The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 60
819. THE SOUL-SEEKERS - WHERE COULD I GO?, 1965. From the
single, Evangelical Recordings.
Tony Tribe is a name
which will be recognised by followers of the British reggae scene. In
1969 he recorded the original reggae version of "Red Red Wine". But
four years earlier he was still using his real name Tony Mossop and
was in a band of British Jamaicans The Soul-Seekers who were part of
the gospel beat group scene which in the US came to be called Jesus
music. The Soul-Seekers played light beat music with more than a
little country music influence but despite elementary production, a
tuneful melody and the warmth of Mossop's vocal make this collector's
item single a charming memento of an earlier, more innocent era of
music.
Tony Cummings
820. BRANDON HAMPTON & SEAN FEUCHT - LET WORSHIP BE YOUR
WEAPON, 2012. From the various artists album 'Incense Rise: Burn
24-7', Burn 24-7'.
Sean Feucht is, as far as Cross
Rhythms is concerned, one of the most effective musical prophets
working in modern worship and this track, produced by Feucht, was
captured (with the inspired by the Spirit nature of prophetic worship
I think "captured" is more appropriate than "composed") at Burn 24-7
meetings either in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania or Vienna, Virginia. Over
an elegant piano figure Hampton and Feucht sing about the ability of
worship to do battle against the powers and strongholds. As the
couplet is repeated again and again and the drums enter in the effect
is mesmerising and when Feucht exhorts and preaches at the song's
climax one is left stunned by its sheer, Christ-centred intensity.
Tony Cummings
821. HOUSE OF HEROES - IN THE VALLEY OF THE DYING SUN, 2008.
From the album 'The End Is Not The End', Gotee.
It took
almost two years of delays before the alternative rock band from
Columbus, Ohio, were finally able to release their breakthrough album
'The End Is Not The End' in 2009. It was certainly worth the wait and
attracted a pile of positive reviews. One writer called it "a
masterpiece" and another journo suggested that "'The End Is Not The
End' is a concept album that has stories of love, endangerment, death,
politics, desperation, loneliness, depression, bombs, heartache and
poverty." "In The Valley Of The Dying Sun" features piercing guitar
work and massed vocals on a song that portrays Jacob wrestling with
God in an epic musical soundscape. The lyrics can lend themselves to
numerous interpretations but within the context of the alum some of
them appear to speak of modern warfare. "I'm thinking of you when I
kill a good man/To keep myself from being killed by him." A
breathtaking musical statement.
Tony Cummings
822. DOTTIE RAMBO - I'M GONNA LEAVE HERE SHOUTIN', 2008. From
the album 'Stand By The River', Spring Hill.
This song
first appeared on the album 'An Evening With The Singing Rambos' back
in 1967 but it was this version, re-recorded by the veteran singer,
songwriter and Southern gospel matriarch which brought out the whole
knee-slapping, Pentecostal joy of the song. The new version has almost
a rockabilly vibe which with its husky, low register vocal, bluesy
harmonica and punchy acoustic-driven rhythm all belie the fact that
Dottie was 69 when she recorded this. Sadly, five years later Dottie
died in a car crash but no doubt she was shouting her praises to God
as she ascended to Heaven.
Tony Cummings
823. BILLY PRESTON - THAT'S THE WAY GOD PLANNED IT,
1969. From the album 'That's The Way God Planned it', Apple.
In his 49-year career in music singer, songwriter and keyboard
virtuoso Billy achieved much and as any Beatles anorak will tell you
was the only musician getting a label credit on a Beatles single (for
his work on "Get Back"). Spiritually though, things were difficult. A
confused sexuality created problems for the hugely talented one-time
child prodigy who down the decades moved in and out of gospel and
mainstream music several times. Billy's spell with the Beatles
produced possibly his best work and this song, a UK hit single, was
his best recording. Produced by George Harrison and with such
luminaries as Keith Richards, Eric Clapton and Doris Troy all adding
their talents "That's The Way God Planned It" is a rollicking pop
gospel hybrid which still sounds good today.
Tony
Cummings
824. DON FRANCISCO - STEEPLE SONG, 1979. From the album 'Got
To Tell Somebody', NewPax.
Don may not be one of
Christian music's great singers, a number of his melodies are
perilously close to one another and his country-tinged arrangements
haven't always stood the test of time. But in one area Don remains a
towering giant. As one of Christendom's great lyricists the veteran
has surely penned no greater set of words than "Steeple Song" and in
our age of mega-church hype and OTT tele evangelists they still ring,
40 years on, with the power of the prophet. Each verse makes its
telling points, the third being particularly powerful: "I don't care
if you pray for miracles/I don't care if you speak with tongues/I
don't care if you said you love me/In every song you've sung/It
doesn't matter that your sacrifice/Is loud enough to raise the
dead/The thing I need to ask you is/Have you done the things I said?"
For a split second the question hangs there, before the chorus brings
more challenging questions. "Do you love your wife?/For her and for
your children/Are you laying down your life?/What about the
others?/Are you living as a servant to/Your sisters and your
brothers?/Do you make the poor man beg you for a bone?/Do the widow
and the orphan cry alone?"
Tony Cummings
825. ANTHONY BUTLER & HIS SINGERS - JUDGEMENT'S COMING,
1955. From the album 'Mighty Day: 25 Gospel Greats',
Document.
With a jaunty strummed guitar and some soulful
chanting from his Singers who slow things down for a couple of
passages, it's Anthony's staccato delivery on the verses which will
keep modern listeners reaching for repeat play. A little like some of
the quick fire deliveries of the mighty Golden Gate Quartet tracks,
Anthony's mesmerising chanting is a delight and the rhythmic delivery
of those verses is another clue of the origins of rap music.
Tony Cummings
826. PETE MEAR - PRESSING ON, 2004. From the album 'Pressing
On', Independent.
Pete is a worship leader from
Huntingdon Community Church in Cambridgeshire who has neither sought
nor obtained any kind of fame. In 2004 Pete went into the dB Studios
in Lincoln and recorded his sole album, most copies of which he gave
away to friends and family. It deserved to be heard much further
afield and this title track, a searing blues rock rendition of the
Dylan song first heard on the great man's 'Saved' album, is as
powerful declaration to keep on going "to the higher calling of the
Lord" as you're likely to hear.
Tony Cummings
827. FAIRFIELD FOUR - PACKING EVERY BURDEN, 1951. From the
various artists album 'Le Gospel 1939-1952', Body &
Soul.
The decades-long history of the Fairfield Four
reached a pinnacle in December 1951 when the Nashville acappella
harmonisers recorded this stunning track for Dot Records. With a
gasping, gurglingly soulful lead vocal from Sam Mc Crary, a bass voice
from George McCurn so deep it rattles the bass bins and a slow and
bluesy song declaring that we need more faith and grace to deal with
the burdens that surround us, this is a sonorous, soulful delight.
Tony Cummings
828. CHRIS TOMLIN - HOW GREAT IS OUR GOD: WORLD
EDITION, 2012. From the album 'Chris Tomlin: The Essential
Collection', Sixsteps.
It takes a good while before we
can, with any confidence, proclaim that a modern worship song
currently circulating around our churches has the quality to go into
long time circulation along with the Wesleys and Newtons. But surely
this is the destiny for this congregational classic penned by Chris
Tomlin, Jesse Reeves and Ed Cash. Its artful blend of memorable
melody, the simplest of choruses and the most poetic of verses ("He
wraps himself in light/And darkness tries to hide/And trembles at his
voice") ensured it made an immediate impression when it appeared on
Tomlin's 2004 album 'Arriving' album. But it was the version released
on 'Chris Tomlin: The Essential Collection' which reflected its
international impact with, as well as English, the Texas-born
singer/songwriter performing the song in Hindi, Indonesian, Russian,
Spanish, Mandarin, Portuguese, Zulu and Afrikaans.
Tony
Cummings
829. HARVEST FLIGHT - TRUTH, 1971. From the album 'One Way',
Destiny.
A great cut from an early Jesus music album
from three Californian long-hairs which in recent years has come to be
much sought after by collectors because of its impressive display of
styles from abrasive hard rock to dreamy folk psych. "Truth" is a
bluesy edgy rocker that offers blistering fuzz and wah wah guitar from
singer/guitarist Evan Williams which along with some tasty Hammond
organ from Kerry Chester makes "Truth" an early rock gem.
Tony Cummings
830. SCOTT CUNNINGHAM BAND - FOREVER GRATEFUL, 2012. From the
album 'Come Away', Independent.
With so many thousands
of independent releases vying for consumer attention on the Internet
Highway it's hardly surprising that the Church has rather overlooked
the fine 'Come Away' set from California's Scott Cunningham Band. The
band is fronted by a Calvary Chapel teacher in worship ministry who
has had one or two of his songs recorded by well known figures like
Jeremy Camp while Scott's daughter Madison Cunningham has one of the
most haunting and emotive voices since Leigh Nash first emerged with
Sixpence all those years back. The band arrangements on their debut
album are epic, synth-infused soundscapes and on "Forever Grateful"
Madison's voce, with some telling harmonies from her sister, brings a
sublime sense of worshipful adoration that few worship albums
achieve.
Tony Cummings
831. SCOTT STAPP - JESUS WAS A ROCK STAR, 2013. From the album
'Proof Of Life', Wind-up.
Creed were never the critic's
favourites and in the late 1990s and early 2000s despite the pop
rockers releasing three consecutive multi-platinum albums, one of
which was later certified Diamond, rock music writers were soon lining
up to pour scorn on the band. The barbs continued with Scott's solo
output and with the gritty-voiced singer/songwriter embracing the
Christian faith, there is today little likelihood that the hipster
critics will let up anytime soon. Scott has never bothered about the
alternative rock clique and his solo albums, 2005's 'The Great Divide'
and 2013's 'Proof Of Life', showcase music of maximum pop rock appeal
even without the help of his Creed bandmates. In "Jesus Was A Rock
Star" over a rock track tighter than a dancer's leotard, Scott
knowingly makes a revolutionary suggestion to the countless millions
of youth culture hedonists, "He was your party that you've been
looking for/Maybe, just maybe, Jesus was a rock star."
Tony
Cummings
832. REV GARY DAVIS - I HEARD THE ANGELS SINGING, 1972. From
the album 'Talk On The Corner', Vantage Music.
The late,
great Reverend Gary Davis was, of course, a seminal figure in
introducing blues and gospel music to white audiences in the '60s
while his dazzling guitar technique inspired a generation of folksters
and rock musicians to play like the one-time street musician. The good
reverend was perhaps best known for more upbeat numbers such as "You
Gotta Move" and "The Great Change In Me", but this recording, from
later on in Davis' career, showcases the man's ability to turn out a
poignant and reflective work of art. With just a 12 string guitar for
accompaniment, Davis picks out a mesmerizing yet simple minor key riff
that sits behind a brooding and melancholic telling of encounters with
an angel, Satan and then the Holy Spirit. As if acting out a one man
call and response and assuring himself that he is surrounded by
protective angels no matter what, Davis repeats the title of the song
after each line to make this a meditative piece that covers big themes
such as redemption, anointing, the lies of the Devil and spiritual
warfare with all the world weariness of an aging man who means every
word contained in this truly affecting song.
Lins
Honeyman
again thank you Tony for your efforts greatly appreciated, mind you l go back to the tour of the top twenty at GB 84