Tasha Cobbs Leonard - Youвђ™re Gonna Get The Glory (live At The Ryman, Nashville, Tn/2020) May 2026
: Traditional fiddle, banjo, and mandolin accompany a "hammering rhythm section," a rare but effective fusion in modern African American sacred music.
: Leonard delivers the song with the "passion of an evangelist," moving from vulnerable verses to an "electrifying" climax where she declares a spiritual victory that has "already won". Legacy and Impact : Traditional fiddle, banjo, and mandolin accompany a
Choosing the Ryman—a venue originally built in 1892 as a Union Gospel Tabernacle—allowed Leonard to reclaim the space's spiritual roots. This setting added a layer of "terrifying tension" to the song; her powerhouse vocals echoed through empty pews, mirroring the isolation felt by many during that global crisis. Lyrical Themes: Transformation vs. Restoration This setting added a layer of "terrifying tension"
At the heart of "You’re Gonna Get The Glory" is a "heavy, declarative stance" on pain. Leonard co-wrote the track with contemporary Christian music leaders like and Dante Bowe , moving away from a simple "God will fix this" narrative toward a more profound "God is using this" theology. Leonard co-wrote the track with contemporary Christian music
The Extraction of Beauty: Tasha Cobbs Leonard’s "You’re Gonna Get The Glory"
Tasha Cobbs Leonard’s recorded live at the historic Ryman Auditorium in 2020, stands as a definitive anthem of resilience and spiritual surrender. As the opening track of her chart-topping album Royalty: Live at the Ryman , the song transcends typical gospel worship by reframing human suffering not just as something to be endured, but as "raw material" from which divine beauty is purposefully extracted. A Recording for "An Audience of One"