The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 21
269. HILLSONG UNITED - HOSANNA/FOR ALL WHO ARE TO COME, 2007.
From the album 'All Of The Above', Hillsong.
There is
also a version of this Brooke Fraser composition on the Hillsong album
'Saviour King' but this is the version to get. A truly transcendent
piece of worship with Brooke showing she is one of the finest singers
ever to lead worship with the haunting song over the band's
ricocheting drum rhythms seguing into a prophetic song "For All Who
Are To Come". To those who've suggested that Hillsong United can only
do stadium rockers with simplistic theology had better listen to this
spine-tingling gem.
Tony Cummings
270. THE ELMS - THE BUZZING WON'T STOP, 2001. From
the album 'Big Surprise', Sparrow.
After a pretty
underwhelming debut EP, this band from Seymour, Indiana, upped their
game considerably for their first full length and it delivered a
couple of Christian radio hits Stateside. But it's this soaring
mid-tempo number with a softly psychedelic Beatlesque production which
is the classic. A high falsetto lead from Owen Thomas intones the most
unusual of themes, the conviction of sin via the Holy Spirit, and its
atmosphere of sad melancholy is unforgettable.
Tony
Cummings
271. NEWSBOYS - BREAKFAST, 1996. From the album 'Take Me To
Your Leader', Star Song.
It's mid-period Newsboys that
really floats my boat, when John James and Peter Furler were both
providing lead vocals and Steve Taylor was producing and writing
lyrics for the Aussie pop rockers. Despite my usual aversion to any
record featuring whistling (let alone the whistling chorus featured
here), this is in my view one of the group's best ever. It's those so
witty Taylor lyrics that brilliantly expose Western man's tendency to
moan about the most trivial of life's irritations which will get you
every time. They go, "When the toast is burned/And all the milk has
turned/And Captain Crunch is waving farewell/When the big one finds
you/May this song remind you/That they don't serve breakfast in
Hell."
Tony Cummings
272. LANAE' HALE - ALIVE AGAIN, 2008. From the EP 'Lanae'
Hale', Centricity.
I saw Lanae' play a showcase in
Nashville awhile back and this was the first song that she sang. It's
a simple number celebrating the fact that God still steps into the
lives of ordinary people and changes our hearts. Lanae' celebrates the
wonder of it all yet it was her voice as she delivered the song which
immediately caught my attention. At turns powerful and soaring and
then quiet and gentle, she has this fabulous warble which is almost a
yodel which she brings into her delivery. It's most compelling and
this song is a winner!
Mike Rimmer
273. RODD & MARCO - GOD'S WORLD, 1995. From the
album 'Jurassic Church', Independent.
For a few glorious
years in the early '90s these two expatriate Americans seemed
omnipresent at Britain's Christian festivals and their ability to
entertain any crowd from kids to teens to wrinklies was renowned. With
their zany costumes, silly songs and surprisingly proficient rapping
Rodd & Marco could communicate truth about Hell or the atonement
in a way most evangelists could only dream about while their borrowing
of popular culture was both pointed and unrelentingly witty. Here,
Rodd Christianssen and Marco Palmer, with some help from producer Ken
Smith, constructed a clever parody of Wayne's World and anyone who has
seen that classic cinema comedy will recognise these guys' skill at
echoing California's rock culture making us laugh AND delivering a
spiritual point. Utterly awesome, dude.
Tony Cummings
274. MATTHEW WEST - ALL THE BROKEN PIECES, 2008. From the
album 'Something To Say', Sparrow.
After a lengthy
period as a not particularly outstanding indie act this
Nashville-based songsmith hit the CCM big time and with such skilfully
crafted, acoustic-tinged pop as featured on 'Something To Say' few
would say his success isn't deserved. This is the album's finest song
(oddly tucked away at track 11), a poetic description of a
sin-blighted life reassembled by a loving God ("I can take even your
greatest mistake/Every scar, every tear, every break/And I can turn it
into something more beautiful than you have ever seen"). The chiming
production by Ed Cash is exemplary, up there with his great work with
Tomlin and Matthew's wistful voice intoning the chorus eats into your
consciousness.
Tony Cummings
275. VERRA CRUZ - GUNS IN THE DISTANCE, 2006. From the album
'Emancipation Day', Fierce!
A taut, throbbing rock song
from the veteran British blues rockers led with such gutsy passion by
Marc James, "Guns In The Distance" stares into the face of the rotting
human condition and dares to hope that there's a brighter alternative.
And the lyric "lately I've been hoping or dare I say praying, about
heavy chain breaking, emancipations and revelations." sums up a
yearning desire for spiritual change and impact that drives Verra Cruz
forwards. The fact they've said it in such a forceful fashion stirs
the listener every time.
Mike Rimmer
276. BOB BENNETT - MATTERS OF THE HEART, 1981. From the album
'Matters Of The Heart', Star Song.
In 1982 the journos
writing for Nashville's CCM magazine reckoned this not particularly
successful singer/songwriter's 'Matters Of The Heart' was the best
album of the year, surprisingly ahead of much higher profile albums
like Keith Green's 'Songs For The Shepherd' and Amy Grant's 'Straight
Ahead'. Maybe such accolades were a little OTT but there's no doubting
that this songsmith from Dowrey, California is something special. In
the words of his biographer Joan Brasher his "acoustic folk-style
recordings have honestly confronted the messy side of human
existence." Indeed, Bob's lyrics stand up as poetry while his guitar
playing is deft, technically accomplished and perfectly suited to his
warm, expressive voice. Each verse of "Matters Of The Heart" resonates
with strong imagery but my favourite is the final one. "Eyes laughing
in the face of disaster/Voices pleading on the telephone line/A spark
of truth that catches on fire/Your first taste of the new wine." A
haunting song.
Tony Cummings
277. COMEBACK KID - GIVE AND TAKE, 2003. From the
album 'Turn It Around', Facedown.
When hardcore is
delivered with the passion demonstrated here it is an energising shot
of adrenaline-inducing noise unlike anything else and one which gets
this 63 year old reviewer gazing longingly around the room looking for
a mosh into which he could hurl himself. The raucous bellow of Andrew
Neufeld was first heard on Figure Four albums but here takes on an
even greater ferocity, the answer gang vocals sound like the
collective efforts of Millwall Supporters Club and the vicious
pummelling of the band (much respect to drummer extraordinaire Kyle
Profela) is a magnificent cacophony. And those lyrics bite home -
"There's a choice to respect/There's a choice I accept/But I'll always
be here/I'll always be here/I'll always."
Tony Cummings
278. JOHN COX - WASH THEM AWAY, 2006. From the album
'Sanctuary', Kalibone.
It's one of those CCM mysteries
why this acoustic singer/songwriter from Chico, Texas has only
released three CDs in a decade. (By the way, don't confuse this John
Cox with the former tenor with Southern gospel's Blackwood Brothers
Quartet.) What I can say is that John manages to achieve that most
difficult of tasks, writing songs that speak direct spiritual truth
that, on the one hand, avoid the irritating contrivance of obscure
metaphor yet on the other resist those tried-and-tested clichés which
clog the lyric writing of so many Christian songwriters seeking to
minister. Like many of the songs on 'Sanctuary', John effortlessly
finds the middle ground. This haunting song ponders the staggering
truth that all memory of our sins has been washed away from the divine
mind. The production, by Zodlounge, is inspired too with an eerie
electric guitar similar in sound to that extraordinary Twin Peaks
soundtrack from a while back.
Tony Cummings
279. THE CARTER FAMILY - CAN THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN (BYE AND
BYE), 1935. From the album 'The Carter Family Vol 2: 1935-1941',
JSP.
According to a list in Bil Carpenter's Uncloudy
Days: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia this 78 sold a million copies
(though record sales, before the establishment of the industry body
RIAA, are notoriously prone to exaggeration). What is certain though
is this family of Appalachian mountain songsters were a stunning
repository of rural folk culture and along with Jimmie Rodgers were
the originators of modern country music and were a huge musical
influence. With Maybelle's guitar showing her uncanny ability to pick
the melody of a tune on the bass strings while simultaneously
strumming the rhythm on the treble strings and those haunting Mountain
harmonies, the Carter Family's recordings (over 270 tracks between
1927 and 1941!) were truly timeless. This recording, though showing
lyrical and melodic differences from other versions popularised by
Johnny Cash et al, is a haunting gem of rural folk music.
Tony Cummings
280. MARK HEARD - HEART OF HEARTS, 1982. From the album
'Victims Of The Age', Home Sweet Home.
At the time of
its release Nashville's CCM magazine, clearly increasingly alienated
by the sugar-coated pop confections which were swamping US Christian
radio, singled out 'Victims Of The Age' for rave reviews. Thom Granger
wrote, "These nine songs confront the see-no-evil, hear-no-evil
attitudes held by many present day believers. Heard's word pictures
are vivid and believable. With repeated listening, larger themes seem
to envelope all of the songs." Certainly, it's gritty, blues rock vibe
and Mark's passionate abrasive vocals make 'Victims Of The Age' a
hugely memorable set with "Heart Of Hearts" a stellar song of hope and
faithfulness pinpointing the realities of urban life. Singing backups
on the track is a very young Leslie Phillips (later to become Sam
Phillips) who was so impacted by the song she cut her own version on
her debut album 'Beyond Saturday Night'.
Tony Cummings
281. DAVID EVANS - PROPHECY, 1995. From the album
'R.O.A.G., Heartfelt Music.
Australia's prophet musician
David has long been a friend of Cross Rhythms and this tumultuous
track with its electronica effects, a rap and some full-on preaching
samples are the perfect backdrop for David's rich blue-eyed soul
voice. As it builds to its glorious hook "Young men, prophecy" with
what sounds like a gospel choir in attendance, the air of spiritual
militancy is perfectly maintained. The kind of
go-for-the-spiritual-jugular music that makes much of today's music
sound like a bland wimp out.
Tony Cummings
282. REDCLOUD CON RALPHIE - MANOS PA ARRIBA, 2006. From the
various artists album 'Various: Reggaeton Baptism', Lion Of
Zion.
The fusion of Latin, hip-hop and reggae to produce
that intense rhythmic brew known as reggaeton is, in my book, one of
the most exciting new developments to hit the international music
scene these last few years. It also resulted in this - the first
Spanish language track ever to grace the Cross Rhythms radio playlist.
The best cut from Lion Of Zion's 'Reggaeton Baptism' compilation, this
is a truly electrifying chunk of Latin rapping. Produced by
Christafari's Mark Mohr and featuring Syntax Records' Redcloud it
effortlessly crosses the language barrier.
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