The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 56
764. SUSAN ASHTON, MARGARET BECKER, CHRISTINE DENTE - ANGELS,
1994. From the album 'Along The Road', Sparrow.
It was a
great idea to take three of the finest singers of Nashville CCM to
record an album together, particularly when producer and ace guitarist
Wayne Kirkpatrick was able to bring in Nashville crème-de-la-crème
sessioners with both drummer Steve Brewster and bass player Jimmie Lee
Sloas showing the kind of deft touches most musos can only dream
about. But it is the quality of those three voices and the excellence
of the songs selected which make this an album which still sounds
sparklingly fresh 20 years on. Pick of the pile is "Angels", written
by Jennifer Kimball and Tom Kimmel and with a purred lead vocal by Out
Of The grey's Christine Dente which, when it reaches the chorus of
"We're lifted up by angels," never fails to stir the soul.
Tony Cummings
765. MICHAEL KNOTT - HALO, 2001. From the album 'The Life Of
David', Metro 1 Music.
Michael Knott has a long rock
history, including his numerous albums fronting Lifesavers
Underground, his critically acclaimed but unsuccessful mainstream
pitch with the Aunt Bettys, and his occasional sortes as a solo
songsmith. Yet this man, once described as "the chameleon of spiritual
rock," has had to battle personal demons, including alcoholism, which
have sometimes affected his art. On this album, supposedly inspired by
the biblical King David but more often a highly personal reflection on
the traumas of a thwart relationship, his songwriting reaches its
climax, "I see something in her eyes/Kick and screaming on the
outside/Something hidden within/I think she knows about it/Cause when
she holds me close/I here her soul." A memorable song from a troubled
talent.
Tony Cummings
766. SPIRIT OF MEMPHIS QUARTET - EVERY DAY AND EVERY HOUR,
1951. From the album 'Happy In The Service Of The Lord',
Acrobat.
The Spirit Of Memphis were one of the most
influential church-wrecking quartets of the late '40s and 1950. This
stunning track, recorded in Cincinnati on 5th May 1951 for King
Records, featured the group's smooth-as-silk harmonies over which
Willmer "Little Axe" Broadnax offers an every-intensifying hard lead
which is truly mesmerising.
Tony Cummings
767. HILLSONG CHAPEL - SAVIOUR KING, 2010. From the album
'Yahweh', Hillsong Music.
Marty Sampson's and Mia
Fieldes' "Saviour King" first came to our attention as the title track
of Hillsong's live worship set of 2007 but it took this deft, stripped
down version led by worship leaders Annie Garratt and Jad Gillies to
really bring out the rich appeal of its melody and the joyful vision
of the lyrics. The second verse particularly is up there with the very
best hymnody. "Let now your Church shine as the Bride/That you saw in
your heart/As you offered up your life/And now the lost be welcomed
home/By the saved and redeemed/Those adopted as your own."
Tony Cummings
768. TONIO K - YOU WERE THERE, 1988. From the album
'Notes From The Lost Civilization', What?
Songsmith
Steven M Krikorian (aka Tonio K) has always been the most quixotic of
talents and one who in times past has, during various seasons, drawn
and repelled Christian music lovers. His vast output of songs have
been recorded by such diverse talents as Al Green, Burt Bacharach,
Vanessa Williams, Patty Smith and Wynona Judd, while his brief
flirtation with the Christian music industry (his two '80s albums for
What? Records have long been venerated by Christian hipsters but more
conservative elements in the Church have questioned both his
insistence that he has been a Christian since birth (Steven was
brought up in the Armenian church) and expressed misgivings about his
Dadaist psychedelic punk band The Raik's Progress back in 1967 right
on through the years to his wince-inducing subdisco song "I'm Supposed
To Have Sex With You" for the 1987 movie Summer School. Whatever the
contradictions and tongue-in-cheek contrariness of this larger than
life artisan, few informed Christian music fans would argue that his
What?/A&M albums are masterly music concoctions and 'Notes From
The Lost Civilization' having a funkier, more R&B feel than its
predecessor, clever songs and all star accompanists including Booker T
Jones, T-Bone Burnett and Peter Case. The absolute standout is "You
Were There" with its memorable lyrics a breathtaking glimpse of the
afterlife: "Well it might have been a vision/Or it might have been a
dream/Like a photograph of Eden/It was like no place I'd ever seen/And
you were there waiting for me/You shined the light when I couldn't
see/I stood at the gate like a stranger/And you were there waiting for
me." If only some of our modern worship songsmiths would stop for a
while in their paraphrases of Scripture and use their visions and
dreams to create rock art as memorable as this.
Tony
Cummings
769. GOSPEL CLEFS - OPEN OUR EYES, 1958. From the various
artists album 'Gospel The Old Time Way', Steppin Muzak.
Long before Andrae Crouch sensed what way the wind was blowing and
started working on the accompaniments and production sound of the
Disciples to bring gospel music into line with the increasingly
sophisticated sounds of soul/R&B, New Jersey's Leon Lumpkin was
pioneering something similar with his group the Gospel Clefs, blending
R&B into the musical mix. Unfortunately, in the early years the
label to whom the Gospel Clefs were signed, the traditionalist Savoy
Records, never gave the group full reign and decent recording budgets
to go too far though by the time Leon and his group cut their final
album for Verve Records in 1967 a full soul gospel sound had evolved.
In 1958 the Gospel Clefs recorded the Lumpkin song "Open Our Eyes"
with Charles Ferren singing lead. It was a moving prayer ("Father,
open our eyes that we may see/To follow thee, oh Lord/Grant us thy
loving peace, oh yeah/And let all dissention cease"). It wasn't until
1974 when Earth, Wind & Fire enjoyed a platinum selling album with
"Open Our Eyes" as its title track that the potential of Lumpkin's
vision finally became clear.
Tony Cummings
770. ABIGAIL WASHBURN - CITY OF REFUGE, 2011. From the album
'City Of Refuge', Rounder.
Critics have tied themselves
in knots about Abigail's music, calling it "bluegrass", "folk", or
"Americana". What they are agreed on is that this haunting singer and
dazzling exponent of the clawhammer banjo is one of the most
delightful sounds in roots music. Abigail says she is a Christian but
with beliefs about Christ's exclusivity that aren't orthodox. Leaving
that aside, the singer/songwriter's poetically crafted songs are rich
in the struggles to find spiritual reality in the disappointments and
enigmas of our lives. The title track on her second album expresses
the heartfelt desire to "run, run, run to the city of refuge" where
there's shelter from a life where "Momma's got a lover, poppa thinks
he's sober/Pray on my knees the clouds keep rolling over."
Tony Cummings
771. DON FRANCISCO - IT'S YOUR OWN FAULT, 1991. From the album
'Vision Of The Valley', Star Song.
Veteran US
singer/songwriter Don Francisco is well known for writing songs that
challenge complacent thinking towards matters of faith and this little
gem is a case in point. Deceptively upbeat, the track shuffles along
country style with a genial vocal from Francisco that highlights the
many ways we human beings seek to blame anyone but ourselves for the
many mistakes we make in life. With tongue-in-cheek but both feet
firmly in the truth, Francisco suggests scapegoats such as our
parents, society, the Devil and "even God himself" are free from blame
when it is in fact our own disobedience that gets us into trouble.
Following a delightfully cheesy synth solo, Francisco then goes on to
provide the spiritual solution to the problem of blame apportion with
lines like "don't yell at the wife and don't kick the cat/Just tell
God the truth - he'll listen to that" which, together with Francisco's
amusing muttered ending, typify the song's ability to make the
listener chuckle whilst providing something of a punch when it comes
to taking responsibility for ill-advised actions.
Lins
Honeyman
772. STORM - LOOK AT THE LIFE, 1998. From the album 'Storm',
Survivor.
Formed as a Soul Survivor schools band and
featuring Beth Redman and Lucy West amongst its members, the 'Storm'
album was stillborn and the group disbanded almost as soon as they
were formed. The album was 1998 Christian dance pop of a similar ilk
to the music coming out of The Message at the time. It was produced by
Matt Redman with help from various luminaries of the time including
Zarc Porter. "Look At The Life" highlights a great deal of what made
this album so poptastic. There's a hooky song, imaginative production,
Beth Redman's soulful diva vocals and Glenn Ross's economic rapping.
Because of Storm's shortlived history, this great opening track from a
fab album was almost completely overlooked at the time.
Mike
Rimmer
773. ALL SONS & DAUGHTERS - I AM SET FREE, 2012.
From the album 'Season One', Integrity.
Franklin,
Tennessee-based worship leader Leslie Jordan and former frontman of
Southern rockers Jackson Waters, David Leonard, decided in 2009 to
start writing worship songs together. They could hardly have dreamed
that their first two albums would chart in both Billboard's Christian
and Folk charts. The blend of organic acoustic feel, light wistful
harmonies and a constructive yet poetic approach to songwriting is an
extremely appealing one and the anthemic "I Am Set Free" is a
celebratory delight. Worship Leader magazine described All Sons &
Daughters as "the most enchanting sound emerging from the worship
scene."
Tony Cummings
774. ELDER SAMUEL PATTERSON & THE CHRISTIAN CRUSADERS -
THIS TRAIN, 1963. From the various artists album 'Fire In My Bones',
Tompkins Square.
Little is known about Elder Samuel
Patterson except that he led the Robert Patterson Singers from 1952 to
1968 and continued to record into the '70s, as stated in the
sleevenotes of the superlative 'Fire In My Bones' compilation on which
this deliciously raw slice of gospel blues is featured. A traditional
song made famous by Sister Rosetta Tharpe in the 1939 and secularised
by blues harp maestro Little Walter as the hugely successful "My Babe"
16 years later, Patterson's version leaves all other renditions
standing at the station thanks to its breakneck speed and a relentless
energy that ensures the song never runs out of steam. Proving that the
sum is greater than its parts, the ramshackle combination of only an
electric guitar, some sporadic female backing vocals, a walking bass
organ part, a tambourine and some frantic piano playing is perfect as
Patterson passionately extols the virtue of the train bound for glory
making for a timeless classic.
Lins Honeyman
775. BEEHIVE - GET BUSY, 1996. From the album 'Brand New Day',
Word.
In the midst of the British acid jazz scene in the
late '90s, this brilliant track featured on the 'Brand New Day' album
which won the 1998 MOBO Award for the best gospel album for the band
formerly known as Funky Beehive. Removing Funky from the band's name
didn't jettison the funk from the band's music as this track amply
demonstrates. "Get Busy" starts with a groove driven by bassist Paul
Lancaster whose sterling work propels the track along and builds a
platform for a fab horn arrangement from Ben Castle, some soulful
vocals from Kaz Lewis and an overall party-like atmosphere. There's
even a Prince-like break down two thirds of the way in and the track
ends with some brilliant psych guitar work. Still a floor-filler in my
kitchen 15 years later!
Mike Rimmer
776. CHIP KENDALL - SUNSHINE, 2012. From the album 'Holy
Freaks', Independent.
After the rather underwhelming 'K
Is For Kendall' EP released on his departure from Thebandwithnoname,
many wondered whether the California-born, Manchester-based singing
evangelist would ever find again the hyper-energised heights he
reached with tbwnn. In fact he has, if anything, gone further in
fusing dance R&B, rock rap and pop hooks into something utterly
infectious. And as the singer/author/broadcaster observed himself,
there's something deliciously ironic about singing "step into the
sunshine" at a rain-soaked festival.
Tony Cummings
777. OUT OF DARKNESS - THERE YOU SEE A STRANGER, 1970. From
the album 'Out Of Darkness', Key.
Forget the nonsense
you might read elsewhere about how Christian rock music was invented
on the west coast of America by Jesus hippies blah blah blah. In fact
the British beat boom spawned loads of little Christian combos playing
coffee bars and church halls up and down the land. Out of that scene
came one of the most radical Christian rock bands ever. Out Of
Darkness were built around amazing guitarist Ray Powell and the band's
1970 debut album saw them creating psychedelic rock in a style
reminiscent of Hendrix or Cream. This track is a good indication of
the band's raw power blues style packed with incendiary Hendrix-style
guitar work and heavy grooves. It makes Larry Norman's 'Upon This
Rock' from the previous year sound wimpish by comparison. This is the
real Jesus rock!
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