The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 45
610. SWITCHFOOT - AFTERLIFE, 2011. From the album 'Vice
Verses', Credential.
'Vice Verses' is a rock album of
the highest calibre and this bombastic opener with its dark, Foo
Fighters-style guitar riff pulls in listeners every time it gets
played on Cross Rhythms radio. Jon Foreman sings its "seize the day"
message with passionate deliberation: "I've tasted fire, I'm ready to
come alive/I can't just shut it up and fake that I'm alright/I'm ready
now I'm not waiting for the afterlife." A salient reminder that we
need to appropriate the peace, joy and living presence of the Godhead
here and now.
Tony Cummings
611. THIRD DAY - BORN AGAIN, 2008. From the album
'Revelation', Essential.
Apparently the first part of
"Born Again" was written while Third Day's smoky-voiced singer Mac
Powell was folding laundry. The whole first verse popped into Mac's
head complete and he subsequently recounted how he was "running around
the house, throwing stuff everywhere looking for a pen and a piece of
paper." It was worth the effort. This power ballad with its artful
blend of Southern rock and Americana-tinged folk is a stirring anthem.
Helped by the soaring vocals of Lacey Mosley of the band Flyleaf,
Powell excels himself with his soulful treatment of a song described
as "a heartfelt expression of what it's like to experience a change
from within." Third Day's bassist Tai Anderson said the song dug
beneath the clichéd expression of being born again to reveal what the
phrase is "supposed to mean". I wouldn't argue.
Tony
Cummings
612. JORDIN SPARKS - NO AIR, 2008. From the single, 19
Records.
When the "No Air" single was released in 2008
there were plenty of critics who panned it. After all, Jordin was that
beautiful young lady from American Idol and a pop/R&B song written
by six people was bound to bring forth the reviewing clichés about
such music being "manufactured". As it turned out, Joe Public ignored
the sneers and bought the single in droves ("No Air" eventually
selling close to three and a half million copies). Jordin, ably helped
by R&B hitmaker Chris Brown, sings effortlessly over the
deliciously insinuating groove. As the often repeated question "tell
me how I'm supposed to breathe with no air?" is asked about a
take-your-breath-away romance it is clear that Jordin's biggest hit
remains a breath of fresh air for pop and R&B radio.
Tony Cummings
613. ALLIES - DEVIL IS A LIAR, 1989. From the album
'Long Way From Paradise', Dayspring.
The sentimental
ballad "Butterfly Kisses" was Bob Carlisle's mega hit but Christian
rockers have long held that the Allies, the band Bob fronted from 1984
to 1992, represent Bob's best work. And certainly the Allies' third
album 'Long Way From Paradise' shows a band confident enough to take
on everything from Journey-style rockers, to a cover of "Crying In The
Chapel" which was nearer to the Orioles' doowop version than Elvis'
maudlin rendition. But it was when they gave full reign to Randy
Thomas' blues guitar that the Allies were at their peek and with Bob's
gritty tones the effect of this denouncement of the old Enemy hasn't
worn off 20 plus years on.
Tony Cummings
614. LARRY NORMAN - THE OUTLAW, 1972. From the album 'Only
Visiting This Planet', MGM.
Another track from the rock
pioneer's quiver of classics. Over that delicious folk guitar figure
Larry's high, near falsetto delivers a unique depiction of when God
incarnate walked here on earth. "Some say he was an outlaw, that he
roamed across the land/With a band of unschooled ruffians and a few
old fishermen." Great opening lines to a great song.
Tony
Cummings
615. MELLO-AIRES OF ROCHESTER, NY - TAKE YOUR BURDENS THERE,
1952. From the various artists album 'Powerhouse Gospel On Independent
Labels 1948-1959', JSP.
When tenor Elmer A Stallworth
took some fellow group members from The Flying Clouds Of Detroit to
form the Mello-Aires, he must have had high hopes. The Flying Clouds
had been doing well and the "new" group hoped to build on that
success. It was not to be. Their one single for Gotham Records was all
they managed and with few sales and fewer engagements the group
quickly folded. But they left behind this gem of a track. Ignoring the
jolly piano, it was the hypnotic chanting group vocal over which
Stallworth whipped himself into a soulful frenzy that dominates the
track and has ensured that decades on "Take Your Burdens There" is
popping up on vintage gospel compilations.
Tony
Cummings
616. EARTHSUIT - ONE TIME, 2000. From the album 'Kaleidoscope
Superior', Sparrow.
A melange of rock, electronica and,
on this track, reggae, the New Orleans band brought something
completely fresh to the CCM table before calling it a day in 2003.
This cut from Earthsuit's debut is a gem. An undulating JA groove, a
metallic riff and a shouty chorus which gets you every time make for a
cut that still gets Cross Rhythms radio play today.
Tony
Cummings
617. REND COLLECTIVE EXPERIMENT - TRUE INTIMACY, 2012. From
the album 'Homemade Worship By Handmade People, Kingsway.
Bring together a sound that takes the stomping, rollicking pop folk
which occasionally vaguely resembles the work of Neutral Milk Hotel
and The Pogues but has the purity of heart and abandonment of soul of
true worship and you have a sound which understandably is capturing a
Church tiring of pop rock worship formulae. The Belfast collective's
passionate and Christ-centred music is a blessing to the Church and is
suited for worship in church hall, festival stage or car.
Tony Cummings
618. MAT KEARNEY - ANNIE, 2009. From the album 'City
Of Black & White', Inpop.
Kearney has made some of
the most memorable pop music of the last few years. The wistful lilt
of "Annie" refuses to leave the listener's head. The song, full of
enigmatic images about a girl who's "walking the backbeat out of the
grey" before the memorable chorus "Well, it's one love in the
morning/Three days in the grave/Fall back in the evening/Now our lives
will change" hints at salvation rather than spells it out, but it
works all the better for that. The simple skipping arrangement, Mat's
laid back, huskily poignant vocal, everything here is perfectly
focused and skilfully executed. Acoustic pop perfection.
Tony
Cummings
619. JOANNE HOGG - THE LORD'S MY SHEPHERD, 1998. From the
various artists album 'Liturgy Of Time', Word.
I'm not a
big fan of worship compilation albums. There have been way too many of
them released and often they're poorly packaged. But sometimes they
serve a very useful purpose in bringing to light recordings which,
despite their quality, were largely missed on their original release.
Such is the case of Joanne Hogg's goosebump-inducing version of the
23rd Psalm. When originally issued on the 'Liturgy Of Time' album,
which was subtitled 'Original Interpretations Of Ageless Classics' and
featured artists like Mal Pope, Adrian Snell and David Fitzgerald, the
dazzling quality of Joanne's "original interpretation" was hardly
noticed. But since the inclusion of "The Lord's My Shepherd" on a
couple of compilation albums, more and more fans are coming to
recognise that this could well be the definitive version of King
David's words and the Scottish Psalter's melody. Producer Mark Edwards
captures a magnificent performance from the Iona singer and the whole
track brings home that faith-building Scripture like no other I
know.
Tony Cummings
620. PRODIGAL - NEON, 1984. From the album 'Electric Eye,
Heartland.
Prodigal were a quartet from Cincinnati who
put out three albums between 1982 and 1985. Fronted as they were by
keyboard whiz Loyd Boldman, the band really caught the sound and
spirit of '80s technology-driven bands like Styx. 'Electric Eye' is an
ambitious concept work with many tracks addressing the dehumanising
effect of a society caught in the spell of continuous technological
development and "Neon" is the album's most pointed song, depicting a
hellish scenario not unlike that imagined in a novel by Philip K Dick.
An important work from an underrated band.
Tony
Cummings
621. J MOSS - AFRAID, 2007. From the album 'V2',
GospoCentric.
James Moss is, of course, part of a gospel
dynasty as talented as the Winans and the Clarks. But it's James'
skill as a producer of streetwise urban sounds with the PAJAM team
which has established him in the urban gospel upper echelons and makes
this track such a dazzling tour-de-force. Half rapped singing (or if
you prefer, half sung rapping) has never sounded better and the
electronic effects on the voice give the track a rolling robotic
insistence which demands you pay attention and catch as many of those
staccato lines as you can before the studio maestro sings in a joyful
burst of faith, "Not gonna be afraid no more/Pain just walked out the
door." Seldom has studio technology on a gospel song been used to
better effect.
Tony Cummings
622. ANDREW PETERSON - COME BACK SOON, 2012. From the album
'Light For The Lost Boy', Centricity.
The renaissance
man from Monticello, Illinois has worked at his songwriting craft
steadfastly down the years so that today Andrew is, to my mind, one of
the most eloquent and talented songwriter on the whole music scene,
not just the one populated by Christians. Peterson's ability to
deliver entrancing narrative and haunting melody is second to none
while the production team of Ben Shive and Cason Cooley, who worked on
the 'Light For The Lost Boy' album, have surely never produced a
better album. As the Cross Rhythms reviewer wrote, the arrangements
have "more variety, textures and layers than the clothing collection
of Ann Boleyn." Over the shimmering soundscape the master storyteller
here weaves his images of "the Tennessee flood/The sound of the scream
and the sight of the blood/My son he saw as the animal died. . ." Yet,
as Christianity Today wrote, this song displays "a throbbing hope even
in lament" as the songsmith explores the bleak truth of mortality and
the transcendent hope of the old, old story. Former Audio Adrenaline
man Tyler Burkin's electric guitar work is magnificent and the whole
track shimmers with life while grappling with death.
Tony
Cummings
623. ANDREW PETERSON - THE CORNERSTONE, 2012. From
the album 'Light For The Lost Boy', Centricity.
When an
artist records a classic and puts it as the opening track on his
latest album it is reasonable to expect the rest of the album to sound
weak by comparison. But the stunning partnership of literate
singer/songwriter and producer Shive and Cooley followed on the moody
magnificence of "Come Back Soon" with this equally dazzling second
track. Over a densely woven interplay of guitar parts and eerie
synths, Andrew bluesily delivers his confessional "I saw the desert
wind tear across the wilderness/I felt it blowing off the page/The
teacher told me 'Son, always remember this'/And I have always been
afraid." It doesn't stop there as the singer lays bare his realisation
that the "God is my best mate" utterances of shallow evangelicalism or
the "Jesus is my boyfriend" sentiments of some modern worship simply
doesn't get close to articulating the majesty and mystery of God.
Andrew sings, "I read about the God of Moses/Roaring in the holy
cloud/It shook my bedroom window panes/I did not understand then/I do
not understand now/I don't expect you to explain." And then we have
that confessional chorus, "You've been a mystery since the moment that
I met you/You never move but I can never seem to catch you/The
Cornerstone." Wonderful stuff.
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