The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 9
98. RANCE ALLEN GROUP - GOD IS WONDERFUL, 1974. From the album
'Truth Is Where It's At', Gospel Truth.
When I was a
soul music journalist, and years before I was a Christian I was given
a chance by the old Pye Records, who were licensing Stax at the time,
to compile an album of choice cuts from the first three Ranee Allen
albums on Gospel Truth. It was a musical delight. Here was a voice
which could leap an octave like a thoroughbred leaping Beechers. Ranee
is one of the great gospel singers. Here he takes syllables and
fragments them in a dizzying display of intricate improvisation. On
the climax giving Ranee the opportunity to go for broke and reach for
notes usually only dreamed of by dog whistle manufacturers.
Tony Cummings
99. JESSY DIXON - WE GIVE YOU GLORY, 1983. From the album
'Sanctuary'. Power Discs.
Such is the nature of worship
choruses that they often creep into our consciousness and
congregation's repertoire without any idea of their source. When this
album first came out in 1983 its 'Inspirational' (read MOR) production
values made it seem a waste of a great black gospel voice. But on this
undeniably mediocre album was this joyful praise romp (you know the
one "Glory to God" ... clap, clap, clap) which despite a muddy mix is
still an exhilarating paean of praise with Jessy's voice soulfully
giving God the glory and a hot sax player blowing the back off.
Tony Cummings
100. DENNIS AGAJANIAN - WHERE ARE THE HEROES?, 1983. From the
album 'Where Are The Heroes?', Sparrow.
Ecleticism
rules! Take a half Native American singer, give him a Steve Camp song
and get John Michael Talbot's brother, Terry, to produce him. What do
you get? New country of course! Years before country became hip again,
this fine singer/guitarist was cutting some hot country-gospel albums
for Sparrow and Word before disappearing to custom-album obscurity.
This fine cut asks where are the men of God to inspire a nation, over
a delicious Nashville-meets-LA mid tempo strum. One to search out.
Tony Cummings
As published in CR13, 1st February 1993
101. DEGARMO AND KEY - 666, 1992. From the album
'Destined To Win', Forefront.
A disc that caused a huge
furore on its release in the States some years back. The criticism
came not as you might expect from the Bible Belt bigots aghast that a
Christian band had the effrontery to sing a song about the Antichrist
but from, of all people, MTV who banned the video for being "too
violent". I lie not. But what of the music? A total triumph of AOR
expertise from its throbbing one-note bass, wheezing vocals and that
insidious little figure on clarinet while that full throttle axe solo
on the close is still one of the best Christendom has produced. The
duo from Memphis have made many fine sides throughout the '80s but
this, by a shade, is their finest.
Tony Cummings
102. CLIFF RICHARD - THIEF IN 'THE NIGHT, 1982. From the album
'Now You See Me Now You Don't', EMI.
The definitive
version of Paul Field's truly classic song. Cliff has mega stardom so
I suppose it's only fair he doesn't have street cred as well. In fact,
of course, saying you like Cliff in music buff circles would bring you
a veritable barrage of Super Nerd looks. But then pop-song craft,
particularly when it's coupled with immense popularity is easily
scoffed at. Here Cliff surpasses himself, ringing the full dramatic
effect from the most dramatic of ballads. The vocal! Cliff's voice at
first sad and poignantly reflective then at the climax a harsh
near-shriek. The lyrics! "Children of the darkness he will leave
behind." How did the EMI execs ever miss the heart-stopping
implications of this song? The arrangement! Delicious little stab of
fretless, followed by a glorious piece of charging pomp-rock. Yes, a
fine, fine track.
Tony Cummings
103. NEW HORIZON - MAKE US HOLY, 1984. From the album 'Abba
Father', Window.
If Cliff lacks street cred, this lacks
music cred period - or so first glance at the sleeve would have you
suspect. Let's face it, MOR praise albums by slightly wet looking
Scottish choirs do not seem a likely resting place for anything
vaguely resembling lis-tenable music, let alone undiscovered classics.
But there it is a pure, gentle, perfectly produced rendition of a
quite lovely Bryn Haworth worship song. Soothing to the spirit and a
prayer from the heart.
Tony Cummings
104. BLIND WILLIE JOHNSON -THE SOUL OF A MAN, 1930. From the
various artists album 'The Soul Of A Man', Snapper Music.
Blind Willie Johnson from Texas was the most popular gospel singer
on record well into the American Depression, and this track recorded
in 1929 shows a unique talent at the height of is prowess. It's all
here. That searing guitar, that unexpected turn of eloquence, that
harsh, impossibly impassioned voice. On "The Soul Of A Man" he duets
with his wife Angeline who was no great shakes as a singer. But
somehow she adds to the intense yet transcendent effect.
Tony
Cummings
105. CARMAN - THE CHAMPION, 1985. From the album 'The
Champion', Myrrh.
In Cross Rhythms I wrote, "To the
sophisticated CCM industry media man, he's the embarrassing
clown-prince bringing tent-meeting hokum and unashamed theatrics in an
age of crossover compromise and expanding markets." People love or
loathe Carman. And certainly this seminal track first showed us what
was to become one of the key devices in Carman's formidable creative
armoury - the dramatic monologue set in other realms where we
eavesdrop on the heavenly beings and where the key events of the ages
come alive in Super Hero audio animation. My little boy loves this
track - he wanted to take it to school and play it to his friends. And
with that triumphant instrumental passage at the climax I find, maybe
a little to my surprise, that I too am thrilled by this theatric saga
of a champion Jesus rising from the cosmic canvas to defeat Satan.
Tony Cummings
106. DEGARMO AND KEY - CASUAL CHRISTIAN LIFE, 1992. From the
album 'Destined To Win', Forefront.
Another gem from the
Memphis duo, a wheezingly soulful ballad with a heartfelt plea that
the singer will not stumble into spiritual indifference and Christian
mediocrity. Amen to that.
Tony Cummings
107. BILLY PENN'S BROTHER - SONG FOR ANNETTE, 1990. From the
album 'Power Blocs/Mustard Seeds', independent.
A song
and rendition of such intense, harrowing pain that I seldom listen to
it. Yet this is a masterpiece, based on the story of a nine year old
whose burnt corpse was found in a ditch. Richard Nicholson sings his
own words against the simplest of folk roots accompaniments: "Tell me
who upon God's green and pleasant earth/Despised the crystal tears
running down your face/... Just a man out there without name." And
sometimes I find crystal tears of my own.
Tony Cummings
108. REZ - WHITE NOISE, 1983. From the album 'DMZ',
Sparrow.
I was slow into metal. Being a soul boy in the
'60s I'd momentarily gone gaga for Jimi Hendrix when he was a sideman
for R&B acts (I still love his solos on old Little Richard and
Isley Brothers records) but by the time he, and the manufacturers of
guitars and amplifiers developed all that enveloping, belching,
thunderous axe noise I was dismissive of Hendrix and the early
pioneers of heavy rock and metal that followed. I stayed that way
until this album forced on me to review by Buzz put me nose to nose
(well actually ear to speaker) in contact with the power and the glory
of the cranked-up guitar solo. Rez's cacophonous virtuoso intro still
sounds radical even in this age of trash and doom and by the time
Wendi Kaiser charges into the song proper the listener has either long
retreated to his concrete bunker or has abandoned himself to the
sheer, exhilarating thrill of it all.
Tony Cummings
109. THE WINANS - IT'S TIME, 1990. From the album 'Return',
Warner Alliance.
When the video of this soul/hip
hop/gospel gem was unveiled for America's Christian music industry at
the 1990 Dove Awards, there was a spontaneous burst of applause. I'm
still clapping. I can still do a reasonable rendition of that rap
intro "well, it's time to make a change, etc" though without the
rapper's laconic sense of studied cool. Only Marvin, one of the GREAT
voices of either soul or R&B, can lift the dance groove up to the
heights.
Tony Cummings
110. SUSAN ASHTON - DOWN ON MY KNEES, 1991. From the
album 'Wakened By The Wind', Sparrow.
"Got a witness not
too stable/Wouldn't get me very far/Got one hand on the table/One in
cookie jar/Got sins that need eviction/From a temple that's a
wreck/Got a chain of contradiction/Hanging around my neck." So sings
Susan in a tremulous bittersweet vocal of delicious understatement
while the acoustic folk-blues arrangement ebbs and flows in surging
waves of percussive dynamics. A breathtaking debut.
Tony
Cummings
As published in CR15, 1st June 1993
111. AL GREEN - IN
THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS, 1981. From the album 'The Lord Will Make A
Way', Myrrh.
Hearing this track for the first time left
an indelible mark with me. I was a baby Christian and desperate to
find some music to reflect the strange surging fire that had gripped
me. I saw this album mentioned in 'Blues And Soul' and having loved
all those old Green soul hits, went down to an R&B specialist in
Soho and bought an import copy. My search was rewarded with this
classic. Over an eccentrically lolloping rhythm track (featuring some
great out-of-tune guitar from Moses Dillard), Al purrs, squeals, gasps
and soars while that chorus has to be one of the most joyful sounds
caught on quarter inch. Maria Muldaur later revived the song, but
couldn't recapture the soulful passion of the original.
Tony
Cummings
again thank you Tony for your efforts greatly appreciated, mind you l go back to the tour of the top twenty at GB 84