Soul Shine Song

Let your soul shine it s better than sunshine it s better than moonshine damn sure better than rain yeah now people don t mind we all get this way sometimes gotta let your soul shine shine till the break of day sometimes a man can feel this emptiness like a woman has robbed him of his very soul a woman too god knows she can feel like this.
Soul shine song. Soulshine with lyrics on screen the allman brothers band 1994 this song is property of the respective authors artists and labels the lyrics and pictures. The song was written by lead singer ed roland who is the son of a baptist minister. When you can t find the light that guides you through a cloudy day when the stars ain t shining bright you feel like you ve lost you re way when the candle light of home. Let your soul shine it s better than sunshine it s better than moonshine damn sure better than rain lord now people don t mind we all get this way sometimes got to let your soul shine yeah shine on and on and on.
Soulshine by allman brothers band 1994. Oh it s better than sunshine it s better than moonshine damn sure better than rain yeah now people don t mind we all get this way. The song s title originates from haynes s nickname given by his father. This song launched the career of collective soul.
He is a guitarist for the allman brothers band and is the primary singer guitarist and songwriter for gov t mule he also released a solo album in 1992 tales of ordinary madness haynes also spent the summer of 2004 playing with the dead a group featuring the remaining members of the grateful dead. It is best known as a recording that haynes band the allman brothers band released on their 1994 album where it all begins featuring gregg allman on vocals. Roland rejects the christian band label explaining that one doctrine cannot speak for all of the band s members. Ed roland wrote it in 1989 when he was in a band called marching two step.
Zerastyle hotmail it we don t own all of these songs. Soulshine is a song written by warren haynes and originally recorded by larry mccray on his 1993 album delta hurricane.