25 Years Later, Vince Gill Adds a New Verse About Heavenly Reunion to "Go Rest High on That Mountain"

Country music veteran Vince Gill is adding a new verse to his classic hit "Go Rest High on that Mountain" twenty five years later. With its uplifting Christian message of eternal life, "Go Rest High" has long been considered a standard across funeral and memorial services. And it's one of Gill's indispensable songs on his concert setlist.
"Go Rest High" was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from Gill's MCA Nashville Records album When Love Finds You. It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob of a heart attack in 1993.
While the first verse is a sober acknowledgment of the end of a troubled life. The second verse expresses both grief and the assurance of life after death. Now, the new verse arrives with the blessed promise of a heavenly reunion: "You're safely home in the arms of Jesus / Eternal life, my brother's found / The day will come I know I'll see him / In that sacred place, on that holy ground."
"In all seriousness, as I looked at it as a piece of work, I thought it was unfinished in a way that a song should close the door and have an end and tell the whole story," Gill tells PEOPLE.
The song won the CMA's Song of the Year award in 1996 and a BMI Most-Performed Song award in 1997. It also received two Grammy Awards for Best Male Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Song in the 38th Grammy Awards.
Tags : Vince Gill vince gill news vince gill go rest high on that mountain new verse vince gill go rest high on that mountain
Hot Trends
-
Phil Wickham Offers an Intimate Take of Bethel Music's "Raise a Hallelujah"
-
Darlene Zschech Celebrates 12 Years as Senior Pastor of HopeUC After Leaving Hillsong Church
-
Joy Williams Reveals the Real Reason Behind Civil War's Breakup
-
Squire Parsons, Southern Gospel Singer, Dies
-
"American Idol's" John Foster Delivers a Faith-Filled Version of Brooks & Dunn’s "Believe"
-
How the Late Natalie Cole Found God in Her Bout with Drugs
-
TAYA Leaves Hillsong Church
-
Amy Grant Records Exclusive “Home (Layana’s Song)" for R.J. Halbert’s Star-Studded “Caretaker” Audiobook
-
FREE MUSIC: Philippa Hanna's "You're Still God"
-
TAYA Opens Up About Her Pregnancy & Her New Single
-
The Young Escape's "Older" Offers Support to Those Going Through Life's Transitions
-
"Prosper," A New TV Series Loosely Based on Hillsong Church, Airs
-
7eventh Time Down Offers a Rock-Worship Rendition of "This Is Amazing Grace"
-
Chester Bennington Dies: Was He a Christian?
-
Did You Know that Rapper DMX Is A Deacon and Aspires to be a Pastor?
Most Popular
-
Phil Wickham Offers an Intimate Take of Bethel Music's "Raise a Hallelujah"
-
Darlene Zschech Celebrates 12 Years as Senior Pastor of HopeUC After Leaving Hillsong Church
-
Joy Williams Reveals the Real Reason Behind Civil War's Breakup
-
Squire Parsons, Southern Gospel Singer, Dies
-
"American Idol's" John Foster Delivers a Faith-Filled Version of Brooks & Dunn’s "Believe"
-
How the Late Natalie Cole Found God in Her Bout with Drugs
-
TAYA Leaves Hillsong Church
-
Amy Grant Records Exclusive “Home (Layana’s Song)" for R.J. Halbert’s Star-Studded “Caretaker” Audiobook
-
FREE MUSIC: Philippa Hanna's "You're Still God"
-
TAYA Opens Up About Her Pregnancy & Her New Single
-
The Young Escape's "Older" Offers Support to Those Going Through Life's Transitions
-
"Prosper," A New TV Series Loosely Based on Hillsong Church, Airs
-
7eventh Time Down Offers a Rock-Worship Rendition of "This Is Amazing Grace"
-
Chester Bennington Dies: Was He a Christian?
-
Did You Know that Rapper DMX Is A Deacon and Aspires to be a Pastor?