The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 61
833. PAUL JONES & FIONA HENDLEY - WHEN LOVE CALLS
YOU HOME, 1996. From the album 'Personal', ICC.
Back in
1996, Paul Jones of Manfred Mann, Blues Band and Radio 2 fame and his
wife and former West End actress Fiona Hendley released a collection
of easy listening tracks that reflected their Christian faith. Amidst
the wealth of lushly-produced tracks on the couple's only album to
date nestled a refreshingly stripped back cover of the Commissioned
song "When Love Calls You Home", written by Fred Hammond, Ty Lacy and
Britain Lenox. It's a gem of a song ("Out there on the edge dangling
somewhere in the darkness/Doubting if anybody really cares") but in
contrast to the original, the Jones' version contains little more than
an acoustic guitar, some gentle piano and a touch of light percussion
to allow the pair's accomplished vocals and the message of God's
redemptive love to take centre stage. A characteristically memorable
harmonica solo from Jones is the icing on the cake. Having being a fan
of Jones' Radio 2 blues show during my teenage years, this particular
track is of special significance to me due to the fact that it
featured on a Cross Rhythms sampler cassette shortly after the album's
release and served to introduce to me a publication that I have had
the honour of contributing to since 1997.
Lins Honeyman
834. JOSH TURNER - LONG BLACK TRAIN, 2003. From the album
'Long Black Train', MCA.
South Carolina native Josh
burst onto the US country scene in 2003 with "Long Black Train", a
song that one reviewer suggested sounded like "a country gospel song
of the 1940s." It was in fact penned by Josh and skilfully rolls
death, temptation and redemption into a metaphor of a funeral train.
Josh's rich, deep baritone perfectly conjures the song's funeral mood
and it became a huge country radio hit, the 'Long Black Train' album
becoming the only debut release of 2003 to win a gold album. It
deserved all of its success and the reminder in the lyric that there's
"victory in the Lord" is a salient reminder to all country music
fans.
Tony Cummings
835. HILLSONG UNITED - OCEANS (WHERE FEET MAY FAIL, 2013. From
the album 'Zion', Hillsong Music.
Down the decades
America's Gospel Music Association (GMA) have handed out their Song Of
The Year award to what have been, to my ears, some pretty lame
choices. But then, as the Grammy Awards and many other award
ceremonies have demonstrated, allowing intense radio exposure/big
sales as the main criterion in winning glittering prizes is bound to
produce some odd winners particularly when US Christian radio is as
narrowly blinkered as it seems currently. Of course, popular music
gets its very name from being popular so it can seem extremely
opinionated to insist, as I do, that whether a recording sells five or
five million has really nothing much to do with whether it's any good
or not. But that's what I believe. However, in the case of "Oceans
(Where Feel May Fail)" I believe Joe Public and, at their 2014 bash,
the Dove Award gatekeepers got it right in their Song Of The Year
choice. As a band Australia's Hillsong United have improved
tremendously down the years. Where once they often sounded like a band
trying to sound like SonicFlood trying to sound like Delirious? today
no such criticism can be made. "Oceans" and indeed the whole 'Zion'
album is a creative tour-de-force with this song, penned by Matt
Crocker, Salomon Ligthelm and the band's frontman Joel Houston, the
jewel in the crown. With its orchestral intro and new keyboard player
Benjamin Tennikoff bringing some angular synth lines to the powerhouse
rock guitars, it's a great radio friendly track. But, of course, with
worship music it is the song rather than the performance which is of
primary importance and "Oceans" is as melodically memorable as all
great pop music needs to be while the lyrics will surely stir any
worshipper to follow where our Lord would lead.
Tony
Cummings
836. NORMAN & NANCY BLAKE - I'D RATHER BE AN OLD TIME
CHRISTIAN, 2002. From the album 'Just Gimme Somethin' I'm Used To',
Shanachie.
One of the leading figures of the bluegrass
revival of the 1970s, Norman has recorded with Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash
and Ralph Stanley and has been called "a national treasure" for his
decades-long commitment to traditional American music. In 2002 he
recorded this song, sometimes attributed to Albert Brumley, with his
wife and long-time musical compatriot Nancy at Pyramid Studios in
Lookout Mountain, Georgia. It's a deft rendition of a timeless gem.
"In this world I've tried most everything/I'm happy now to say/There's
nothing like religion/In the good old fashioned way/I'm walking in the
old time way/And I want the world to know/That I'd rather be an old
time Christian/Than anything I know."
Tony Cummings
837. BEN OKAFOR - SANCTIFY MY SOUL, 1992. From the album
'Generation', Plankton.
It took me a long time to really
enjoy Ben Okafor. When I first heard him outside a small tent at
Greenbelt a couple of years before he made his first record I rather
dismissed him as a Bob Marley copyist. Being, before my conversion, a
black music purist (a strange affectation for a white boy) I believed
that only black Americans could sing "real" soul music and only black
Jamaicans could perform "real" reggae. The Spirit had some work to do
before my cultural prejudices could be completely demolished. So in my
early years as a music critic and journalist for Buzz magazine I
theorised that Ben's growing popularity at Greenbelt was due to the
fact that for years Ben was the ONLY exponent of gospel reggae in
Britain and with many young British churchgoers keen to hear something
that at least got close to "Exodus" or "No Women No Cry" the
Nigerian-born Ben filled the need. It wasn't until the remastered
version of the 'Generation' album was released that I had to
radically revise my opinion of Mr Okafor. He still offered some of
those insidious lopsided riddems of JA but he'd found his own creative
focus. Propulsive Afro-beat, raw Ritchie Havens-style acoustic rock
and worldbeat reggae were all evident on the album to make something
completely his own. Ben's vocal stylings may still have owed much to
Marley but now on this joyful number, they were heard over jangly
guitars, a finely recorded bassline, some delicious congas and a
drummer who showed on the chorus an on-the-fours drive which
unexpectedly, and probably unwittingly, replicated the driving rhythm
of Northern soul. Seldom has a track so successfully woven together
such an eclectic musical potpourri and with its celebratory chorus
"Sanctify my soul/I love you more than gold" it's easy to understand
how this song would get any crowd on their feet and dancing.
Tony Cummings
838. NOEL PAUL STOOKEY - THE WEDDING SONG (THERE IS
LOVE), 1971. From the album 'Paul And.', Warner Bros.
Known to millions as the Paul in Peter, Paul & Mary, the folk
music popularisers who in the '60s toured the world and sold millions
of records, Noel Paul went on to become the Jesus Movement's most
famous "celebrity convert." This lovely song reached number 24 in the
US pop charts in 1971 and has since become heard in hundreds of
thousands of wedding ceremonies around the world. "The Wedding Song"
was written for the wedding of his friend and one-time bandmate Peter
Yarrow, at which Noel Paul served as best man. Despite its success
Stookey refused to accept any royalties for the song, insisting that
it had come to him by divine inspiration and that, being a conduit, he
deserved little credit. This position is reflected in the lyrics. "He
is now to be among you, at the calling of your hearts/Rest assured
this troubadour is acting on his part/The union of your spirits here
has caused him to remain/For wherever two or more of you are gathered
in his name/There is love."
Tony Cummings
839. SISTER O M TERRELL - LORD I WANT YOU TO LEAD ME, 1953.
From the various artists album 'The Guitar Evangelists Vol 2',
JSP.
Refreshingly, the gospel blues genre has always
been populated by its fair share of female acts - certainly more so
than the secular blues scene - with the likes of Atlanta-born
singer/guitarist Sister Ola Mae Terrell being one of the best. And
though she never achieved anything but a fraction of the fame and
fortune handed out to another guitar-toting singer of gospel truth,
Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Sister Terrell was, on the evidence of the 78s
she recorded for Columbia Records, every bit Tharpe's equal. In the
exemplary "Lord I Want You To Lead Me", she plays what sounds like a
National steel guitar and that, together with her passionate, raspy
vocal is electrifying as she delivers this plea for the Lord's
guidance. Some gospel blues fans suggest that the direct emotional
current conveyed by her voice and instrument suggests something in
common with both the Reverend Gary Davis and - for skilful guitar work
and sheer devotional intensity - Blind Willie Johnson. But, as this
song demonstrates, Sister Terrell deserves her own place in the annals
of blues and gospel history.
Lins Honeyman
840. RIVERS & ROBOTS - FOUNTAINS, 2013. From the album
'Take Everything', Independent.
Reviewers have already
had a go at identifying the Salford-based band's various influences -
Elbow and David Gray being suggested on the musical front and Song Of
Solomon for their approach to lyric writing. They may be right, but I
also hear a great deal of pristine originality emanating from singer,
songwriter and producer Jonathan Ogden and with their sinuous bass
lines and intricate rhythms Rivers & Robots have captured a sound
which is hauntingly worshipful but stands apart from most modern
worship music.
Tony Cummings
841. THE CRABB FAMILY - THE WALK, 2003. From the album 'The
Walk', Daywind.
Like The Imperials before them, The
Crabb Family made their reputation as Southern Gospel harmonisers and
have been blessed with a soulful lead singer. Not that Jason Crabb,
who as a solo has gone on to win a coveted Male Singer Of The Year
Dove Award, sounds anything like Russ Taff. Jason's voice is higher
and lighter-textured but, over a tight country-style accompaniment
complete with bluesy guitar licks, is equally able to deliver a vocal
with plenty of black gospel fervour. "The Walk" has a clever lyric
penned by Gerald Crabb. "I found myself seated in the line of
fire/That old preacher man sure had the holy power/With the Bible he
read my life like he knew it well/The more I put up my defence, the
more conviction fell." That's followed by the memorable chorus of the
convicted sinner walking down to the altar. "What they were singing
slips my memory/There's a lot I can't recall/But I won't forget the
mercy/And I won't forget the walk."
Tony Cummings
842. PHIL WICKHAM - YOU'RE BEAUTIFUL, 2007. From the album
'Cannons', Fair Trade Services.
When I first heard
worship led by Phil Wickham at the West Country's annual Creation Fest
he was an independent artist known only to Californian church-goers. I
was hugely impressed with his rich, vibrato-loaded voice and his
winning way with Scripture-filled compositions. With the telling
proviso of "if he gets signed" I predicted that one of his songs would
connect with the international worshipping community. As it turned
out, both things happened, Fair Trade Services signing Phil and his
songs like "This Is Amazing Grace" making waves in many churches. But
it's this beautiful celebration of God's creation which is, I believe,
Phil's best so far ("I see your face in every sunrise/The colours of
the morning are inside your eyes/The world awakens to the light of the
day/I look up to the sky and say/You're beautiful.")
Tony
Cummings
843. DIXIE NIGHTINGALES - THE ASSASSINATION, 1964.
From the single, Chalice.
The Dixie Nightingales were
among the best known of the semi-professional Memphis gospel groups
though someway short of the fame of the quartets the Dixie
Hummingbirds and the Sensational Nightingales whose names they had
partially borrowed. For Nashville's Nashboro Records they recorded a
pile of sides but when label boss Ernie Young refused to record and
release "The Assassination", written by the Dixie Nightingales' lead
singer Ollie Hoskins, insisting it was not a gospel song, the group
moved to the home of Memphis soul Stax Records, who were hitting big
with Otis Redding, Sam & Dave et al and who had started a gospel
subsidiary, Chalice. In the company's fabled 926 E McLemore studio
they recorded "The Assassination". As Young asserted, the song was not
gospel, rather in the long tradition of folk and blues music, it was a
song that depicted big news events of the day, in this case the awful
shooting of President John F Kennedy. "The Assassination" was a truly
haunting lament, Ollie's pining lead given solemn accompaniment by his
fellow Nightingales and with a backing reportedly featuring the
soon-to-become-superstar Isaac Hayes on organ and, definitely, Carl
Cunningham on drums (Carl later finding success as a member of the
Stax funksters the Bar-Kays). Even the simple rhythmic demands of this
dead slow song showed Cunningham's invention as he added to the
musical drama by inserting loud cracks each time the word "shot" was
sung on the chorus. The drummer got the particular effect by placing a
high-hat cymbal on top of his snare. The Dixie Nightingales were
within a year to become Ollie & The Nightingales who recorded
mainstream soul music with Stax. "The Assassination" though was their
finest musical moment.
Tony Cummings
844. CHRIS AUGUST - WANT TO BE REAL, 2010. From the album 'No
Far Away', Fervent.
A perfectly formed piece of
Nashville pop from one of the brightest new talents in CCM. A rolling
piano figure, a melodically flowing chorus and a delayed drums and
guitar all do their bit in the deftly arranged Ed Cash production as
Chris pleads for spiritual reality. "So I'm throwing out words I don't
fully understand/I could be talking to myself but I don't think I
am/'Cause you're always there through the fight/Saving my heart from
the doubt inside."
Tony Cummings
845. GENESIS GOSPEL SINGERS - MOMMA MO AKOMA NTUTU, 1983. From
the single, Africagram.
Ghanaian high life music was one
of the styles which finally awoke the international record market to
the riches of music which didn't originate in the West. High life's
thrilling blend of multiple guitar rhythms and lots of densely
textured percussion brought an enthusiastic response from music buffs
intrigued by the countless styles and approaches marketed as "world
music". High life gospel music emerged in the '70s and the Genesis
Gospel Singers were, according to a BBC News Channel report, "the most
popular band of the decade." "Momma Mo Akoma Ntutu" was the GGS's
biggest hit and a delight it is too, the nasal high voices and the
plodding deep voices producing a sound like no American or European
choir could ever replicate. The English translation for "Momma Mo
Akoma Ntutu" is "Let My Heart Be Cool".
Tony Cummings
846. IAN YATES - CHRIST IN ME, 2014. From the album 'DNA',
7Core Music.
Since prolific Liverpool worship leader
Ian Yates teamed up with producer and label owner Trevor Michael the
recordings have poured forth. Mr Yates has written many excellent
congregational songs and, in truth, it's only the fact that he doesn't
have a connection with a Soul Survivor, Passion or mega-church which
has stopped his songs being more widely known. His albums too have
been top rate. On 'DNA' he moved somewhat from guitar fuelled rock to
a more electro-tinged approach and on this perfectly formed pop
worship concoction he and Michael reached a creative pinnacle. The bit
where the chorus of male voices intone "Every step, every breath,
every moment" to be answered by Ian singing the hook is a sublime pop
moment which is some arranging/production feat when recording a song
intended for congregations to sing.
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