The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling, in no particular order, the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 34
456. [DWEEB] - PIRATE + COPSE = QUANDARY, 2005. From the album
'Moose Moose Moose Chicken Moose', Independent.
With
this reviewer possessing a beard and a Long John Silver-style accent,
I am inclined to nostalgically remember those early, anarchic [dweeb]
gigs when Sheffield's finest would lead packed throngs in a mass chant
of "I'm a pirate". The surreal ditty from whence this sprang, with its
strange references to mallard ducks and other things, was once
explained to journo Rimmer as being a song that "just reflects our
personality". All I know is that its jerky groove which suddenly
bursts into a heavy rock riff seemingly transposed from another song
works mysteriously well while Tim Alford's wheezingly eccentric vocal
remains one of the Christian scene's most distinctive sounds.
Tony Cummings
457. SIXPENCE NONE THE RICHER - SPOTLIGHT, 1994. From the
album 'The Fatherless And The Widow', REX Music.
The
first time I heard this song on an obscure US independent music
sampler its nagging sequenced riff and its shuffling alternative rock
groove making me note the name Sixpence None The Richer. But at the
stage of that early version of "Spotlight" the group hadn't yet
acquired Leigh Bingham as their lead singer and the song's writer Matt
Slocum did the vocal. It was when Leigh joined and her haunting
Americana voice was added to the song and "Spotlight" became track two
on Sixpence's record label debut that it became (alongside 'The
Fatherless And The Widow''s other classic "Trust") a repeat-play on my
stereo.
Tony Cummings
458. CARL PERKINS - BIRTH OF ROCK & ROLL, 1991.
From the album 'Friends, Family & Legends', Magnum
Music.
If there's any singer/songwriter, Christian or
non-Christian, entitled to pen a song that ambitiously recounts the
history of rock'n'roll then there can be few better choices than Carl
Perkins. As any student of rock music will tell you, Carl's exuberant,
raw rockabilly recordings for Sun Records in the 1950s helped lay down
the rhythmic template for all that was to follow. In the mid '70s the
"Blue Suede Shoes" man was at a low ebb until a dramatic Christian
conversion not only secured his salvation and deliverance from
alcoholism but was pivotal in resurrecting his flagging career. Before
his death in 1998 Carl was being heralded for what he was, one of the
giants of rock'n'roll. Modern icons like Bono, Paul Simon and George
Harrison guested on his final recording but it was this track from a
1991 album which gets my vote as Carl's best post-conversion track.
Carl's lyric wittily recounts, "Nashville had country music/Memphis
had the soul/Little rockabilly had the rhythm/That started rock and
roll/And I was there when it happened/Lord, I think I ought to
know/Folks, I was there when it happened/I watched Memphis give birth
to rock and roll." The melody is slightly corny but the rhythm is
sublime and the plentiful guitar solos from Chet Atkins, Steve Mariner
and, best of all, Carl himself show that, even in the autumn of his
years, Carl remained a master of rhythm.
Tony Cummings
459. KIRK FRANKLIN - REVOLUTION, 1998. From the album 'The Nu
Nation Project', Gospocentric.
This storming track
continued Kirk's work in wrenching gospel music into the 21st century.
Again, there were those who thought the music style was too "worldly"
in the same way as he'd received flak for "Stomp" with God's Property.
But again, you can't argue with countless fans, both Christian and
non-Christian, who took this track to their hearts and again made it a
hit. From start to finish, this has so many hooks that it's impossible
not to get caught up with this and "throw yo hands up"! The mixture of
chants and whoop whoop vocals all add to the energy and atmosphere and
once again Franklin hypes the whole thing in his unique fashion. "Do
you wanna revolution?" he asks and yes Kirk, we clearly did. In fact
we still do! One of the most significant gospel recordings of the last
30 years and possibly the high water mark of Franklin's career and
influence.
Mike Rimmer
460. THE MOX FILES - AWAKENING THE DAWN, 2001. From the album
'Alien', Independent.
British singer/songwriter Andrew
Moxon was, at least for the release of this album, The Mox Files and
this eerily haunting track is his classic (and, as far as I know, his
only physical release). The song itself is a vision of the Kingdom
("Up and down my nation/There's a brand new song/Praising you every
house/Awakening the dawn"). But what really lifts the track to the
heights is the stunning techno production from one of Bristol's most
underrated talents, Tony 'The Psalmist' Silcock. Probably the greatest
thing the master of sequencers and drum machines has ever created with
Andrew's heavily treated vocals echoing in and out of the
reverberating groove.
Tony Cummings
461. SWAN SILVERTONES - SAVIOUR PASS ME NOT, 1961. From the
album 'Move Up', VeeJay.
This track was called by gospel
authority Anthony Heilbut "the last great Swans record" and I wouldn't
argue. Its compelling power rests in the stunning interplay between
lead vocalist Louis Johnson who sings the first verse in a soulful
baritone of breathy intimacy and the amazing Claude Jeter. Heilbut
described it thus, "Jeter comes in supplementing the simple chorus
with glorious ad libs, while Johnson chants the words like a backwoods
preacher." Stunning.
Tony Cummings
462. BUDDY MILLER - WITH GOD ON OUR SIDE, 2004. From the album
'Universal United House Of Prayer', New West.
Bob
Dylan's "With God On Our Side" has been acknowledged for many a long
year as one of the GREAT protest songs. But it took this jaw-dropping
rendition by the multi-talented country man to bring out all the
pathos and passion of the lyric pinpointing hundreds of yeas of
warfare and carnage all in the name of God. With Buddy's mountain man
howl and a production which starts with a reverb-drenched guitar and a
fiddle and ends with a stately band ponderously pounding home each
devastating line made this an impossible to ignore denouncement of
blind patriotism and xenophobia. Amazingly, Buddy's epic rendition
clocks in at nine minutes yet never, for one second, loses its power
to convince.
Tony Cummings
463. CHRIS TAYLOR - WORTHLESS PURSUIT OF THINGS OF
THE EARTH, 2000. From the album 'Worthless Pursuit Of Things Of The
Earth', Rhythm House.
San Antonio's Chris Taylor has
been making fine music for years with limited recognition (though the
'Worthless Pursuit. . .' album was nominated as Rock Album Of The Year
in the 2001 Dove Awards). But in view of the theme of this compelling
Taylor composition - which skilfully pinpoints the facile
pointlessness of materialism and our whole vainglorious culture - such
lack of platinum sales and back-slapping award ceremonies shouldn't
have phased Chris too much. The one-time Love Coma man sings "From the
moment of our birth/It's a worthless pursuit of things on the
earth/Over and over again/I've worked my fingers all the way to the
bone/Possessing the things I don't need." With some gutsy electric
guitar and a touch of Americana in the mix, this is a gem of a song
delivered with the laconic confidence of a masterly songsmith every
bit as good as anything Neil Young ever recorded.
Tony
Cummings
464. DEACON BLUE - DIGNITY, 1987. From the album 'Raintown',
Columbia.
That 15 years after its release as a single
"Dignity" was used as the backing music to help promote a programme
schedule, one season on BBC2, is testament to how the song has
long-since been equated with quality art and high production values.
The group's large following amongst middle-class Yuppies in the late
'80s earned Scotland's Deacon Blue immense suspicion amongst the cool
music press and almost prevented the songwriting of Ricky Ross a fair
hearing. But their huge fan-base north of the border was sufficient to
keep Deacon Blue in the charts and on the radio and by the time of
their split in 1994 the acclaimed "Dignity" was deservedly re-released
as a farewell gesture. Originally recorded seven years earlier, the
song had featured in their stage-set for over a year and was
transformed in the studio - Jon Kelly was Paul McCartney's producer,
had worked with George Martin and it showed: "Dignity" sounded
near-perfect. Essentially, the story of an Everyman-of-sorts, a humble
Scottish council worker who reflects the yearning we all have, for a
better world - but "never thinks to mutter". With a sublime piano part
from James Prime, this atmospheric, evocative, emotional combination
of words and music captures a highly personal yet profound mood, with
the climax, "And I'm thinking about home/And I'm thinking about faith.
. ."
John Cheek
465. FIRE FLY - ALPHABET SONG, 2002. From the single "Blue
Eyed Boy", Embryo.
Occasionally dedicated music
enthusiasts prepared to trawl through mountains of unknown recordings
will unearth a track that not only gives endless listening pleasure to
its discoverer but will leave them convinced that had the cut been
given even a little in the way of a promotional push it would have
gone on to big things. So it is that I'm convinced that Fire Fly's
"Alphabet Song" COULD have hit big on Christian and even pop radio, if
only. . . Fire Fly, as Britain's clique of hard music buffs will tell
you, were an excellent Midlands-based band who between 1998 and 2009
released three albums, and EP and this single while offering
unforgettable performances that managed to fuse mosh pit excitement
and tender-hearted worship. In Si Bibby and Mark Broomhead they had
two stalwarts of the UK thrash scene but this track is a million miles
from the extreme noise of that genre. Instead singer Si is accompanied
by a haunting electric piano figure (possibly played by producer David
Pickering Pick) in a wistful song that ambles through the alphabet ("A
is for the apple that Eve had to try/B is believing that boys should
not cry. . .") and then explodes in a flurry of hard rock aggression
before returning to that eerie alphabet. Unique.
Tony
Cummings
466. SOLOMON BURKE - THE OTHER SIDE OF THE COIN, 2002. From
the album 'Don't Give Up On Me', Fat Possum.
Although
the 'Don't Give Up On Me' album was overhyped and was never the Best
Album Of 2002 as claimed by Mojo magazine, it did mark a return to
form for the veteran soul singer. The brand new songs handed to the
veteran gospel crossover man by Elvis Costello, Bob Dylan, Van
Morrison and Brian Wilson were, in truth, of variable quality. But to
hear Burke's vibrant bel canto with a band sympathetically produced by
Joe Henry made for nostalgic listening for those who remembered
Solomon's Atlantic Records glories. For my money, Nick Lowe has always
been one of Britain's finest songwriters and this song, though not
penned by a believer, neatly and succinctly pummels the sin of
judgmentalism ("Yes, there is much in life for which I could atone/But
let him without sing cast the first stone"). Solomon emotes the
confessional with elegance.
Tony Cummings
467. JAYNE EDWARDS - HARMONY/I GOT IT, 1983. From the single,
Profile.
In 1983 I was reading a copy of Buzz magazine
which, back then, was one of the few places where you could read
reviews of new Christian music. A certain Tony Cummings reviewed this
12 inch single and enthused greatly about it. It was released by RCA
and I discovered one solitary copy sitting in the racks of my local
independent record shop so I snapped it up. It had an early '80s disco
feel with a groovy extended instrumental introduction called "Harmony"
before it seamlessly kicked into "I Got It". There was a solid driving
beat and some great horn work on the track but its crowning glory
belonged to the righteous vocalising from Ms Edwards. I don't know
much about Jayne Edwards. She had at least one other R&B single
around the same era but then slipped from view. But this song made a
lasting impact on me! Edwards puts every ounce of storefront church
passion into delivering a testifying song that celebrates the fact
that she's got it! The lyric reveals the "it" is an experience of the
Holy Spirit which includes speaking in "unknown tongues". Towards the
end of the nearly eight minutes of song as Jayne is hollering her
thanks to Jesus, an unnamed male singer enters into a call and
response climax to stoke the fire even more. This is unbridled
celebratory '80s dance gospel and after listening to this, you'll want
"it" too!
Mike Rimmer
468. PHOENIX SONSHINE - THE EXODUS, 1975. From the
album 'The Exodus', Destiny.
One of the most adventurous
tracks ever recorded by the Jesus music acts of the '70s this trio of
Gary and Debbie Cowan (from Phoenix, naturally) and Paul Amschler
specialised in jangly folk rock in Crosby, Stills & Nash style.
But on this song Phoenix Sonshine also made use of the Guli Folk
Orchestra, whoever they were. So Indian instruments like gaida,
gadulka, tapan and kaval add their colourings to an ambitious song
about the epic journey of the Israelites. A gem.
Tony
Cummings
469. MIGHTY CLOUDS OF JOY - A BRIGHT SIDE, 1964. From the
album 'A Bright Side', Peacock.
The hypnotising
musicality and sheer, no-holds-barred passion of African American
preaching has long not only gripped congregations but found many
admirers in the stuffy, non-spiritual world of white blues and gospel
collectors. And this stunning seven minutes-odd sermonette by Joe
Ligon recorded when he was at his height as a rasping, hollering,
screaming exhorter of the brethren and frontman for one of the era's
great quartets has few equals. Joe tells a typically melodramatic tale
about a praying mother whose only son has been wrongfully arrested for
a murder and how the courageous old lady uses her body to stop a bell
ringing which in the custom of the town, preceded the dispatch of any
prisoner. Throughout his heart-rending sermonette Joe's fellow Clouds
urge him on with yells and whoops and by the time they finally get to
the song about there being a bright side in the darkest gloom the
point of sacrificial love has been pushed home with the power of a
sledge hammer. Melodramatic? Undoubtedly. Effective?
Unquestionably.
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