The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 19
As published on 5th August 2010
241. STARFLYER 59 - I
LIKE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHS, 2001. From the album 'Leave Here A Stranger',
Tooth & Nail.
I'm not one of those critics who
consider Jason Martin, singer and composer with Starflyer 59's loose
aggregation of musicians an unheralded genius. (When talking about the
'Leave Here A Stranger' album recently the highly respected Dr Tony
Stone wrote "this record is a shining star in a discography of
artistic brilliance.") But I will admit that the decision to put Jason
together with producer Terry Scott Taylor ensured a very fine album
with this eerily brooding track the pinnacle of the set. Taylor wraps
Jason's dry, laconic vocal in a swirling, dreamy soundscape which
wouldn't sound out of place on 'Pet Sounds' while Jason's lyrics,
which in the past has struck me as immature exercises in miserablism
or obscure fragments of his inner world here work beautifully even if
you're left wondering about "the old swing and trumpets that fly
through my country." The mood of poignancy is entrancing.
Tony Cummings
242. STARS OF HARMONY - ROUGH AND ROCKY ROAD, 1948. From the
various artists album 'Good News: 100 Gospel Greats',
Proper.
The Stars Of Harmony had a tangled, if
fascinating, history. Founded in the mid '30s as the Heavenly Gospel
Singers they were soon to find there was another group of that name.
So they became the Stars Of Harmony while on the West Coast, the Sons
Of Liberty in Pennsylvania and the WSM Varieteers when singing on
Nashville's WSM radio station. And just to cap it all their lead
singer Leo Z Manley eventually became a member of the Kuff-Lynx who
had an R&B hit in the '50s. When the Stars Of Harmony were at
their height they cut this gem for Supreme Records of Los Angeles. It
starts off like a typical piece of jubilee harmony with each verse
listing the harsh realities before eternal reward ("You have to cry
sometime, before you get to Heaven" then "You have to moan sometime"
etc, etc). But then handclapping and a gurgling lead improvising over
the top of the chanting takes it into "hard quartet" territory while
the increasing rhythmic swing capped by what sounds like a girl
squealing encouragement. It's a shame it's so short as it's a little
masterpiece.
Tony Cummings
243. KEONI - JOY, 1994. From the album 'Keoni',
WAL.
Keoni was born in Honolulu, Hawaii and raised in
Colorado. Rather mysteriously, Keoni isn't singing lead on this track.
Rather, it's a soulful sister who takes most of the lead over a synth
funk groove that, if there'd been any justice, would have found its
way to dancefloor popularity. As it is, it demonstrates that Keoni
really knew how to get a Prince-style vibe while the mass shouted
refrain "Shout for joy!" is a telling hook. The production from Caesar
shows that he could handle pop funk just as well as the metal field in
which he normally worked. Keoni may have quickly disappeared off the
scene but he left behind this vibrantly catchy track. Joyful
indeed.
Tony Cummings
244. MORNINGSTAR - MIGHTY GOD, 1996. From the album 'Worship',
Eaglestar Productions.
The MorningStar team, based in
Rick Joyner's South Carolina church, is increasingly known (thanks to
God TV) as being at the very forefront of experimental worship music,
as they continually endeavour to push back accepted boundaries of
styles and sounds. During one of their most musically prolific periods
came the live 'Heart Of David' series, a four-volume set of intense,
exciting and extravagant vocal and instrumental worship sounds.
Perhaps the most accessible of all tracks is "Mighty God", a
hauntingly beautiful seven-minute slice of unhurried adoration
composed by Leonard Jones, which emphasizes the majesty and reign of
Almighty Jehovah. Arguably the most beautiful worship track to emanate
from the dynamic MorningStar team.
Tom Lennie
245. CANDI STATON - HIS HANDS, 2006. From the album 'His
Hands', Honest Jons.
I don't know whose idea it was to
get the legendary R&B and gospel diva to apply her delicious vocal
talents to Will Oldham's "His Hands" but it was a decision made in
Heaven. Will's dark narratives of brokenness and hurt probably aren't
for mass tastes but here his classic song - recounting first the
pleasure then the pain caused by the hands of an abusive lover and
then, in the song's unforgettable climax, the consolation and healing
wrought by the hands of the Lord himself - make it one of the most
creatively daring songs penned for many a long year. The arrangement
is perfect too - old school Southern soul recreated effortlessly by a
bunch of hand picked Muscle Shoals session musicians with Barry
Beckett's B3 giving just the kind of sonorous underpinning to bring
out all the world-weary pathos of Candi's vocal.
Tony
Cummings
246. LEELAND - TEARS OF THE SAINTS, 2006. From the album
'Sound Of Melodies', Essential.
Teenage prodigy Leeland
Mooring had a busy year in 2006 with the release of his band's 'Sound
Of Melodies' debut album and co-writing half of Michael W Smith's
'Stand' album. "Tears Of The Saints" is a stunning, stirring song that
captures a heart to reach out beyond the walls of the church and see a
generation come to Christ. Whether it's prodigals returning to their
first love or others discovering Christ for the first time, this is a
moving prayer for God to move, the church to wake up and things to
change. The swirling strings, the passionate vocals and the build up
from where he sings "sinner reach out your hands. . ." after about
four minutes, sends shivers down my spine every time!
Mike
Rimmer
247. MOLLY JENSON - DO YOU ONLY LOVE THE ONES WHO LOOK LIKE
YOU, 2009. From the album 'Maybe Tomorrow', Bully! Pulpit.
The San Diego singer released the 'Maybe Tomorrow' album and this
duet with Switchfoot's Jon Foreman was its killer highlight. The
question itself is an important one that deserves our attention and
the song is beautifully constructed as Molly makes us think about
those around us and whether we invest enough time looking after them.
A simple production which simply lets the song itself breathe freely
and the interplay between the two singers makes this a truly poignant
song. I played this for weeks on Rimmerama and was so moved by it that
I ended up preaching on the subject. So, if ever there was a song that
caused a direct response in the listener, here it is!
Mike
Rimmer
248. DREAM OF EDEN - SAVE ME, 1995. From the album 'Into The
Here And Now', Essential.
Dream Of Eden were husband and
wife team Bret and Diana Pemelton and on this cut, tucked away at
track eight on the second of their two albums, they cut a near perfect
pop record. Bret takes the lead on the lilting mid tempo song driven
by acoustic and electric guitars while the arrangement, by David
Lyndon Huff, is nigh on perfect with a so simple chorus you'll be
singing for days.
Tony Cummings
249. C A TINDLEY BIBLE CLASS GOSPEL SINGERS - YES HE
DID, 1926. From the various artists album 'Black Vocal Groups:
Complete Recorded Works & Supplements Vol 3',
Document.
Charles Albert Tindley was of course one of
the early giants of the gospel hymn. His compositions such as "What
Are They Doing In Heaven", "Some Day (Beams Of Heaven)", "Let Jesus
Fix It For You" and "Stand By Me" (the latter modified by Leiber &
Stoller to produce a hit for Ben E King) are classics which were a big
influence on modern gospel's Thomas A Dorsey. It's not known whether
Tindley was directly involved with the Bible Class Gospel Singers who
utilised his name but this octet, schooled in conventional harmonies
and with a non-emotional performance style, recorded six sides. The
best is this track recorded in Chicago for Paramount Records in 1926.
The jaunty song has a joyful swing and there's a falsetto voice in the
harmonies which greatly lifts the sound. Unfortunately the 78 from
which "Yes He Did" was taken for the CD airing was a seriously beat up
copy. But if you can listen through the hisses and crackles you'll
hear something truly charming.
Tony Cummings
250. VICTIZZLE - I PRAY, 2008. From the single,
Independent.
The debut single "Jam Yourself" certainly
drew attention to Victizzle who quickly established himself as THE
producer and artist in London's gospel grime and hip-hop underground.
This, his second single, saw him collaborating with Tunday and Simply
Andy (both makers of excellent CDs in their own right) and
demonstrated what makes Victizzle such a talent. It's as much the
memorable hook and the way that he constructs such great grooves as it
is the message of the song but when you combine the two together, it's
gold! It's scandalous that the UK's Christian record companies have
ignored such a major talent.
Mike Rimmer
As published on 20th August 2010:
251. BOB CARLISLE - WE
FALL DOWN, 1999. From the album 'Stories From The Heart',
DMG.
It's ironic that by far the best known rendition of
Kyle Matthews' song "We Fall Down" is the version by Donnie McClurkin
(from his 2000 smash live album 'Live In London And More') and THAT
version omitted the fine verses which put that memorable, repetitive
chorus "We fall down, we get up" in context. As it turns out Bob is
just as soulful a song interpreter as McClurkin and here we have
Matthews' complete composition in all its stark power as the verses
recount a believer borne down by the heavy load of life passing a
"monastery's high cathedral walls". Wondering how it would be to live
in such a place, warm and at peace having shut the world away, he
espies a priest and asks him what his life is like inside the
monastery's walls. The priest replies with that unforgettable chorus,
"We fall down, we get up/We fall down, we get up."
Tony
Cummings
252. LIGHTEN UP - HELILUIA SADA GAENGE, 2008. From the album
'He Reigns', Independent.
I was always disappointed that
the all Asian group Mowglee produced such generic Western pop rock but
on the 'He Reigns' worship album, released by the lead singer/composer
with Mowglee, Marcus Masih under the moniker Lighten Up, are two
bhangra-style songs. This is the pick of the two, a careering,
pulsating piece of bhangra praise where the tablas and gourds crackle
with all the energy of a Hindi praise party. You may not be able to
speak the tongue but you can certainly catch the vibe.
Tony
Cummings
253. JARS OF CLAY - FLOOD, 1995. From the album 'Jars
Of Clay', Essential.
In 1996 this track created a crisis
for the gatekeepers of American college radio. They had been
enthusiastically playing the single of this haunting slice of
"alterna-folk" before learning the appalling news that this band from
Greenville College in Illinois were Christians! Some stations with
their unofficial policy of not playing Christian music immediately
pulled the track off their playlists and in one major city the
station, which was the sponsor for the group's first national tour,
did not even send personnel to the show! But such displays of
prejudice were too late to stop the song's upward momentum. "Flood"
became a major pop hit Stateside, climbing to number 37 in the
mainstream singles chart. Critics tied themselves in pigeon-holing
knots trying to identify Dan Haseltine and co's sound suggesting as
well as the unwieldy "alterna-folk" such phrases as "Americanised
Beatles", "electro-tinged retro folksters" and even "the Bee Gees
doing R.E.M. songs". All fail to catch the essence of the band's
fusion of poetic lyrics ("But if I can't swim after 40 days/And my
mind is crushed by the thrashing waves/Lift me up so high so I can't
fall/Lift me up") and a production from Adrian Below which is light
years from the prog pomp of King Crimson but instead deftly integrates
Matt Odmark's thrashing acoustic guitar, Haseltine's plaintive vocal
and the sudden, shouted counterpoint chorus. A true classic.
Tony Cummings
254. NOEL ROBINSON & NU IMAGE - YOU ARE MY HEALER, 2006.
From the album 'Garment Of Praise', One Voice.
Sometimes
when you're sick, it's easy to focus on the sickness but here's a
worship song that focuses the worshiper on God, The Healer. A pretty
melody, a fabulous arrangement and superb interplay between Robinson
and the tight small group vocals of Nu Image only add to the impact of
the song. Just as it builds up and hits home, the song then breaks
down into a testimony time and wow! Preach it brother! The combination
of scriptural truth, testifying and memorable melody is soul stirring.
And then the song vamps all the way home!
Mike Rimmer
again thank you Tony for your efforts greatly appreciated, mind you l go back to the tour of the top twenty at GB 84