Rocketown Records / The Fuel Music
Release Date: October 9th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Michael W. Smith – Still, Vol. 1 (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Rocketown Records / The Fuel Music
Release Date: October 9th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Michael W. Smith – Still, Vol. 1 (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Capitol Christian Music Group / Jesus Culture Music
Release Date: September 11th 2020
Reviewed by: Joshua Andre
Bryan And Katie Torwalt– Café Sessions EP (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Centricity Music
Release Date: September 18th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Chris Renzema – Mercy (Single) (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Centricity Music
Release Date: October 23rd 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Jason Gray – Order Disorder Reorder (Amazon mp3/iTunes/Capitol CMG)
Independent
Release Date: August 7th 2020
Reviewed by: Joshua Andre
Cassadee Pope– Rise And Shine (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
BEC Recordings
Release Date: August 28th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Brian Ortize – King of Kings (EP) (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Centricity Music
Release Date: April 24th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Chris Renzema – Let the Ground Rest (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Think about life for a moment in all it’s ebbs and flows. It’s ups and downs, ins and outs, valleys and peaks. It’s not that hard to do now, when we see what’s happening with the world, with COVID-19 wreaking havoc around the world. We look at our lives and think and wonder. What are the constants in our lives when everything around us seems be less certain? And then hopefully we start to think, and we can then write them all down. Our friends and family. Check. Our relationship with God. Check. Our endless supply of DVD’s and movies, the streaming services of Stan, Foxtel, Netflix, Amazon, Apple TV and Disney +. Check. Well…then again, maybe streaming services isn’t as constant in our lives as we ourselves initially think. But you get the picture. And then last but not least, something in our lives that has been constant for forever, in ways that maybe we ourselves don’t even know it, is in fact music. Music, just like film and TV, has the power to delve deep into our souls, and minister to our very core of our humanity, hopefully bringing to light, issues that maybe we ourselves need to work on, while also highlighting our very relationships with our friends, family and God Himself, in the whole process of us enjoying a song and reflecting on its meaningful lyrics. For me, music has always been a staple in my life for as long as I can remember- I started listening to children’s music like The Donut Man and Psalty the Singing Songbook when I was younger, and as time went on, my musical tastes continued to expand. Artists like Delirious?, Carman, Steven Curtis Chapman, Chris Tomlin, Newsboys, Tim Hughes and Rebecca St. James were all artists I thoroughly listened to throughout my primary and high school years, while my university days were impacted by a lot of CCM- artists like the ones aforementioned, alongside others- Third Day, Casting Crowns, MercyMe, Nichole Nordeman, Natalie Grant, Bebo Norman, Kerrie Roberts, Paul Baloche, Phil Wickham, Matthew West, Kari Jobe, Britt Nicole, BarlowGirl, Hawk Nelson, Sanctus Real, Building 429, David Crowder*Band, and Jason Gray (to name a few of the many, many artists we- my twin brother and I, branched out into). Now here I am in 2020, one year and a half into my blog series, and my musical tastes have continued to grow and expand even further. Yes, this blog series (which you can read more about here) has been daunting and at times, uncertain, but on a holistic level, has also been rewarding, as I felt the Lord’s presence and Him speaking to me through a lot of music that one wouldn’t necessarily call ‘Christian’. And that was my own conundrum that I was working through- and am still working through. I’ve concluded that mainstream music isn’t ‘bad’, as a lot of fundamentalist Christians believe. And maybe I believed that statement too, even though I didn’t grow up in such a fundamentalist environment.
Continue reading MOMENTOUS MONDAYS: INFLUENTIAL ARTISTS OF ALL TIME – WEEK 59: VANESSA AMOROSI
There are sometimes during the weeks where I sit and ponder and wonder. What really, really constitutes a great song or artist? Is it the message of the melody, the lyrics, what is being said, that would make the song stand the test of time in the end? Is it the musical composition, and the various layers of guitars, drums, keyboards and the like, that evoke different emotions, considering who is listening to it? Is it the general perception of the artist that determines whether a song or even an album by that artist, is successful, impactful or even decade-defying or not? Does an artist make a song, or can a song make an artist? These are the questions that have been haunting fans of music, and critics of it, for quite some time, and as we sit and think about all this, in 2020; I don’t think we’ve ever come to a clear conclusion sooner, if at all. For artists, songs, and albums are people’s preferences, and what one person can deem in their own lives as influential, the other can avoid with a ten-foot-pole. That’s just life, and there’s millions of genres available for people to listen to, to their hearts content. Music is very, very subjective, and so for me to tackle this year-long (and then some), project, about the top 100 Influential Artists (in my very own subjective opinion)- and then to top it off, 40 artists that are deemed the ‘classics’…you see what I mean right? People can call this ‘music experiment’ mere folly. And yet for me upon reflection- since I started embarking on this vastly daunting (yet equally exciting and rewarding) venture, I’ve been realising that such an exercise as this, as led me to appreciate music in all its facets all the more.
Continue reading MOMENTOUS MONDAYS: INFLUENTIAL ARTISTS OF ALL TIME – WEEK 58: JOHN MAYER
Curb / Word Entertainment
Release Date: July 17th 2020
Reviewed by: Jonathan Andre
Dan Bremnes – Wherever I Go (Acoustic Sessions) (Amazon mp3/iTunes)
Continue reading Dan Bremnes – Wherever I Go (Acoustic Sessions)