The latest part of the ongoing series chronicling the greatest 1001 recordings made by Christian artists
Continued from page 38
510. PANTANO-SALSBURY - I'M JUST A RECORD, 1977. From the
album 'Hit The Switch', Solid Rock.
As it turned out,
John Pantano and Ron Salsbury - the main talents behind the
wonderfully named Jesus music pioneers the JC Power Outlet - weren't
given much of a helping hand when they signed with Larry Norman's
Solid Rock Records. For a start their sole album had a strangely
smoothed out production with way too many ballads. Secondly, 'Hit The
Switch' received minimal promotion. But the album did contain this
gem, a rollicking piece of Norman-esque boogie with Larry Norman, Tom
Howard and Randy Stonehill all helping out on backing vocals.
Tony Cummings
511. JULIE MILLER - BROKEN THINGS, 1991. From the album 'He
Walks Through Walls', Myrrh.
Few voices convey bruised
humanity as powerfully as Julie's and here that stunning country
voice, deftly accompanied by husband Buddy on guitar and bass, John
Schreiner on piano and Melisa Hanson on cello, has never sounded so
vulnerable as she sings her song of brokenness and healing. "So beyond
repair, nothing I could do/I tried to fix it myself but it was only
worse when I got through/Then you walked right into my darkness/And
you speak so sweet/And you hold me like a child/'Til my frozen tears
fall at your feet." Achingly beautiful and a timeless classic.
Tony Cummings
512. BLUETREE - GOD OF THIS CITY, 2007. From the album
'Greater Things', Independent.
This tremendous rock
worship team from Northern Ireland emerged with the stunning 'Greater
Things' album (which was eventually retitled when picked up for record
label release). This is the classic from the album, one of the most
inspiring worship songs in years. "God Of This City" originally came
into being as a spontaneous number while the band played worship songs
at an outreach in a strip club in Thailand. This remarkable song
retains its spiritual power. The band did a fine job in creating vibey
rock with uplifting anthemic moments. It takes no account of what you
can see with human eyes but instead pulls the listener into the world
of the unseen and the impossible to remind us all that wherever we
live, God has his plans and nothing can stop them.
Mike
Rimmer
513. STAPLE SINGERS - I'LL TAKE YOU THERE, 1972.
From the album 'Be Altitude: Respect Yourself', Stax.
With an intro lifted from the reggae classic "The Liquidator" and
the mighty Muscle Shoals rhythm section of David Hood (bass), Eddie
Hinton and Jimmy Johnson (guitar), Barry Beckett (electric piano) and
Roger Hawks (drums) the scene was set for Mavis Staples to show off
her full repertoire of grunts, gasps, growls and shrieks as she
responds to the timeless Southern funk groove. In his Top
R&B/Hip-Hop Singles book Joel Whitburn wrote the two chord song,
credited to its producer Al Bell, is "almost completely a
call-and-response chorus" but that doesn't matter as Mavis invites her
listeners to seek Heaven. The overdubbed Memphis Horns add the final
embellishment and this fully deserves its number one spot in the US
R&B charts for May 1972 and its listing in Rolling Stone's list of
the 500 Greatest Songs Of All Time.
Tony Cummings
514. SHELL PERRIS - EVERY TIME I FALL, 2009. From the album
'Beautiful Life', Authentic.
Anyone who associated
Shell's music with the perky teen pop of tbc would have been stunned
by this cut. Singing in a higher octave than she normally uses and
with an emotional intensity we would never have dreamed of on earlier
recordings, this mid tempo song drips with a raw vulnerability that
only comes when singers cease to worry about hitting notes and start
"living the lyric". And live it Shell does as she sings to her Forever
Friend who forgives her failings and mistakes and brings healing and
restoration. It was brave of Shell to offer a vocal of such naked
emotion and brave of producer Dave Healey to allow it in on the CD.
Tony Cummings
515. LIFEHOUSE - HANGING BY A MOMENT, 2000. From the album 'No
Name Face', Dreamworks.
This gem of radio-friendly pop
rock was apparently written in a flash. Singer/songwriter Jason Wade,
having led worship at Los Angeles Vineyard, decided to make a pitch at
the mainstream and he and his musical associates were duly signed to
Dreamworks Records. Jason told a reporter, "We were in the studio and
were almost finished with the record. I had a melody in my head, so I
went into the next room with a guitar and the song poured out in seven
minutes." "Hanging By A Moment" reached number one on the US charts.
On it Wade claims to be "starving for truth" and surrenders himself to
an intangible but very real love interest. The Lord? Sounds like
it.
Tony Cummings
516. KEVIN PROSCH - LORD OF THE DANCE, 1996. From the album
'Kiss The Son', Kingsway.
The early music of prophetic
worship pioneer Kevin Prosch, momentarily at least, pushed back the
boundaries of what we could expect in a worship song in terms of
melodies, song lyrics and instruments employed (as indeed his more
recent output continues to do). Ever calling believers back to their
"first love", his "Lord Of The Dance" is a rousing call to celebrate
the goodness of our God in unashamed abandoned worship. More than
virtually any other song I know, this one is so carefree and danceable
that it virtually demands active participation in the form of body
movement. The song is comparable to, though even better than,
"Undignified" by Matt Redman (who in fact does a fine take of "Lord Of
The Dance" on the 'Soul Survivor Live '96' venture). But it's this
original which best captures the mood of exhilarating abandonment to
God.
Tom Lennie
517. LARRY NORMAN - READER'S DIGEST, 1972. From the album
'Only Visiting This Planet', Solid Rock.
The stream of
classic songs that poured out of Christian rock's godfather in the
early '70s remain as sharp and apposite as when they were first
launched on a startled Church. "Reader's Digest" is a careering rock
ride beginning with acerbic couplets on the state of '70s music, "I
don't dig the radio, I hate what the charts pick/Rock and roll may not
be dead, but it's getting sick" or "Rolling Stones are millionaires,
flower children pallbearers/Beatles said 'All you need is love' and
then they broke up" before turning to the state of the world, "We need
solution, we need salvation/Let's send some people to the moon and
gather information" before ending with another of his timeless
finales, "What a mess the world is in, I wonder who began it/Don't ask
me, I'm only visiting this planet." Brilliant then and now.
Tony Cummings
518. THE BURN BAND - JOY, 2006. From the album 'All
From You', Vineyard Music UK.
It was my trip to St
Albans Vineyard to attend the launch of the 'All From You' album that
proved to be one of the most exhilarating musical experiences of 2006.
Here was a church band who could truly rock out yet whose powerful
songs engaged all who heard them to go beyond the shallow community
singing that passes for worship in many a church. "Joy", penned by The
Burn Band's singer/guitarist Sam Lane, was a big turntable hit on
Cross Rhythms radio - a rare feat indeed for a church ministry band -
and a song that asks the most pertinent of questions, "Have you felt
his life within you?/Have you felt the truth release you?" before its
anthemic chorus declares that it's the Lord who's the love, the hope
and the joy. Rock worship of passion and power.
Tony
Cummings
519. FIVE BLIND BOYS - WHEN GOD DIPS HIS PEN OF LOVE, 1948.
From the various artists album 'Get Right With God: Hot Gospel
1947-'53', Krazy Kat.
In Newark, New Jersey in 1948 the
Five Blind Boys of Mississippi recorded 10 songs for the Coleman
Brothers' Coleman label. This was their finest. The late Alexis Korner
once played "When God Dips. . ." on the Beeb and its frenzied
expression of Holy Spirit fervour caught the ear of art rock icon
Richard Thompson. Mr Thompson subsequently recounted his reaction on
hearing the track in Q magazine, "I thought, this is unbelievable. I
must get some more of this. So I got this record and other Five Blind
Boys records. They had a famous screamer: Archie Brownlee was the
original screamer from whom Little Richard and James Brown took the
scream into R&B and popular music. But Archie Brownlee does it
more sensationally than anyone has since. And the Rev Percell Perkins
was the other lead singer - they'd swap lead singers. It's quite
devastating stuff."
Tony Cummings
520. CODE OF ETHICS - WITHOUT REASON (House Mix), 1994. From
the EP 'Code Of Ethics Extended Play Remix', Forefront.
In their early days Barry Blaze and buddies put in quite a bit of
Depeche Mode and Human League into Code Of Ethics' sound but it was
when they remixed a song or two to become full on electro house floor
fillers that they were most effective. This remix from 1994 has a
delicious groove which was as good as anything out there in clubland.
Shame it never came out on vinyl.
Tony Cummings
521. AUDIO ADRENALINE - SOME KIND OF ZOMBIE, 1998. From the
album 'Some Kind Of Zombie', Forefront.
The 'Some Kind
Of Zombie' album marked the completion of AA's steady move away from
the singalong pop of "Big House" to a multi-layered, grunge-tinged
sound which was altogether darker. The title track was inspired by
vocalist Mark Stuart's observations of voodoo worship in Haiti where
he was raised as the son of missionaries. Here the songwriter brings
out a parallel about Christians being dead to sin and though the point
of the song is somewhat obscure, the lurching funk rock rhythms make
it possibly the most inventive and rhythmically dense track the CCM
hitmakers ever attempted.
Tony Cummings
522. PHILLIP LARUE - CHASING THE DAYLIGHT, 2009. From the
album 'Let The Road Pave Itself', BEC Recordings.
I've
always liked Philip LaRue's huskily expressive voice since those
memorable CCM hits he and his sister cut as LaRue so I was delighted
when he returned to the vocal mic with the 'Let The Road Pave Itself'
album. And in a collection of haunting, understated, lovingly crafted
songs this is my favourite. The arrangement is simple enough, chugging
mid tempo rhythms over which Philip declares a new found dimension of
faith. He declares, "There's still arrows in my heart/There's still
time I fall apart/And all I am left with is whys." But then God's
healing love falls like rain. As I said, a beautifully crafted song of
faith.
Tony Cummings
523. WAKING ASHLAND - SHADES OF GREY, 2005. From the
album 'Composure', Tooth & Nail.
Waking Ashland were
a San Diego-based band influenced by such diverse elements as Joe
Jackson, The Pixies and Husker Du who in singer, songwriter and
pianist Jonathan Jones had one of the most underrated talents in
recent rock history. His band's ability to create brooding emotional
piano melodies underpinned with sonic distortion guitars was a
riveting listening experience and this track, the opener on the second
of Waking Ashland's releases (two albums, two EPs), is a haunting
confessional ("I, and I am to blame/I sit here in shame/I threw you
away again"). When the wall-of-sound guitars burst in after the
extended voice and piano start the effect is electrifying.
Tony Cummings


Two classic blues tunes from Lins there.