The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 10
As published in CR15, 1st June 1993
111. AL GREEN - IN
THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS, 1981. From the album 'The Lord Will Make A
Way', Myrrh.
Hearing this track for the first time left
an indelible mark with me. I was a baby Christian and desperate to
find some music to reflect the strange surging fire that had gripped
me. I saw this album mentioned in 'Blues And Soul' and having loved
all those old Green soul hits, went down to an R&B specialist in
Soho and bought an import copy. My search was rewarded with this
classic. Over an eccentrically lolloping rhythm track (featuring some
great out-of-tune guitar from Moses Dillard), Al purrs, squeals, gasps
and soars while that chorus has to be one of the most joyful sounds
caught on quarter inch. Maria Muldaur later revived the song, but
couldn't recapture the soulful passion of the original.
112. JAMIE OWENS-COLLINS - STRAIGHT AHEAD, 1982. From the
album 'Straight Ahead', Light.
Jamie was one of the
pioneers of Jesus music but her light, acoustic music had always been
a bit saccharine-sweet for me. This album was the one really
successful attempt to contemporise her sound (well, for the year it
was recorded anyway) and in many ways was a pioneering album for the
way pop-gospel of the Amy Grant mould was developing (though Jamie's
'Straight Ahead' is a different song from this). I love the
songwriting craft, the sheer Tightness of the arrangement, the sense
of luminous love that Jamie brings to this.
113. ROY ACUFF AND THE SMOKY MOUNTAIN BOYS - THE WRECK ON THE
HIGHWAY, 1942. From the various artists album 'The Golden Age Of
Country', Capitol.
Recorded in 1942 and still able to
produce goose pimples. Country and western had always loved lurid
narratives of death, but this story in song about discovering blood
and wrecked vehicles in a highway motor accident finds its focus in
the poignant refrain "but I didn't hear nobody pray." In all the
carnage and groans of despair nobody, the singer recounts, thought to
pray to God. In the hands of lesser country singers this country
evergreen becomes a wallow in maudlin sentimentality. In Mr Acuff's
assured hands it is one of the most moving listening experiences in
the long history of country music.
114. RUSS TAFF - MEDALS, 1985. From the album 'Medals',
Myrrh.
Russ has rather discounted his early pop-gospel
albums in favour of his recent discovery of his Southern roots but for
me this is still a wheezingly, searingly soulful and impassioned
performance as it ebbs and flows in a surge of energy, power chords
and orchestrated drama while the lyric is one of the finest ever
produced out of Nashville's CCM hit factory.
115. LESLIE PHILLIPS - HOURGLASS, 1985. From the album 'Beyond
Saturday Night', Myrrh.
When Leslie played her first UK
gig at Finchley Baptist Church there were less than 50 people in the
audience. That night she sang her material from this fine album debut
and showed herself to be one of the finest voices in Christian music.
This track, despite its slightly routine arrangement, has passion and
faith and keeps me returning to it.
116. AMY GRANT - IN A LITTLE WHILE, 1982. From the album 'Age
To Age', Myrrh.
Great pop songs of faith are rare indeed
but Amy sang an absolute classic with this simple tale of faith in the
banality of modern life. That line about scattering junk mail on the
floor is still one of the most memorable in CCM while that
bitter/sweet voice has never sounded more poignant.
117. SHATTOCK AND RUST - ELECTION DAY, 1989. From the album
'The Rock Beneath', independent.
Great songs don't need
great recording budgets to show their quality. Godfrey Rust is
probably best known to Joe Punter as a poet whose book 'Breaking The
Chains' was recently in the Christian best sellers. But he's also a
consummate lyricist and OK singer in the pop-folk Simon And Garfunkel
mould. The song, a so-clever number which uses all the imagery and
paraphernalia of a political election to make an incisive spiritual
point is an absolute gem. Its astutely crafted lyric shows that all
those banal 'Jesus died for me at Calvary' songs circulating around
Christendom claiming to be 'biblical' are in fact merely lyrics by
people who haven't developed the skills of top quality lyric writing.
118. LCGC - KNOCKIN' ON HEAVEN'S DOOR, 1993. From the album
'Hush And Listen', Permanent.
It's funny, until this
album I'd never realised the quality of Bazil Meade's voice, thinking
of the man primarily as a choir leader extraordinaire. But here Baz
delivers what for me is one of the most thrilling soulful lead vocals
I've heard. The song was always a classic; I loved it when Dylan sang
it in 'Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid' and when Mike Peters sang it to
a rapturous crowd in Greenbelt's Big Top. But it took that element of
soul, with Bazil's husky multi-tracked lead teasing the last bit of
poignancy out of the melody and the choir coming in with some soulful
humming to reduce my knees to jelly.
119. MOLLY O'DAY AND THE CUMBERLAND MOUNTAIN FOLKS - WHEN GOD
COMES AND GATHERS HIS JEWELS, 1946. From the various artists album
'The Golden Age Of Country', Capitol.
What do Prince and
Hank Williams have in common? They both wrote superlative gospel songs
(eg, Prince's "The Cross", Hank's "Are You Walking And A Talking With
The Lord" and this gem) while tragically failing to put their words
into action and live the Christian life. This wonderful version was
recorded in 1946 but still sparkles with the freshness of an
Appalachian mountain stream.
120. OUT OF THE GREY -
THREE BEAUTIFUL WORDS, 1992. From the various artists album 'Coram
Deo', Sparrow.
It was Charlie Peacock's superlative
'Coram Deo' praise and worship concept album that convinced me that
Christine Dente of Out Of The Grey was more than another good American
vocalist, but a great one. Here she sings an exceptionally beautiful
song on forgiveness with the simplest of acoustic accompaniments.
As published in CR16, 1st August 1993
121. VEIL OF ASHES
- SUICIDE, 1990. From the album 'Pain', Graceland.
Christendom's rad rockers largely missed this wonderful album
produced by Adam Again's main man Gene Eugene. A shame as this dark,
sombre rock album with a musical approach one part The Alarm, one part
The Cult and one part sheer originality, Veil Of Ashes were some band.
On this astonishing cut, lead vocalist Sean Doty pours out his soul
over a stark, eerie accompaniment. Apparently, Sean lost a friend to
suicide and the repeated line "I had a friend" is an unforgettable,
sad listening experience.
122. ADRIAN SNELL (with Phil Thomson and Caroline Bonnett) -
BEAUTIFUL, 1993. From the album 'Beautiful...Or What?!',
Myrrh.
Well, it had to happen sooner or later, some
astute Cross Rhythms reader has sussed that the inclusion of new album
tracks in the SORAS listing means that all the 1001 greats aren't
written in stone but rather the listing is...er...fluid. Still, that
gives me a chance to say to the three Cross Rhythms readers left who
aren't utterly sick of me wittering on about "Beautiful", that this is
one of the most poignant and artfully crafted marriages of melody,
lyric and arrangement you're ever going to hear. Not a Jesus, JESUS,
JESUS! song, rather an exquisite, haunting expression, through the
images of a tossed and torn rag doll, of the pain and doubt within the
human soul when our very right to exist is questioned. And over this
haunting song the assurance that in the sight of God his people are of
infinite worth and beauty hovers unspoken, unsung but transparent.
Adrian, Phil, Caroline et al have created a timeless classic.
123. RAGE OF ANGELS - SOMEBODY'S WATCHING YOU, 1991. From the
album 'Rage Of Angels', Regency.
Vocalist Dan Mariano
shrieks, with the rasping rawness of rockdom's Hall Of Fame, the twin
lead guitar attack of Greg Kurtzman and Frank DiCostanzo shreds every
ear lobe within half a mile and the whole think stays so heavy that
you may need a fork lift to get the album onto your record decks.
Careering like an out-of-control locomotive it thunders along its
track leaving the listener exhilarated and energised. Metal remains a
mystery to the uninitiated, a wanton cacophony of non-music, but for
those with the metabolism to take their rock neat with no tonic, this
is the stuff to bring tears to the eyes and fire to the spirit.
124. JEFFREY LAMS/KENNETH NASH - ABRAHAM'S THEME, 1985. From
the album 'A Time For Peace', Colours.
Not the Abraham
who was once asked to sacrifice his son on the altar (read the book
for the gripping conclusion) but the Abraham who was a Jewish athlete
who ran for Britain in the same Olympics as another famous athlete,
Eric Liddle. Yep, you got it, 'Chariots Of Fire'. So can Vangelis'
haunting film theme be truly considered 'Christian music' even when
performed by three Californian believers (Jeffrey Lams piano, Frank
Martin synthesizer, Kenneth Nash percussion/producer)? So does
instrumental music have any place in a 'Christian music' listing? I
suppose one of the advantages of a project like SORAS is that in the
words of some bard 'if you makes the game you makes the rules', so
Cummings says this is a Christian music classic. It certainly is a
rendition that consistently brings a tranquillity to my spirit while
those descending minor chords on the concert grande quite eclipsing
Vangelis' original. Classic ambient music and the silly-billy who put
together the recent 'Candlelight Colours' compilation and left off
this long-deleted classic needs our prayers.


Two classic blues tunes from Lins there.