Introduction

“A Voice from Heaven”: A Lost Duet That Feels Like a Miracle
In music, some songs are written with notes. Others are written with memory, love, and something far deeper than sound. The rediscovery of “You’re Still Here”—a never-before-heard duet between Guy Penrod and his son Logan Penrod—belongs to the latter.
This isn’t just a release. It feels like a moment that was waiting to find its way back to the world.
Hidden for years among forgotten studio recordings, the song has resurfaced like a message carried through time. And from the very first note, it doesn’t sound like a polished production—it feels like a conversation. Intimate. Raw. Alive.
Guy’s unmistakable baritone—rich, powerful, and deeply soulful—blends effortlessly with Logan’s warm, heartfelt voice. But what makes this duet unforgettable isn’t just the harmony. It’s the emotion between the lines. The pauses. The breath. The sense that something greater than music is happening.
“You’re Still Here” is more than a title—it’s a promise.
A reminder that love doesn’t end where life does. That even when distance, time, or loss tries to separate us, the connection remains—quietly living on in memory, in faith, in the echoes we carry inside.
The lyrics are simple, but they cut deep. They speak to anyone who has ever missed someone, anyone who has held onto a voice, a moment, or a feeling they couldn’t let go of. It’s not just nostalgia—it’s healing. A song that doesn’t just describe loss, but gently transforms it into hope.
For Guy Penrod, whose legacy with gospel music has already touched millions, this moment feels different. More personal. More eternal. And for Logan, it’s not just a collaboration—it’s a continuation of something sacred.
In this song, they are no longer just father and son.
They are one voice.
Since its release, listeners across the world have described the same reaction: tears within seconds. Not because the song is sad—but because it’s honest. Because it reaches a place words often cannot.
One listener wrote: “This isn’t just music. It’s a reunion.”
And maybe that’s exactly what it is.
Because “You’re Still Here” reminds us of something we often forget: love doesn’t disappear. It transforms. It lingers. It finds new ways to speak—even through silence, even through time.
In the end, this duet is more than a rediscovered track.
It’s proof that some bonds don’t belong to this world alone.
They belong to eternity.