This Is Me--2024 A to Z Theme

My A to Z Themes in the past have covered a range of topics and for 2025 the theme is a random assemblage of things that are on my mind--or that just pop into my mind. Whatever! Let's just say I'll be "Tossing It Out" for your entertainment or however it is you perceive these things.
Showing posts with label Christian rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian rock. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2019

From Now On ( #BOTB )



        Home is not just a physical place, but it's also an idealized vision of something that can be different from one person to the next.  If home is where the heart is, I wonder what happens when someone gets a heart transplant?...


     
        I'll be honest--I'm a bit of a homebody.  Now that I'm retired I spend a great deal of time at home and I'm completely comfortable doing so.  And yet, if tomorrow I had an opportunity to take off to live on the road doing something I enjoyed (and able to afford to live the lifestyle in comfort) I'd be gone without too much thinking it over.  Still, I'd want to have someplace that I could think of as my home base--a place where I keep my stuff and lay my head when I need a break now and then.

       I want the best of all worlds.  I want to be true to my own self, but to consider those for whom I care the most.  That's what I think.  Is it what I do?

Battle of the Bands

Battle of the Bands is the blogging event started by Far Away Series and now hosted by StMcC Presents Battle of the Bands.   This event happens each month on the 15th and on some blogs there is also a Battle on the 1st of the month.  My blog is one of those with a second Battle on the 1st of the month.   The premise is simple:  Listen to the songs presented below and then in the comments vote for your favorite and tell us why you liked it.  Then visit the links listed near the bottom of this post for more Battle action.


From Now On

         For anyone who has been reading my blog posts this year, you are probably aware by now that I have become a fanatic about the 2017 film The Greatest Showman. Since I've said a great deal about this film in previous posts, I won't delve into this more in this current post.  However, I'm going to use another great song from the film for another Battle.  The film has so many great songs that have inspired a myriad of YouTube covers by some very talented artists and I keep finding more of them.  Here are some recent finds that are covers of the song "From Now On".

         In the film, this song expresses the revelation to the re-imagined historical figure of P.T. Barnum of what is most important to him--family and friends and home.  This is a message that can likely resonate with most of us.  No matter how hard we pursue our dreams or how far we go from our roots, our hearts yearn for the love of those who support us and encourage us onward.  If we forget those who gave us our lives, we have lost the truest essence of who and what we are.

        Initially I was a bit surprised to find so many Christian interpretations of songs from The Greatest Showman, but as I watched those videos and listened to the lyrics I soon realized why.  The film is decent family-friendly fare that extols the values of love, acceptance, friendship, and heritage.  When I received notification that a band that I've started following had released their own Christian version of "From Now On" then I started researching the other versions and hence a Battle was born...

Susan Shiebler & Company   "From Now On"  (2018)

         From East Patchogue, New York we have this video that is apparently a Christmas greeting of sorts produced by the Susan Shiebler Photography and Arts Studio.  I didn't find much in regard to the performance artists or video producers other than the statement on YouTube that explains:  "Each person in this video is a survivor, a survivor of cancer, abuse, anxiety, addiction, bullying or depression; all rescued by the restorative love of God." Take a listen and see if this version provides you some inspiration...







Forsaken Hero   "From Now On"  (2019)

        One of my dream places to live is Marion Virginia.  My discovery of the Christian band Forsaken Hero came when I was perusing YouTube for videos about the town of Marion and found the band's live performance version of the song "This Is the Greatest Show."   As I started exploring many of their videos on YouTube I took a liking to the band and began following their social media accounts. A few weeks ago I was notified about their latest CD (now available) and after listening to the cut of "From Now On" another Battle was born!  I've been disappointed that the band has for some reason taken down most of their YouTube videos, but I guess maybe they have their reasons for doing so.  In any case we at least have this video for now...





Time to Vote!

     In this round we have a couple videos where the musical arrangements are similar, but the presentations are somewhat different.  Both groups are very talented and I like them both, but I'm going to vote for one as my favorite.   What about you?    What's your favorite between these two choices?   You don't have to know about music to have an opinion since it all comes down to your own personal taste.

         Please vote on your favorite by letting us know your choice in the comment section and tell us why you prefer the version you chose. Then after you've finished here, please visit the other blogs listed below who may or may not be participating this time around. And if you've put up your own BOTB contest let us know that as well so we can vote on yours.




Here are some other places where you might find BOTB posts:

 StMcC Presents Battle of the Bands

  'MIKE'S RAMBLINGS'

'Curious as a Cathy'

Sound of One Hand Typing

Angel's Bark  


Debbie Doglady's Den

Jingle, Jangle, Jungle 


Cherdo on the Flipside

A I Love Music


Winner of this Battle Announced on Friday June 21st.

        It's the summer blogging slowdown I think. Or maybe blogging is just slowing down.  I'll be just here counting the votes and reporting the outcome in a week.  I'm living my life here at home--for now.

         Where do you think of as your home?   Do you have a tendency to be content wherever you are as long as the circumstances are reasonable?    What are reasonable circumstances in your view?  Have you seen The Greatest Showman yet?











Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Do Angels Play Electric Harps?

              In the summer of 1976 I went to see Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band in concert in Knoxville, Tennessee.  I had been a fan of Bob Seger since 1969 when his band was called Bob Seger System and they released the Ramblin' Gamblin' Man album which had a cover graced with an angelic looking female standing on a field of breaking ice.  There was something spiritual about the cover that appealed to me.  And the music rocked.

             The band changed in the 70s, but Seger's style was pretty much the same.  When I heard he was coming to Knoxville I was anxious to see him.  He was going to be the opening act for some band called Kiss.  I was familiar with Kiss, but I was not a fan. To me they were an Alice Cooper wannabe band that didn't play music as good as Cooper's.  I would have to tolerate Kiss in order to see Bob Seger.

             Seger and his band were great.  Since I had paid for the ticket I stayed for Kiss to see what they were all about.  The music was as I expected, but live it was much more exciting.  It was the show spectacle itself that impressed me.  I had previously been very impressed by Alice Cooper's elaborate stage production, but the Kiss concert presentation was bigger.  The lighting was strewn throughout the entire coliseum.   There were portions of the stage that would elevate and huge flames that spewed from either side of the stage.  The audience was sucked into the show.  When I left that night, I was still not a Kiss fan, but I was amazed by the production of the show.

             In the days that followed I began to envision a rock band that played Christian oriented music in a live lavish concert presentation such as I had seen with Kiss.   In my mind I could see "GOD" in huge letters festooned with lights hanging over a coliseum.  Special lighting and pyrotechnic effects would enhance the musical experience as a stage presentation that included flying angels and orbs of light would dazzle the audience.   The entire experience would be mind boggling visual displays and spiritually soaring rock and roll music.

             I had been a big fan of  the musical Jesus Christ, Superstar and any songs that seemed remotely related to God, Jesus, or spirituality.  At the time I did not know that God rock or any rock music that actually aligned itself with Christianity existed.  I was ready for it.  Not only was I ready for Christian rock, I was ready for some more modern music to replace the boring music that I had been used to hearing in church.  I had stopped going to church by then, but I thought if the music changed maybe I would go back.

              A decade later, sometime in  early 1985, I was driving at night somewhere in the vicinity of Northern Virginia.   Apparently we had been driving for a while and I must have been getting tired because I stopped listening to cassettes and decided to listen to the radio.  Sometimes when driving fatigue starts to hit me I like to see what's on the radio to perk up my interest.  An unfamiliar song was playing.  It sounded good, with a driving drum beat and nice vocal and instrumental work.  As I listened closely the subject matter of the lyrics was distinctly Christian related.  The dj identified the song as "Yield to the Spirit" by the Joe English Band.

           In the days to come I began seeking out the Joe English Band album What You Need.  It was not easy until I realized that I needed to go to a Christian book store that also sold music.  I finally located the album and while in the store found another album--Beat the System by Petra--which captured my attention.  Soon I was hooked on Christian music.  I was buying as many albums as I could afford, reading every new issue of Contemporary Christian Music magazine, and seeking out any information I could find on contemporary Christian music.  I was determined to become highly knowledgeable in the field.

            Probably around late May of 1985 I was staying outside of Chicago, where I had some time off and decided to spend some time visiting my friend, Fred.  I began telling him about my new obsession with modern Christian music.  Fred was not a Christian, but he was the sort of person who always seemed to be in the know about everything.  He checked his sources and found that there was going to be a large Christian rock concert not far from us that very night.  We decided to go.

          The venue was a large sports arena in Addison, Illinois.  It was an oversized barn, but ideal for rock events.  I was struck by the crowd--an array of punker and metal head looking types with crazy hair and facial piercings mixed with clean cut young church people.  It looked like the crowd at any typical rock concert.  The only real difference was that I didn't smell any marijuana smoke once the concert had started, but otherwise the crowd could have been the same.  Among the concession stand offerings were large plastic cups of non-alcoholic beer.  One of the bands played a version of Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze" except they substituted "Jesus Christ" for "Purple Haze".  All in all the experience was strangely surrealistic with mostly unmemorable music--I don't even remember what bands were playing, but they were definitely harder rock than I normally listened to.

        Subsequent years brought concerts more to my enjoyment as I became more discerning in my choice of concerts to attend.  I saw artists like Michael Card, David and the Giants, and Charlie Peacock in venues ranging from large auditoriums to churches.  The Christian concerts were very similar to any other concerts except that the artists would talk about Jesus briefly.  Otherwise, one was much like the other. 

         In the early nineties I began attending church again after a hiatus of many years.  I had moved to the Los Angeles area and started attending a Southern Baptist Church because it reminded me most of back home in Tennessee.  The praise music they were now singing was more related to rock than the classic hymns I had grown up with.  Through the years the music in our church has become progressively more rock oriented.  Even when they do revive an old traditional hymn they add a contemporary spin to it.

          Christian music has become a huge business.  Sometimes you can't even tell that a song is Christian other than the group has been labeled as a Christian group and you probably wouldn't even have known that if someone hadn't given them the label.  Sometimes I think about what it might have been like in the days when J.S. Bach was composing his glorious cantatas to God; to sit in church with a small orchestra playing or a large pipe organ and a sweet voiced choir.   At times I even miss the nice older lady that used to play the Hammond organ in the Methodist church I attended when I was younger, as we plodded solemnly through "The Old Rugged Cross" or "In the Garden".