brothers on my in dash 8 track player back in central Arkansas. my how time flyers
yes it was sad to hear of Harold's death, but we know that he is with God. I think this is the best version of How Great Thou Art I have heard.
Hello
Great rendition of this timeless hymn
such wonderful harmony!!I love these guys!
I believe the Statler Brothers have the greatest blend of voices I've ever heard. May God bless them for the blessings they've given so many by using their marvelous voices to glorify Him.
Jo-Ann Mac k if
Jo-Ann Mack I never thought they could replace Lou but Jimmy was absolutely awesome! I saw them twice in concert. Once in San Diego then years later at a small community play house with Jimmy and he Nailed this song that they had to do a few more lines over and over. Sat about 5 rows away from them. I know every song they did old and new. This was in Pensacola Florida.
Russ Tom and
Agreed!!
Hello Ann
Bravo! One of the great classics sung with great harmony! Love the Statler Bros.
The Statler Brothers - How Great Thou Art, Singing a Great Song
Good Song
Magnificent! Saw them perform in Chico, CA and in Redding, CA. Superb! 💖⭐
their version has always been my favorite. I have missed them so much. We know where Harold is now. Eternally happy
Hello how are you doing
Statler Brothers really sing it! By far, one of my favorites!
Hello
Best gospel quartet ever
great music
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Just what my weary soul needed on this Sabbath day .
One of the brst
That is supposed to b 1 of the best.rxcuse the error
Beautiful.
I began listening to the Statler Brothers as a teen back in the 70's and have never stopped. I love to sing Bass and have always emulated Harold but obviously I just cannot reach his level.
This is my favourite hymn we sing in church
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@@christiandonaldson31 am fine thank you
@@audreysimon2887 hope you are safe from the virus?
@@christiandonaldson31 yes thank you staying safe it’s so stressful though I think we are all in the same boat am in Liverpool England we’re you from please
@@audreysimon2887 I'm texting from Texas. Good to know you are safe in this scary time . Will like to know you more my friend
one of the best versions on the planet
I just love this song and the Boys certainly do it justice.
I really miss them.Such a great group.Loved their music & always will.
I really miss hearing Lew DeWitt sing. I listen to them sing this song at least once a day. He has an awesome voice!
Oh come on guys, let's stop comparing Lew and Jimmy. they were both good, equal. Just enjoy them.
Lew Dewit is always my hero after he help me by saying to me I was cute. My father had said to me I was ugly and dumb!
Hello
@@barbarashaw8136 hello
Probably the very best quartet of all time!!!
My Grandpa loved the Statler Brothers and this was his favorite song. And just at the age of 12 I started to catch on and listen to the Statler Brothers. For Christmas and my Birthday I received the O Happy Day record and a few others. Then a week ago my Grandpa had a brain bleed which took his life. I know he is always looking down at me and he is in a lot better place. He is also with the dear lord and probably meeting his parents after a long time. I will always love my Grandpa and thank him daily of the music that he influenced me with.
Arkie.L Vandeventer 1937-2020
I will miss you Grandpa
Amen. Absent from the body present with the Lord