STYLE: MOR / Soft Pop RATING OUR PRODUCT CODE: 1234-24864 LABEL: Independent CMM041CD FORMAT: CD Album ITEMS: 1 RRP: £13.00
Reviewed by Mike Rimmer
Roger Jones has been writing and touring musicals for 20 years, and by all accounts is tremendously popular. This latest project explores the ups and downs of God's people through history in a verity of songs that are basically a stage musical a la Lloyd Webber et al. However this is less 'Les MIs' and more plain old miserable. Though clearly recorded with verity of soloists taking part, the songs themselves have a tweeness lyrically and musically that is unintentionally funny! Corny songs, obvious rhymes and arrangements that would better suit a cheesy kids album. Actually what the songs reminded me of were those terrible kids' TV programmes where the presenter would suddenly grab a guitar and sing grinningly some excruciating ditty into the cameras. If these songs had been written in the early 70's, they would have been cutting edge but things have moved on and it sounds dated, out of touch and cringy. I know that fellow reviewer Trevor Kirk points out that this stuff is tremendously popular but I wonder, is popularity a good yardstick for the musical merit of the project? In this case, I'd argue not, it is just an indication of how the church continues to be addicted to mediocrity. Defiantly more a snake than a ladder.
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Posted by Lidia Chalk in Rayleigh-Essex @ 23:39 on Apr 12 2009
As someone who many years ago sang in two of Roger Jones
musicals and not only received tremendous blessing but saw
many others blessed also, I thank God for this man's gift. I
understand that his work does not satisfy the more
fastidious among us but I have no doubt that the Lord is
pleased; not because He does not appreciate the sublime but
because this kind of mediocrity is perfectly appreciated
by Him also.
As someone who many years ago sang in two of Roger Jones musicals and not only received tremendous blessing but saw many others blessed also, I thank God for this man's gift. I understand that his work does not satisfy the more fastidious among us but I have no doubt that the Lord is pleased; not because He does not appreciate the sublime but because this kind of mediocrity is perfectly appreciated by Him also.