The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 57
778. THE ORIOLES - CRYING IN THE CHAPEL, 1953. From
the album 'Still Crying In The Chapel 1948-1962', Jasmine.
Originally written by US songsmith Artie Glenn for his teenage son
Darrell to sing and record, this gentle and considered song advocating
the benefits of a relationship with God was most famously recorded by
Elvis Presley in 1960. However, an earlier cover by one of the
pioneers of doowop (a secularised version of the old jubilee gospel
harmony sound) the Orioles most certainly provided the starting point
for Presley's recording and is as near the definitive version as it
gets. With a beautifully tender lead vocal from Sonny Til, backed by
minimalist instrumentation and some sumptuous harmonies from the other
Orioles, this simple song tells of a soul finally falling to his knees
in prayer and surrendering to God having searched elsewhere without
finding peace of mind - an act, we're told, that moves the singer to
tears of joy. Before the genre was even invented, this is an
undoubtedly a song of worship and one that genuinely and emotionally
states that joy, freedom and contentment can only be found in the
Lord. Given this unapologetic approach and its purely spiritual focus,
it's perhaps surprising that this humble yet powerful song became such
a massive mainstream success - thanks in no small way to Glenn's
writing skills and the Orioles' pitch perfect handling of the
composition in question.
Lins Honeyman
779. NEEDTOBREATHE - OOHS AND AHHS, 2011. From the album 'The
Reckoning', Atlantic.
Around the time of the release of
NeedtoBreathe's 'The Reckoning' album in September 2011 the band's
lead singer Bear Rinehart told Billboard, "We want to be an important
band. We want to be a band that people believe in and that people are
impacted by." The South Carolina-based rockers achieved their desire,
'The Reckoning' reached number six in Billboard's 200 album chart and
the opener "Oohs And Ahhs" shows just why they've reached the major
league. A wily mix of explosive guitar riffs, drum attack and a gritty
vocal complete with falsetto swoops from Bear, it's a minor key song
on which you wouldn't expect to hear punchy brass riffs. But it's not
just the clever blend of Southern rock sass and stadium rock bombast
which make "Oohs And Ahhs" so memorable. Its enigmatic lyric is
steeped in regret. "We were fresh coming off the vine/Thrown into a
barrel of the cheapest wine/Bottled in a store with a neon sign/And
we're all the ones to blame."
Tony Cummings
780. DANIEL BASHTA - HEAVEN, 2011. From the album 'The Sounds
Of Daniel Bashta', Integrity.
It was David Crowder
Band's rendition of "Like A Lion" which alerted the worshipping Church
to the sheer power and authority of Atlanta-based prophetic worship
man Daniel Bashta. The offspring of missionary parents, Daniel is a
passionate and frequently inspired communicator. "Heaven" is an
expanded version of a song originally released on Bashta's 2009
independent mini-album 'My Worship In Motion'. It's sparse lyrics,
effectively a call for Heaven to fall down on those who sing it, are
sung over a stretched-out accompaniment which ebbs and flows. Daniel's
earthy tones bring out the brilliance of simplicity. "I finally found
a life worth living for/It's not my life. . . it's yours." Like Jesus
Culture, Bashta is part of a movement who've glimpsed more, much more,
than what passes for worship in most churches. We need to heed these
singing prophets.
Tony Cummings
781. GARY CHAPMAN - SWEET JESUS, 1991. From the album 'The
Light Inside', Reunion.
In an interview in 1994, shortly
after the release of 'The Light Inside' album, Gary gave an account of
how this achingly poignant song came into being. He said, "I came as
close to a vision experience as I've ever personally had. Saw the
entire song like a movie. Top to bottom. I wrote the whole thing in
five minutes. And even to say that I wrote it, that's stretching it
some." This stunning narrative song, produced simply with Michael
Omartian's elegant piano, skilfully tells its tale - an old, rundown
bridge that the townspeople should have repaired years ago; a mother
and baby on the bridge the day it collapses; an old man fishing under
the bridge sees the mother and child fall into the water and dives in;
the exhausted old man finds them but realises he can't save them both;
the mother passes the child to the man and he swims to shore where he
dies from exhaustion. There's the most haunting of choruses: "Sweet
Jesus, please won't you catch us/Sweet Jesus, please won't you hear
us, crying." The song reaches its epic climax in the third verse as
the rescued child, now a man, sings, "I miss my mother and the brave
old man/Though I never knew them/They are the soul inside the man I
am/I bear their dreams/And I am walking in their footsteps/And I am
talking to their God and my cry is/Sweet Jesus, please won't you catch
us, save us." Gary has written many hits for everyone from Amy Grant
to Kenny Rogers. He has never written a better one than this cinematic
gem.
Tony Cummings
782. L.A. SYMPHONY - ANYTHING, 2001. From the album 'Call It
What You Want', Unreleased.
At the start of the
millennium, the American hip-hop collective L.A. Symphony were signed
to Steve Taylor's inventive label Squint Entertainment who were
pushing back the frontiers of what a Christian label might achieve.
They'd already had success with Sixpence None The Richer's global hit
"Kiss Me" and it looked likely that their next signing would break out
with a massive hip-hop hit album. Instead, as the label collapsed with
debts and was bought out by Word Records, L.A. Symphony's breathtaking
'Call It What You Want' album was shelved. Had it been released, I am
confident that this album would have been considered the greatest
Christian hip-hop album ever, and probably a game changing mainstream
hit as well. Such were the talents of the group that more than a
decade later, the whole project still sounds powerfully fresh. This
acoustic and atmospheric groove and criss cross blend of vocals and
catchy hook features some dazzling raps from the Symphony and
contributions from Will.I.Am and Black Eyed Peas three years before
anyone outside the West Coast had really heard of them.
Mike Rimmer
783. THE EMOTIONS - BEST OF MY LOVE, 1977. From the
single, Columbia.
Despite the fact that the vast
majority of soul singers made their first attempts at music making
within the African American church, it often remains problematic to
affix the name "Christian music" to them. Church-going can be just a
cultural rather than a spiritual activity and soul music history is
littered with artists, once they left church-going/gospel singing
behind them, whose mainstream showbiz careers showed no trace of
Christian discipleship. Happily, such a sad history doesn't apply to
the Hutchinson sisters, who demonstrated a strong Christian faith
throughout their years in the spotlight. Having started singing gospel
in church in Chicago and then switching to R&B with a tiny label
(Twin Stacks), then a major one (Stax/Volt), the Emotions finally had
their biggest hits when Earth, Wind & Fire's Maurice White
produced them for Columbia/Epic Records. Just about anyone who has
jigged around a disco floor will know this million selling classic and
the track still pops up in movies and TV commercials today. Its joyful
groove has seldom been bettered, its lead vocal by Pamela Hutchinson
is uplifting and its lyric, with a slight adjustment, can be made to
apply to God as more than one act has discovered. The Emotions
occasionally got to record gospel songs but it's this entrance into
Boogie Wonderland which shows the sisters at their best.
Tony
Cummings
784. JOSH GARRELS - FARTHER ALONG, 2011. From the album 'Love
& War & The Sea In Between', Independent.
Oregon's songsmith Garrels amazingly can produce fine hip-hop tracks
and also sing and perform some of the most impassioned compositions of
recent years. His singing is sublime with its little swoops into
falsetto adding to the feeling of intensity. His lyrics are some of
the best in Christendom. This song will touch the heart of anyone who
has pondered the mysteries of life. First the haunting chorus:
"Farther along, we'll know all about it/Farther along, we'll
understand why/So, cheer up my brothers, live in the sunshine/We'll
understand this, all by and by" followed by a series of searing verses
including "Tempted and tried, I wondered why/The good man dies, the
bad man thrives/And Jesus cries 'cause he loves 'em both/We're all
castaways in need of rope/Hangin' on by the last threads of our
hope/In a house of mirrors full of smoke/Confusing illusions I've
seen." Poetic imagery, sung with more passion and soul than most
singers can muster over a finely judged electro-folk accompaniment.
Tony Cummings
785. BACKROOM CONGREGATION - SUNDAY MORNING, 1988. From the
single, Thickk.
I don't know if any of the dance music
production team - Derek A Jenkins, "Disco" Dave Daniels, Dwayne "Spen"
Richardson, Shaheer Williams and Stephen B Wilson - were believers but
they sure knew how to put together a classic of gospel house. The
remix sporting a UK garage two-step influence is the best version and
though the words "Sunday Morning" is repeated ad nauseam, its
relentless groove will keep you riveted to the dance floor.
Tony Cummings
786. THE LOUVIN BROTHERS - SATAN IS REAL, 1959. From the album
'Satan Is Real', King.
The title track from a 1959
release by legendary country siblings Charlie and Ira Louvin is often
overshadowed by its parent album's front cover - undeniably one of the
most awful sleeve designs of all time - but it is this song that sums
up the Louvin Brothers' extraordinary boldness when it comes to
spiritual matters as well as the effortlessly expert delivery of their
material. Ultimately a song about being spiritually aware of the enemy
and a reminder that the prince of this world still roams the earth,
the dark nature of the song's subject matter is cunningly disguised as
a pretty country song that gives no hint musically that it would
pertain to anything other than the genre's default subject matter of
love and loss. What makes this piece all the more remarkable is the
disruption of the main song by a lengthy middle section which finds
Ira preaching against a backdrop of a solitary church organ. Spoken
with sincerity and drawing obvious parallels to his own personal life
which was by then subject to violent outbursts and a crippling
dependence on alcohol, Ira recalls an old man interrupting a sermon to
declare that Satan is a force to be reckoned with having previously
fallen from grace as a family man and a leader in his community. Few
Christian artists have had the courage to be this blunt and - let's
face it - commercially self-sacrificing by singing about the reality
of the devil's presence and none have carried it off with the sheer
genius and skill of the Louvin Brothers.
Lins
Honeyman
787. THE MAGNETICS - JUST PASSIN' THRU, 1981. From the various
artists album 'Shots In The Dark', Ghettout.
1981 saw
the release in Britain of a compilation album which, as the name of
the tiny indie label which released it implied, aimed to propel some
of the best undiscovered Christian bands out of the "Christian ghetto"
and into the mainstream music scene. In that noble aim 'Shots In The
Dark' failed though ironically the album was the launch pad for one
band, The Predators, to give years of sterling service to the UK's
Christian ministry scene. 'Shots. . .' featured six bands each
performing two tracks in styles very much from the charts of the day.
The Magnetics were from the south coast and this track showed off
their collision of mod, soul and ska. "Just Passin' Thru" is 145
seconds of tight, sharp, groovy music largely showing off Rick
Quinton's magnificent sax playing and an economic guitar solo from
Mark Lamb. Lyrically it's a Pete Stoodley's stock-in-trade "we're only
visiting this planet" type vocal delivered in a quirky, nasally style
which feels totally in keeping with the whole track. A track which
though very much of its time is perfectly judged and finely
executed.
Mike Rimmer
788. REVEREND CLEAVANT DERRICKS & FRIENDS - JUST
A LITTLE TALK WITH JESUS, 1976. From the album 'Just A Little Talk
With Jesus', Canaan.
"Just A Little Talk With Jesus" has
been recorded by a vast number of country recording stars including
George Jones, the Oak Ridge Boys, Jimmy Dean, Loretta Lynn and the
Statler Brothers while in 1956 Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis
recorded a version together for Sun Records. But it's this rendition
by the song's composer which has a downhome charm which touches the
listener with its simple declaration of the power of prayer. Cleavant
was one of the few African American composers to write for traditional
seven-shape note convention songbooks which were the foundation stone
of Southern gospel music. His songs were regularly published by the
renowned Stamps-Baxter publishing company. A prolific songwriter and
occasional recording artist, Derricks gradually slipped from view
until the '70s when he rather casually dropped in at the offices of
Word/Canaan Records in Nashville and inquired about making an album.
When he told the sceptical manager he was the author of "Just A Little
Talk With Jesus", he was laughed at and dismissed. Later he returned
with proof, and the amazed company quickly signed him to an LP
contract. Two albums resulted: 'Just A Little Talk With Jesus' and
"Satisfaction Guaranteed.' They were to be Derricks's last testimony
as a singer. He died in 1977.
Tony Cummings
789. KIRK FRANKLIN - I SMILE, 2011. From the album 'Hello
Fear', Fo Yo Soul.
American gospel's biggest postwar
star, Kirk Franklin really has a knack of writing songs that connect
with people in the midst of their struggles. This song of
encouragement acknowledges that in the midst of downturn, depression
and recession, it is possible to stir your own heart towards God. The
message encourages the listener to choose to smile no matter what
they're going through and is a song to encourage yourself while you're
waiting for God to answer your prayers and move you forwards. We smile
because we know that God is working even though our circumstances
haven't changed! Somehow God pours out his Spirit on us even when
things are difficult so the song easily transcends the Pharrell
Williams-like brand of happiness. It's about the possibilities of joy.
I love the line "So hard to look up when you look down" and so the
song, like all great gospel songs, simply points the hearer to God. As
usual with Kirk's best work, there is a fantastic vocal ensemble
delivering the song with Kirk adding his signature interjections.
Mike Rimmer
790. T-BONE - MADD SKILLZ, 1995. From the album 'Tha Life Of A
Hoodlum', Metro One.
It's a sad fact that quite a lot of
mainstream hip-hop is a no-go area for believers thanks to this most
exciting of music forms frequently resorting to flows which expound
violence and misogyny. Even another of hip-hop's frequent lyrical
obsessions - emcees boasting of their prowess in sex or rapping skills
- is a tiresome listen for Christians. But Rene Sotomayor took the
whole genre of boasting raps and turned it on its head with this
track. With its surreal humour and its stunning demonstration that
this particular emcee is indeed one of the fastest rappers in the
world, it's a heap of fun. Also the shouted hook by a crowd of
friends, "Who's the man with the Madd Skills/T-Bone, he's got the Madd
Skills," has ensured that this 1995 old school gem is still a
favourite oldie on Cross Rhythms radio.
Tony Cummings
791. FOR KING & COUNTRY - LOVE'S TO BLAME, 2011. From the
album 'Crave', Fervent.
Rebecca St James' brothers Joel
and Luke broke through onto the CCM scene with a dazzling album which
took in various influences, '80s Euro pop, Kings Of Leon, The Killers,
yet also delivered soaring melodies and lyrics which mixed songs about
their love of God with relational love songs. This haunting gem is its
piece de resistance. Radio-friendly pop has seldom sounded better.
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