The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 64
870. CHARLIE PEACOCK - DEATH TRAP, 2012. From the album 'No
Man's Land', Twentyten.
As most followers of CCM will
know, Charlie is a hugely talented producer able to take a wide range
of artists and give them Christian radio hits. But when it comes to
his own albums he refuses to remain shackled by the demands of
format-fixated radio and has released in the past albums of
instrumental jazz or in this case an album that at different times
hints at the music of Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello and John Hiatt though
never aping any of them. Also, Charlie's voice, still at times
uncannily close to Smokey Robinson's sensuous high tenor, adds another
dimension to the songs on 'No Man's Land' which take country music as
their starting point. The lyric of "Death Trap" is a reflection on the
book of James' warning that our unbridled tongues will cause us all
kinds of pain. Peacock pleads with the Lord to help him keep his
tongue in check.
Tony Cummings
871. PHIL KEAGGY - FOLLOW ME UP, 1978. From the album 'The
Master & The Musician', Myrrh.
Having been one of
the pioneers in establishing, if not a genre at least a marketing
niche, with CCM the multi-talented Keaggy bemused Christian radio and
retailers in 1978 with 'The Master & The Musician' album starting
off the whole tiresome "can instrumental music be Christian music?"
debate that even today refuses to die. It was the guitarist maestro's
first all instrumental album and despite initial incomprehension it's
subsequently been recognised as a classic. Eventually Musician
Magazine was listing Keaggy as one of the Top Guitarists Of The 20th
Century. Reviewer Mark Allender wrote how 'The Master & The
Musician' is "full of emotional twists, meditative sounds and world
influenced tonalities." "Follow Me Up" is a breathtaking example of
one of popular music's great talents.
Tony Cummings
872. KANSAS - GOING THROUGH THE MOTIONS, 1983. From the album
'Drastic Measures', Kirshner.
When frontman Steve Walsh
left Kansas they brought in singer, songwriter and producer John
Elefante which signalled their move from their proggy heritage to a
sound which was feisty, radio friendly rock. And so it came to pass
that in 1983 the band delivered one of the truly great AOR albums,
'Drastic Measures', with "Going Through The Motions" one of several
killer tracks. A pomp-tinged tour de force, journalist Tim Jones
enthused about its "looming synths and intricate percussive swipes."
Just as telling were the lyrics penned by John and his brother Dino
with its nagging chorus "Is your day just a reflection of the day
before?/Don't you ever stop and wonder if there's something more?/Do
you really mean to tell me that you're satisfied?/Are you for real or
are you going through the motions?" Pointed questions indeed.
Tony Cummings
873. GUNGOR - GOD AND COUNTRY, 2013. From the album
'I Am Mountain', Hither & Yon.
The problematic way
in which believers throw around the phrases "Christian music" and
"worship leader" has led Michael Gungor and his wife Lisa to try
affixing a new label to their loose knit collective though whether
"liturgical post rock" will do for long remains to be seen. No matter.
What must be acknowledged is that the Gungors have done wonders in
broadening both the musical palate and the lyrical themes of music
made by believers. With its arresting chorus "God we love our God/Oh
God we love our guns" "God And Country" is a withering cry of protest
against the American Church's xenophobic excesses. The
singer/songwriter himself wrote, "What I find incredibly ironic and
perverse is how religion and violence often get tangled up together.
It boggles my mind that, in the US at least, it is often the 'God
fearing Christians' that are the most trigger happy, pro-war people on
the planet. That would be like if a group of Richard Dawkins followers
started a new theistic religion with Dawkins books. It would be
precisely the opposite effect that Dawkins intended with his writing.
While the American Jesus of the political right in the US tends to be
a homophobic grouch with a shotgun in his hand, the Jesus of the
Gospels was nonviolent. That's just painfully obvious in the writings,
and so curiously missing from the religious views of people who like
to claim that they take the whole Bible literally Jesus taught his
followers to turn their cheek and pray for their enemies and warned
that those who live by the sword die by the sword."
Tony
Cummings
874. CANDLE - PATIENCE, 1977. From the album 'The Music
Machine', Sparrow.
Children's music seldom connects with
adults, particularly parents (like this one) who in years past have
been subjected to endless plays of simplistic ditties by over
enthusiastic kiddie winkers. But amazingly this track has stood the
test of time. It comes from one of the biggest selling Christian
albums of all time, the three million seller 'The Music Machine'.
Candle was an evangelistic ministry located first in California and
then Lindale, Texas, who as well as the Candle name also operated as
Agape Force. In 1977 they released 'The Music Machine' where Steve,
Nancy and Mr Conductor encounter all kinds of wonders. This song was
one of nine teaching about the various fruit of the Spirit, co-written
and sung by Frank Hernandez (in character as Herbert The Snail), is
impossible to forget and is enthused about on the internet nearly 40
years on. Maybe it's Hernandez's doleful vocal which gets slower and
slower as the song continues. Maybe it's the excellent production by
Fletch Wiley, the fine jazz trumpeter who was once a member of Andrae
Crouch's Disciples. Or maybe it's just that the message ("Be patient,
be patient, don't be in such a hurry") is still a salient message for
this hyper-fast generation.
Tony Cummings
875. BOB DYLAN - TEMPEST, 2012. From the album 'Tempest,
Columbia.
Possibly the bard's greatest song since "Every
Grain Of Sand", this 14-minute epic retelling of the sinking of the
Titanic is breathtaking. Based, at least in part, on "The Titanic" (or
"When That Ship Went Down") - a folk song once recorded by the likes
of Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly - "Tempest" includes in its masterly
narrative several references to a "sleeping watchman" echoing Jesus'
warning in Matthew 25:13 and a bishop who comes "to help all those in
need" and turning his eyes Heavenwards declares, "The poor are yours
to feed.
Tony Cummings
876. PEDRO THE LION - HOLE, 1997. From the EP 'Whole', Tooth
& Nail.
When Seattle songsmith David Bazan and his
loose collective of musicians first emerged with this release they
immediately received accolades form the growing band of Christian
hipsters. If some of the more clamorous accolades proclaiming Pedro
releases as towering works of genius teetered close to hyperbole,
there is no doubting that Bazan was and is a gifted indie rock
songsmith. On this, Pedro's debut release, "Hole" expresses spiritual
hunger with child-like eloquence. "A hole that big I'd never seen
before/In the tummy of a good ol' boy who always wanted more/Then just
yesterday I saw him satisfied/It seems he'd met the hole-fixin' man,
much to his surprise/But are you for real Mr Hole Fixin' Man?/You
fixed my friend can you fix me?"
Tony Cummings
877. BLIND LEMON JEFFERSON - HE AROSE FROM THE DEAD, 1927.
From the various artists album 'Texas Blues', Big3.
A
write-up of a box set by the seminal blues singer/guitarist Jefferson
called him "the first country blues superstar" which is kind of right
if you consider his gigantic musical influence on subsequent
generations and his classic songs like "Black Snake Moan" and "Match
Box Blues" (recorded by the Beatles) but gives no indication of the
poverty-racked tragedy of much of Jefferson's life. Most of his life
Lemon Henry Jefferson hustled for dimes in the towns of East Texas. In
the book Tolbert's Texas it states that the street musician "star" was
killed while being robbed of a large royalty payment from Paramount
Records, who released Blind Lemon's flow of 78s, by a guide escorting
Jefferson to Chicago's Union Station to catch a train home to Texas.
As well as Lemon's salty and occasionally salacious blues songs, Blind
Lemon also recorded number of traditional spirituals and original
songs like the haunting "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean" (a wish
which for decades remained unfulfilled, his grave being allowed to
clog with weeds) under the name Deacon L J Bates. In fact it was under
that pseudonym that he had first released the powerful "He Arose From
The Dead".
Tony Cummings
878. BRYAN & KATIE TORWALT - HOLY SPIRIT, 2011.
From the album 'Here On Earth', Jesus Culture Music.
When the Torwalts released their 'Here On Earth' album with the
Jesus Culture band, it didn't take long for the international Church
to recognise that "Holy Spirit" was a classic song. Over a haunting
melody the lyrics plead for an active experience of God's presence.
The reality is that it's simply not enough to have a head belief of
God's omnipresence. We need the Holy Spirit to bring "the sweetest of
loves" into our experience. Bryan's tender, poignant vocal and the
surging intro of the band, with Jeffrey Kinde's guitar in overdrive,
make this a masterly chunk of modern worship.
Tony
Cummings
879. SEPTEMBER - PRELUDE/JESTER, 1981. From the album
'September First', Sugar.
America's brother and sister
Dale & Russ Kirkland with some musical friends managed to release
four fine though startlingly diverse albums on their own Sugar
Records. Their first offered Christopher Cross-style pop and their
last was techno rock. But it was on the 1981 album 'September First'
that their considerable talents bore the greatest creative fruit with
what was one of the best produced and most ambitious independent
albums ever. "Prelude" kicks off with sister Dale's Karen
Carpenter-ish voice accompanied by Russ' elegant concert grand then
suddenly lurches into the highly dramatic "Jester" complete with
howling rock guitar before cutting away to classical-style piano and
then returning to a burst of Russ' rasping vocals over thudding
rhythm. Christian-themed prog had never sounded better.
Tony
Cummings
880. SEPTEMBER - RELATE IT TO ME, 1981. From the album
'September First', Sugar.
It was probably the unbridled
eclecticism and sheer creative dexterity that ensured 'September
First' never got much airplay to escape the obscurity which besets
nearly all independent releases. But those blessed few who did get
their hands on copies have now written on the internet praising
'September First' as an undiscovered classic. One fan enthused,
"Imagine Servant as an AOR and borderline progressive band in the vein
of Styx with much more melody and more ballads." After the dazzling
"Prelude/Jester" opener the Kirklands followed it with "Relate It To
Me" featuring one of the most infectious rock riffs complete with a
shredding axe solo. If only mainstream rock radio had got to hear this
cut things could have been so different for September. But then, what
is rock stardom's loss is the Church's gain. Russ and Dale Kirkland
were last heard of ministering at Windsor Crossing Community Church in
St Louis, Missouri. One wonders what eclectic musical delights are
heard within that particular sanctuary.
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