The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 43
582. DC TALK - SO HELP ME GOD, 1995. From the album 'Jesus
Freak', Forefront.
The spoken declaration "I've got
something for ya, man" heralds the start of not only the most
celebrated Christian album of all time but also the song that ushered
in a game-changing new style for CCM trio dc Talk. Without completely
forsaking the hip-hop nature of previous releases, band members Kevin
Max (né Smith), Toby Mac (né McKeehan) and Michael Tait chose to
move to a rock footing by drawing inspiration from the Seattle grunge
movement of the time. Whilst songs like "What If I Stumble?" and the
no-holds barred title track are the ones that most people remember,
the opener "So Help Me God" had the vital task of grabbing the
listener's attention, ensuring existing fans accepted the band's
metamorphosis whilst offering up a credible sound that would hopefully
allow dc Talk to venture into the mainstream market. Within the first
few seconds, all of the above boxes are ticked and - thanks to an
unforgettable riff, a face-melting guitar solo and lyrics that
kickstart the album's overarching themes of confessing inadequacy and
advocating dependence on God - it remains a great track in its own
right.
Lins Honeyman
583. COCO MBASSI - MAKAKI, 2014. From the album
'Joa', Conserprod.
Such is the richness of African music
that I could probably write another Spirit Of Rock & Soul
focussing on that continent's church music but as this Western-based
endeavour has taken me 15 years and counting I think I'll leave that
to someone else. Coco Mbassi is a critically acclaimed Cameroon-born
singer/songwriter and on "Makaki" a sublime song of praise celebrating
the Lord's faithfulness based on one simple phrase "Makiki m'Ongo ma
si ma tomba" which translated means "Your promises shall never pass."
Coco's sweet and richly soulful voice, aided by her own harmonies,
emanate joy and devotion as the hypnotic repetition of the
accompaniment (by producer Serge Ngando on standup bass and two
jaw-dropping percussionists Dembele Sidki and Daouda Thiam) takes
hold. It's a track which makes the listener long for the opportunity
to visit a church in Cameroon where, no doubt, we could all celebrate
the Lord's faithfulness in a 20 minute version rather than the
wonderful three minutes three seconds this recording allows.
Tony Cummings
584. QUICKFLIGHT - FADE TO GLORY, 1983. From the album
'Decent Beat', StarSong.
When the synth-driven bands
like Human League and Soft Cell emerged on the British scene in the
early '80s Christian rock music seemed distinctly behind-the-times.
One band though that did grasp the nettle were this Canadian outfit.
Fronted by singer and keyboard player Ric DeGroot, Quickflight caught
the eerie new wave vibe perfectly and 1983's US StarSong/UK Kingsway
release 'Decent Beat' was one of the best albums of the year. Many
lyrics weren't overt, but were rather opaque ponderings which, to
quote CCM magazine, were "articulating the questions of urban youth
and pointing to the direction where the answer can be found." One song
though that did give more than a hint of the divine was the prayerful
"Fade To Glory". On this brooding track Jesus is referred to as Agnus
Deo with Ric intoning, "Give me all you've got to give/Loose these
chains and let me live."
Tony Cummings
585. GOSPEL CLASSICS - MORE LOVE, THAT'S WHAT WE NEED, 1968.
From the single, Checker.
In the strange argot of
Northern soul devotees, this single is an "all time classic dancefloor
filler." For those not au fait to the insular world of North of
England club deejays and how by playing obscure recordings of old
school soul music they brought some welcome popularity, at least in
places like Wigan, Blackpool and Cleethorpes, to hundreds of often
unknown soul singers as well as a few gospel acts. The Gospel Classics
were a seven-man vocal group who'd once all sung with the more
successful Violinaires. They hailed from Detroit and though they never
got to record with Motown, signing with Chess/Checker Records was
probably the next best thing, particularly as the Chicago company had
already shown they could replicate the Motown sound with a gospel
singer crossing over to R&B with Fontella Bass' "Rescue Me".
Penned during the era of race riots and US social turmoil, "More Love,
That's What We Need" had a simplistic universal love message but with
a fine, throaty, female-sounding lead vocal and a guitar-driven
arrangement, which could almost pass for the Detroit's Funk Brothers,
it was indeed a piece of light, finger-snapping R&B made for
dancing.
Tony Cummings
586. SOUL EMBRACED - MY TOURNIQUET, 2000. From the album 'For
The Incomplete', Clenched Fist.
The sad spectacle of
Evanescence tying themselves up in knots once the sales stigma of
being labelled "a Christian band" hit home shouldn't overshadow this
classic song. For though Evanescence recorded this song as
"Tourniquet" on their 17 million selling 'Fallen' album, it was the
original by Soul Embraced which is superior. Originally a side project
of drummer David Sroczynski and William "Rocky" Gray from Shredded
Corpse, later to join Evenescence, Rocky reformed Soul Embraced with
fellow Living Sacrifice member Lance Garvin (drums) and his
brother-in-law Chad Moore (vocals). 'For The Incomplete' came out in
2000 of which "My Tourniquet" is the killer. The drums alone are worth
checking out. The shotgun guitar intro and that gorgeous recurring
riff once the song opens up really sets the scene for this lyrically
very powerful song.
Tony Cummings
587. REV H B CRUM & HIS MIGHTY GOLDEN KEYS - DON'T YOU
KNOW ME THOMAS, 1959. From the various artists album 'Screaming Gospel
Holy Rollers Vol 1', Vee-Tone.
By the late '50s the
"hard" gospel quartets were at their height and the leather-lunged Rev
H B Crum could scream and carry on with the very best though he and
his Golden Keys were never to achieve the gospel success of the church
wrecking Blind Boys Of Mississippi let alone the screamers who
purloined the style for R&B stardom like James Brown. In this oh
so brief (one minute, 42 seconds) single, one of six sides the good
reverend recorded in New York City on 28th January 1959, Rev Crum
screams himself into a frenzy of Holy Spirit fervour as he confronts
the doubts of the disciple Thomas. The careering tempo is fast enough
to leave the saints doing the Pentecostal two-step risking heart
attacks so maybe the single's brevity was a wise move.
Tony
Cummings
588. CHRIS TOMLIN - EVERLASTING GOD, 2006. From the
album 'See The Morning', Sixsteprecords.
Worship
songwriter Ken Riley told Cross Rhythms how he'd come to co-write
"Everlasting God" with Brenton Brown. The South African-born
singer/songwriter, though suffering from ME, had invited Ken to get a
train down from Newcastle to London so they could attempt writing a
song together. Brenton had been reading Isaiah 40 and that "Brenton
was hanging on to that like a lifeline, he was believing God's
promises that his strength would rise." With that in mind, Brenton and
Ken wrote what was to prove to be a classic song in 20 minute bursts
in between Brenton having to go and lie down. Brenton's version and
Ken's band Yfriday's version of the song are both good but it was
Chris Tomlin's rendition, with exemplary organic production from Ed
Cash, which was to take the song to the world Church.
Tony
Cummings
589. FOUR KORNERZ - BETTER DAYS, 2007. From the album
'Soulectric', UB1 Music.
In a recent radio interview,
the Nigerian funksters' Deji pointed out that even five years on the
message of this song still resonates in today's financially worrisome
times. Said Deji, "It's a song which says, 'Don't lose hope.' Things
will not always go rosy, especially in this wonderful Christian walk
that we have, but as long as you hold on to your hope that better days
will come, nothing can faze you." In the same interview Deji explained
how the deliciously funky groove evolved. "We had this idea in our
heads, we had no lyrics, nothing and I said, 'Guys, just keep playing
this' and I recorded the music. I was just there at about two in the
morning on my own, chopping vocals and stuff and I just put up a mic
and I started humming it to myself. I think by 7AM the song was done.
I was red-eyed, I looked something like the bogeyman coming out of the
studio. But I was very happy."
Tony Cummings
590. LAND - WHATEVER IS, 1999. From the album 'Point Me To
The Skies', Sacred Tree Music.
Back in the late '90s,
songwriter Steve Knott and a disparate collection of singers and
musicians gathered at Castle Sound Studios in East Lothian under the
auspices of renowned Scottish producer Calum Malcolm (Simple Minds,
Prefab Sprout) to record what would be their second and final album
under the name Land. Considered by Knott as the best track on the
album, "Whatever Is" sees singers Diane Macleod, Shirley-Anne Nolan
and Yvonne Whitty (better known today as Scottish songstress Yvonne
Lyon) passionately extol the qualities of a God-filled mindset in the
form of a mediation based on Philippians 4:8. The song itself is a
game of two halves and starts relatively sedately before the
appearance of a gospel choir midway through - an idea that seemingly
came to Knott in a dream. The choir lifts the track onto a completely
new level. I had the pleasure of witnessing this song gel in the
studio and, along with various Land members, Electrics frontman Sammy
Horner and a vastly more experienced and able black gospel choir from
Glasgow, was honoured to be a very small and insignificant part of the
troupe of backing singers that make this track and the album as a
whole just that little bit special.
Lins Honeyman
591. WHITSUNTIDE EASTER - TRANSITORY, 1977. From the album
'Next Time You Play A Wrong Note. . .', Grapevine.
If
you're a vinyl collecting fanatic with a well thumbed copy of Rare
Record Price Guide you'll know that the 'Next Time You Play. . .'
album sells for £100 plus. This set by an obscure Dutch Christian
band, recorded at Eastbourne's ICC studios, and produced by John Pac
sold zilch when released into the Christian bookshops but has
subsequently been acclaimed as a "psych folk" classic by obsessive
vinyl hoarders. And the album does indeed contain some wonderful stuff
with "Transitory", a song of fragile beauty with a delicate vocal from
Nannet Coumou over some shimmering acoustic guitars. Timeless.
Tony Cummings
592. DELIRIOUS? - WHAT A FRIEND I'VE FOUND, 1995. From the
album 'King Of Fools', Furious?
"Deeper" was the epitome
of pop rock perfection which (eventually) made it a chart hit, but it
was this beautiful, elegantly building paean of worship which was the
perfect closer. Helped by wise studio head Andy Piercy, the d:boys had
that rarest of gifts, the ability to make pop credible music while
taking us to a deep place with God who is "closer than a brother."
Tony Cummings
593. BOYER BROTHERS - STEP BY STEP, 1952. From the
single, Excello.
When in 1952 Florida's James and Horace
Boyer visited deejay and entrepreneur John Richbourg, whose radio
programme on WLAC was THE means of getting exposure to gospel music,
they couldn't have expected the outcome. Remembered James, "We
introduced ourselves and said we desired to make records. He had us to
audition with only the piano. After he heard one song he said, 'Wait a
minute.' Between his radio chores he set up recording equipment and
told us to run through two songs." One of these songs was Horace's
arrangement of "Step By Step" penned by the great James Anderson. As
it turned out, this primitive recording of the elegant yet soulful
rendition of the Anderson hymn ("Step by step, I'm nearly in the
Kingdom") was leased to Ernie Young for the first release on Young's
Excello Records. With much radio play from Richbourg it turned out to
be a major gospel hit. Decades on, academic Horace Boyer gained
accolades for his seminal gospel study How Sweet The Sound: The Golden
Age Of Gospel while that charming, liltingly soulful oldie turns up on
numerous Gospel Classics compilations.
Tony Cummings
594. 16 HORSEPOWER - FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE, 1997. From the album
'Low Estate', A&M.
The various musical offerings of
David Eugene Edwards with both 16 Horsepower and Woven Hand have long
attracted a clique of fans. Critic John Thompson once described 16
Horsepower's eccentric stylings: "The music is a style all its own:
part old school country (complete with fiddle, hurdy gurdy, banjo and
squeeze box) and part gothic rock. The songs drone, wheeze and burn
into a sound that surprisingly works. And then there is Edward's
voice. . . he howls, cries and at times screams with a beauty I have
never heard before." "For Heaven's Sake" is among Edwards' best with a
power depiction of the love that will not let us go. "All my love,
well it is madness/Freely given to you folks with gladness."
Tony Cummings
595. WHITNEY HOUSTON - JESUS LOVES ME, 1992. From the various
artists album 'The Bodyguard: Original Soundtrack Album',
Arista.
For me this is the greatest Sunday School song
ever written and it was a huge surprise Whitney's dazzling version
found its way onto the multi-million selling soundtrack of The
Bodyguard movie. For such a simple song, its origins are complex. The
lyrics first appeared as a poem in a novel, Say And Seal, written by
Susan and Anna Warner and published in 1860. The tune was added in
1862 by William Batchelder Bradbury who read the novel and was moved
by the scene where the words "Jesus loves me this I know/For the Bible
tells me so/Little ones to him belong/They are weak but he is strong"
were recited to a dying child. Bradbury added his own chorus "Yes,
Jesus loves me. . ." and a classic was born. Over a century later it
was Whitney's soulfully sincere reading of the song that brought the
hymn evergreen to a new cinema and CD audience. The fact that Whitney
continued to sing the Warner and Bradbury gem through the rest of her
deeply troubled life and it was the last song the singer ever
performed on stage gives Whitney's beautiful interpretation even
further poignancy.
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