The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 20
255. MARTYN JOSEPH - EVERTHING IN HEAVEN COMES APART, 1995.
From the album 'Martyn Joseph', Epic.
The Welsh
songsmith has recorded some gems down the years but it's this
breathtaking evocation of Heaven, when all created things, from
baboons to swing top bins, from the leper's soul to "the unseen rage
of all our days" are revealed and disassembled, molecule by molecule
in the divine light. The dazzling kaleidoscope of images are courtesy
of Martyn's sometime collaborator, poet Stewart Henderson, and I doubt
if Stewart has ever delivered a better or more thought-provoking
lyric.
Tony Cummings
256. RESOLUTION - POLITICALLY INCORRECT, 1993. From the album
'Politically Incorrect', N-Soul.
This album's
co-producer, dance music maestro Scott Blackwell, once told me that
the Resolution album was N-Soul's worst ever seller with thousands of
returns from America's ultra-conservative Christian bookshops once
they'd espied songs like the title track and "Sympathy For The Left
Wing" on the album. Consequently, the great American public missed out
on an electro pop rock gem. The simple bass groove and rimshot rhythm
are delicious while the lyrics by keyboard player Calix Reneau are
brilliant ("It's not a Black thing/Or a White or a Latin or an Asian
swing/Not conservative, moderate or liberal/Not holistic, New Age or
traditional/Not slave nor free nor Jew nor Gentile/Not politically
correct, not by a country mile/It's the cross of Christ/I said, it's
the blood-soaked cross of Christ.") Powerful stuff indeed.
Tony Cummings
257. JONATHAN BUTLER - LORD I LIFT YOUR NAME ON HIGH, 2004.
From the album 'The Worship Project', Maranatha! Music.
Many consider this compelling worship anthem, penned by Rick Founds
in 1991, one of the finest modern worship songs ever and down the
years acts as diverse as Donnie McClurkin, Noel Richards, Petra and
SonicFlood have recorded versions. But few recordings are as
sensitively rendered and emotionally touching as that by South African
native Jonathan Butler, who, as well as being a worshipper, is known
as an accomplished jazz instrumentalist and passionate R&B singer.
Here, his velvety-smooth vocals, the unhurried pace and soft,
worshipful atmosphere make the tune a pure delight.
Tom
Lennie
258. FAYE ADAMS - SHAKE A HAND, 1953. From the
single, Herald.
The story of how the rhythm and blues
record companies of the post war years gradually moved away from the
urban blues artists which were their big sellers and persuaded more
and more church-based singers to switch from gospel music to R&B
to create "soul music" was, of course, repeated hundreds of times. And
so it came to pass that Faye, the daughter of David Tuell, a key
figure in the Church Of God In Christ, sang with her sister Anna on
gospel radio shows in Newark, New Jersey before crossing over to chase
the showbiz dollar. Using her married name (which, rather
unfortunately, was Scruggs), Faye won an audition with band leader Joe
Morris. And after some flops, her first release under the Faye Adams
moniker was this milestone hit. It topped the US R&B charts for 10
weeks in 1953 and made 22 in the mainstream pop charts. In many ways
"Shake A Hand" belongs in that list of seminal R&B hits like Ray
Charles' "I Gotta Woman" and the Isley Brothers' "Shout" which were
clearly secularised versions of the sound of gospel while lyrically
"Shake A Hand" was a '50s version of "Reach Out And Touch Somebody's
Hand" espousing a call to love our fellow men and women by the simple
device of shaking "a hand if you can". Faye had a big, soulful voice
while the backing choir here gave her sentimental anthem a churchy
feel. When the R&B hits stopped she returned to singing in the
church.
Tony Cummings
259. P.O.D. - ALIVE, 2001. From the album 'Satellite',
Atlantic.
It was a quirk of history that the
'Satellite' album was released on 9/11. Certainly that joyful
collection of metal anthems hit the perfect note in such a bleak and
bitter time. Though HM magazine may have overstated it when it claimed
that "Alive" became "a healing balm for a generation", it certainly
was a glorious anecdote to those rock devotees who'd gorged on the
poison fruit of post grunge depression plus a riposte to those critics
who were convinced that rapcore could only ever be an expression of
musical anger. The lyric was utterly life affirming: "Every day is a
new day/I'm thankful for every breath I take/I won't take it for
granted." As the song continued, one of rock's most distinctive
voices, Sonny Sandoval sang with unapologetic abandon "I feel so alive
for the very first time. . . Now that I know you I could never turn my
back away/Now that I see you I believe no matter what they say" and
the riffing guitars rammed home every syllable. Great stuff.
Tony Cummings
260. SUFJAN STEVENS - GET BEHIND ME, SANTA!, 2006. From the
album 'Sufjan Stevens Presents Songs For Christmas', Asthmatic
Kitty.
I've gone on record several times to express my
dislike of songs about Santa Claus. From my perspective the guy with
the white beard and red coat is a Christmas usurper who simply muddles
the wonderful story of the incarnation. So well done to our
banjo-playing iconoclast Sufjan and his decidedly left of centre
recording sensibilities for coming up with this tongue-in-cheek piece
of Yuletide wit. Originally released as a fanclub project 'Peace',
this is now on a Christmas song box set. Worth wading through Sufjan's
so-so renditions of "Once In Royal David's City" and "O Come O Come
Emmanuel" to get to this Christmas treat.
Tony Cummings
261. KOSMOS EXPRESS - DREAMMAKER, 1997. From the
album 'Now', Sublime.
One US fanzine commented that
this, the debut album by a Californian band, "doesn't seem like much
the first time around but Goraieb and co have the perfect pop formula
for longevity." They were right about the grow-on-you quality but
wrong that the band led by singer/guitarist Rob Goraieb would achieve
longevity (Kosmos Express only managed one more album breaking up when
Sublime/Pamplin went belly-up). What this band left behind were two
albums of infectiously catchy Britpop and though the songs "Beautiful"
and "Little Tree" are possibly a little too close to being
"Wonderwall" clones to be comfortable this haunting opener with its
conga-driven intro, effective backward effects at the end of each line
and ferocious guitar attack when if finally gets to the climax make it
an overlooked gem.
Tony Cummings
262. THE CROSS MOVEMENT - ON RIGHT NOW, 2000. From the album
'Human Emergency', Cross Movement.
In the early years of
the decade The Cross Movement collective of East Coast MCs were THE
Christian act recording hip-hop with plenty of hard hitting street
vibe yet with sufficient pop hook sensibilities to get exposure on the
few Christian radio stations adventurous enough to play them. Written
and produced by William Branch, with its chanted hook telling the
"Kingdom people bring it on right now" with verses that go right for
the spiritual jugular ("Though we laugh, it's not funny when we ask
if/You're going to Heaven and you say 'I'm a Baptist'/Perhaps this rap
is a way to get at this/An up-to-date, God-honouring way to combat
this."). Evangelism at its catchiest.
Tony Cummings
263. PRATT/McCLAIN - HERE I AM (THE ANTI-CHRIST SONG), 1974.
From the album 'Pratt/McClain', ABC.
If you're old
enough to remember the Happy Days sitcom of the '70s which featured a
pretty naff recreation of 1950s rock'n'roll culture you'll probably be
less than impressed with the information that Pratt & McClain
provided the "Happy Days" theme song, surely one of the corniest hits
(number five in the US singles chart in 1976) ever. But two years
before their breakthrough, Truett Pratt and Jerry McClain, along with
producer Michael Omatian, were making some excellent Jesus music of
which this is their best known song. A powerful piece of pop rock with
some biting electric guitar and a rapid-syllable vocal hook very
reminiscent of the kind of thing Omartian used on his own album for
ABC in 1974 'White Horse'. The lyric is, of course, a warning against
a world leader who will one day hoodwink a godless world ("I built my
kingdom on a pot of gold"). Powerful stuff.
Tony
Cummings
264. NEWSBOYS - MY FRIEND JESUS, 2009. From the album 'In The
Hands Of God', Inpop.
Pete Furler describes the
frustration that we all face when taking on errant customer "service"
systems on the telephone where you wait to be connected, listen to
piped music and slowly go up the wall. In these situations it's very
easy to lose our religion and Furler honestly describes it with humour
and everybody's favourite line about having to listen to Celine Dion
songs whilst on hold! And yet the twist in the song is that the
Newsboys remind us that even in annoying situations, God encourages us
to think and act like Jesus so instead of punching the wall, we can
still speak kindly to each other. Something to remember the next time
you're stuck on hold. "My Friend Jesus" manages the difficult task of
being a fun song with something serious to say!
Mike
Rimmer
265. BART MILLARD - THE OLD RUGGED CROSS, 2005. From the album
'Hymned No 1', INO.
In 1913 George Bernard wrote this
classic hymn and since that time hundreds, possibly thousands, of
versions have been recorded. But it was when Millard, lead singer of
American million-selling worship band MercyMe, decided to do what so
many Christian artists were doing around the turn of the millennium -
record a set of popular old hymns to contemporary arrangements - that
the hymnbook favourite had its finest hour. Bart's arresting vocals,
careful choice of both lesser known and popular hymns, and use of
highly varied musical styles make the album an absolute winner with
the greatest treat being this closing track, on which Bart offers a
mellow, laid-back acoustic approach, with bass, slide-guitar and his
own emotive vocals combining to spell-binding effect. Millard did
three studio takes of this song - but the first was voted easily the
best. Indeed, such is the beauty of this rendition that it's virtually
impossible to imagine anyone performing a more compelling version.
Tom Lennie
266. MIGHTY & SEYI - SEEK YE FIRST, 2008. From the single,
Breaker Productions.
London-based Mighty & Seyi are
a rapper and singer locked together to create hip-hop that was infused
with melody. They won the Star Awards in November 2007 and a year
later their debut single showed them to be a talented duo bursting
with ideas. Message-wise, the song is a hard-hitting plea that for
anything to change on the streets, it'll take a generation of kids to
choose to seek God before anything else. The remix from Birmingham's
Tony Bean is by far the best as it adds fresh funk to the song and
gives the single a real lift. We are still awaiting Mighty &
Seyi's album debut. Here's hoping it comes soon.
Mike
Rimmer
267. WADE MAINER & THE SONS OF THE MOUNTAINEERS - THE
PRECIOUS JEWEL, 1941. From the various artists album 'Mountain
Gospel', JSP.
On 29th September 1941 Wade Mainer and his
mountain-style harmonizers Curley and Jack Shelton went into a studio
in Atlanta, Georgia and recorded this plaintive song about a lost
sweetheart who was going to be the singer's wife but went instead to
Heaven. It's easy to lampoon country/bluegrass's death songs but for
me the plaintive harmonies and eerily haunting melody make this a gem
of simple, appealing rural music which would sound great if ever
revived by one of the new traditionalists.
Tony Cummings
268. NATALIE GRANT - PERFECT PEOPLE, 2008. From the album
'Relentless', Curb.
Natalie Grant, after delivering
rather unmemorable early albums, fully deserves her current position
as American CCM's top female singer. A song like this gem from the
pens of Jason Barton, Sam Mizell and Matthew West sounds like a match
made in Heaven as it brings out the brittle poignancy of her lower
register and the anthemic gospel-tinged power of her upper register on
the chorus. Add to a great vocal performance, the simple yet profound
lyric ("There's no such thing as perfect people/There's no such thing
as a perfect life/So come as you are, broken and scarred/And be amazed
and be changed by a perfect God") and you have the perfect Christian
radio hit.
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