Soul Train Music Awards - Soul Train Music Awards By Year

Soul Train Music Awards By Year

  • 1987 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1988 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1989 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1990 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1991 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1992 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1993 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1994 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1995 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1996 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1997 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1998 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 1999 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2000 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2001 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2002 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2003 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2004 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2005 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2006 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2007 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2009 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2010 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2011 Soul Train Music Awards
  • 2012 Soul Train Music Awards

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Famous quotes containing the words soul, train, music and/or year:

    Youth is the period in which a man can be hopeless. The end of every episode is the end of the world. But the power of hoping through everything, the knowledge that the soul survives its adventures, that great inspiration comes to the middle-aged.
    Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936)

    Perfect present has no existence in our consciousness. As I said years ago in Erewhon, it lives but upon the sufferance of past and future. We are like men standing on a narrow footbridge over a railway. We can watch the future hurrying like an express train towards us, and then hurrying into the past, but in the narrow strip of present we cannot see it. Strange that that which is the most essential to our consciousness should be exactly that of which we are least definitely conscious.
    Samuel Butler (1835–1902)

    It is from the blues that all that may be called American music derives its most distinctive character.
    James Weldon Johnson (1871–1938)

    The boys dressed themselves, hid their accoutrements, and went off grieving that there were no outlaws any more, and wondering what modern civilization could claim to have done to compensate for their loss. They said they would rather be outlaws a year in Sherwood Forest than President of the United States forever.
    Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (1835–1910)