Blog Archive for September 2024
Album Of The Day: The First Decade: 1983-1993 by Michael W. Smith
The cassette tape of this album is some of my earliest memories of listening to modern pop music. My parents were too busy raising five kids to listen to much music, so I think I had heard of this Michael W. Smith guy and asked them to buy the tape for me, if I remember correctly. In the previous decade, Michael W. Smith had been busy, putting out 6 studio pop albums, a live album and a Christmas album. This compilation takes the best of the 6 albums, such as "Go West Young Man", "Secret Ambition", "Place In This World" and his ever-popular "Friends", plus two new songs stuck at the start to make sure the fans have a reason to buy it. It's Christian pop at its best and worst: lots of Christian culture clichés like stories about Jesus, talk of abstinence and an end times reference, but also some personal love songs, edgy power pop considered "not Christian enough" by some, and a choral hymn at the end. This was released 31 years ago today, so take a trip back in time if you want the best of '80s Christian pop from a talented musician and songwriter.
Release Year: 1993
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Album Of The Day: When Silence Falls by Tim Hughes
Tim Hughes has been leading worship in UK churches for many years. This is my favorite album of his and it's a love letter to God. "Beautiful One" is one of his best-known songs, but songs like "Whole World In His Hands", "Name Above All Names", and "Holy, Holy" are also beautiful anthems of praise. The song which the album title comes from, "When The Tears Fall", speaks to the hardships of life, but also goes back to praise to the Father, even in those times. The production by Nathan Nockels is top-notch and ties the songs together into a cohesive album. Thanks, Mr. Hughes, for writing and recording these songs for the worldwide church to praise God with.
Release Year: 2004
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Album Of The Day: Reset by Mutemath
20 years ago today, this EP was released and it declared the start of one of my favorite bands for the next 13 years. Mutemath started out as a few friends doing remixing, producing, etc. and turned into one of the best live bands I've ever seen. And this Reset EP started it all. The title track is a 5½ minute instrumental jam with amazing drum work and a beautiful mix of guitars, bass and keyboards as well as production tricks. "Progress" and "OK" showed they could write vulnerable ballads that the masses could connect to. And "Control", "Plan B" and "Peculiar People" were such energetic songs, they should have been the next big thing in electronic pop/rock, in my opinion. Sadly, despite a good amount of success, they never became a well-known name in popular music before breaking up in 2017. This EP started it all and it's still some of their best songs, though sadly it's never been available on streaming services to this date.
Release Year: 2004
Album Of The Day: Welcome (Reframed) by The Arcadian Wild
Bluegrass is not really the type of music I usually listen to, but some friends highly recommended this band, so I saw The Arcadian Wild play in Minneapolis this spring and I enjoyed the show a lot. All three members play instruments and sing, and the mix of fiddle, mandolin and guitar goes really well with the vocals of Isaac, Lincoln and Bailey. Even though they don't play with a drummer, there's so much energy and rhythm to how they play and they had the crowd hanging on and singing along with every note. Welcome (Reframed) is an expanded version of their 2023 album, Welcome, with 4 new songs and a new song order. New songs like "Welcome" and "Common Courtesy" fit so well with the rest of the album, the original version already feels like the incomplete album. This isn't you traditional bluegrass; it might be more bluegrass with a bit more of a rock edge or something.
Release Year: 2024
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Album Of The Day: 5PRINT Mixtape by Deepspace5
Released 15 years ago yesterday, this is maybe not an album either; it's a mixtape. In some places called the The Blueprint 3 Outtakes (Deepspace5 Version), this is now sold on Bandcamp as the 5PRINT Mixtape. Deepspace5 is a underground rap super-group, so here you'll find cool beats and beds and fast-paced raps over the top of the music. This type of underground stuff from labels like Uprok Records about 25 years ago was some of my first exposures to rap/hip-hop music, and I still enjoy this type of underground hip-hop from time to time. I only picked up this release on Bandcamp recently, and I need to listen a few more times to catch half of what was said and break it down, but I love the fast-paced, clever wordplay and the fun beats.
Release Year: 2009
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Album Of The Day: Fall by Jon Foreman
I'm cheating a bit today—it's not an album. This is the first EP released by Jon Foreman, entitled Fall. This 6-song release definitely feels like fall to me. Maybe it's the acoustic guitar and the harmonica and the idea of a southbound train. At least a few songs on this album take lyrics from lamentations or psalms from scripture and are set to simple, acoustic music by Jon and his musician friends. It's so much fun to hear this lighter (musically) side of Jon Foreman, who is also the primary songwriter and singer for rock band Switchfoot. This is good music for a quiet, contemplative fall evening, and since fall just started a few days ago, it's been on my mind.
Release Year: 2007
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Album Of The Day: Fernando Ortega by Fernando Ortega
I'd never really listened to the music of Fernando Ortega much. I think I knew that he was most well-known for his versions of hymns. But then in 2004 I came across this album, his self-titled release, and I found that yes, there were a few hymns on the album and they are beautiful, but there's also a lot more. Fernando Ortega's smooth vocals are mixed with country, folk rock, and other styles on this release. Some of the songs lyrically talk about nature ("Dragonfly" and "When The Coyote Comes"), some about daily life ("California Town" and "Mildred Madalyn Johnson"), and some about the days where we struggle ("Shame" and "Noonday Devil"). It's a beautiful album and one I come back to on occasion. I really do need to check out Mr. Ortega's other albums one of these days! (I even have a few other of his albums I recently bought used on CD and I haven't listened to them yet.)
Release Year: 2004
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Album Of The Day: World Renown For Romance by Denison Marrs
This is independent rock music at its best, in my opinion. For me, Denison Marrs is all about the walls of guitars and the interesting guitar tones. Actually, no, I love how Eric Collins's vocals sometimes float above the band and sometimes gets drowned out by the band. And wow, some of these lyrics are so catchy. I remember hearing songs like "Let's Dance" and "The New Droan (Light Years Away)" on RadioU back then and I had to buy this album. World Renown For Romance has been released twice on CD by Velvet Blue Music, first in 2001 and then in 2005 with completely different artwork and a bonus track (see 2005 cover below). Play it loud and rock out!
Release Year: 2001
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Album Of The Day: Church Music by David Crowder Band
Released 15 years ago today, Church Music is an epic 74 minutes of music that is probably not what you grew up with at your church. (I know I certainly did not.) I love David Crowder and his band of ambitious instrumentalists because they bring the rock 'n' roll to whatever they are working on, even if it's supposed to be a album full of songs for churches to sing. There's certainly some nods to modern worship and even the classic hymns here, but it's also a rock fest and a dance party as the band incorporates even more electronic elements than in the past albums, which have been more guitar-focused. The cover of "How He Loves" made the John Mark McMillan song popular, but "Eastern Hymn", "Shadows" and "Oh, Happiness" are great songs by the band along with the rest of album. Dance!
Release Year: 2009
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Album Of The Day: 220 by Phil Keaggy
Phil Keaggy has been playing guitar for about 60 years now. He has released many dozens of albums, and 220 is one of my favorites. Phil does no singing on this one, just jamming on electric guitars with a band. It could work as fun background music, but it's even more enthralling, in my opinion, listening to it at full volume. Mr. Keaggy has such a variety of sounds he can get out of a guitar and really shreds in some songs.
Release Year: 1996
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