I have thoroughly enjoyed this song... so I want to share it with everyone with this message from the creator, Christopher Blythe. , "In 1845, W.W. Phelps wrote what should have been the greatest song of his career. It was called "A Voice from the Prophet: Come To Me." You remember Phelps, he is sometimes called Joseph Smith's ghostwriter. He is the author of "If You Could Hie to Kolob," "The Spirit of God," and "Praise to the Man." In this song, Phelps sings from the perspective of Joseph Smith recently deceased and inviting us to join him in eternity. The image is of Joseph Smith as psychopomp, the figure who greets us upon death - a role that artists have imagined held by Michael the Archangel, the grim reaper, St. Peter, and so on. I love this. It is also the first public reference to Heavenly Mother! For some reason, I cannot find a single version of this song on the web. That said, this version explanation. First, it is AI. I'm sorry, but at least it is a special use of AI. When I was a youngster, I really wanted to be a pianist and would get together with friends and write songs that we described as Darkwave or ambient. This song is the product of a melody that I wrote as a 16 year old. In fact, its my favorite melody I ever wrote... but it was never a full song. So, a few weeks ago I recorded myself playing it on piano and then inputing that piano version into Suno. I then slightly modified the lyrics of Come to Me to fit the melody and remove lines of only a historic interest."