Worship Musician May 2019 | Page 48

NEW MUSIC SELECTIVE HEARING | Robert Berman JOSH WILSON TANYA GODSEY PHIL KEAGGY & REX PAUL SCHNELLE Don’t Look Back The End Is the Beginning Illumination We’ve all heard friends say of some musician, “Love Lines the Last Horizon” was one of the Phil Keaggy makes albums because he loves “The album is fine, but it doesn’t really capture best pop albums of 2016, so Tanya Godsey making music. Lots and lots of music. But the live show.” Anyone who’s seen Josh Wil- has a lot to live up to this time around; happily, let’s be honest: Unless you’re a superfan, the son in concert or on one of his YouTube vid- she keyboard-driven output of such uber-prolific musicians can eos can attest that he belongs in that category. anthems are the name of the game, from be daunting. “Another album already? Didn’t He’s not only a multi-instrumentalist but also a the resurrection theme of “Coming Back to we just get the Bucket List album a couple master of looping, surrounding himself with in- Life” to the harmonized “Grow” which leans of months ago?” Yes, we did. But this is no struments and then hopping fluidly from drums on a floral metaphor of “growing towards the self-indulgent or slapdash effort. Rather, it’s to keys to vocals to lead guitar as he builds Light.” Biblical language appears constantly: a supremely catchy arena rock/pop album songs up and down in layers. It’s mesmerizing. “no shadow of turning;” “I lift my eyes to the recalling the 80’s heyday of Survivor and It also doesn’t translate to the recorded format, hills;” tears “sown in grief;” “of death’s sting, the Foreigner. Tasty, tasty guitars are of course in which multi-tracking is a trick as old as Les end” and the like. Songs written solo or with present, but never just for the sake of playing Paul’s legend. Thankfully, Wilson’s songs are Sarah Hart and Cindy Morgan are augmented some notes, as both artists trade vocal and strong enough to stand on their own, without by programming from California-based artist instrumental riffs with ease and skill. Keaggy’s the admittedly impressive stage show. His Lael. Both the stripped demo version and the vocals remain clear and bright, while Schnelle strong, clear vocals recall Nate Ruess, backed final produced versions are included for all five recalls the pure power of Kansas’ Jon Elefante. by classic rock instrumentation you’d hear from tracks. Godsey has one of those arresting alto Seven of the eleven tracks are originals full of Ben Rector. “Self Less” opens things up with a voices like Annie Lennox or Jess Ray that grabs up-front gospel sentiments as in “Nothing Can sweet combo of organ and clean electric gui- you so hard that it almost doesn’t matter what Separate Us, “Glorify Your Name,” and “Day tar, reminding us that Christ-like humility con- she’s singing, but in this case the songs fulfill of the Lord.” Four tracks remake classics from sists in thinking of others rather than ourselves. the promise in the vocals. Keaggy’s earlier repertoire: the rockers “Time” nails it. Spacious, “Borrow” rolls along with Ed Sheeran-like patter and “Full Circle” and the ballads “Let Everything describing the battle with anxiety, paraphras- Else Go” and “Spend My Life With You.” ing Jesus’ words in Matthew 6. “OK” deals with shame and the pressure to seem sinless. “Dream Small” encourages people to look for every opportunity to be helpful, not preoccu- pied with grand aspirations. Don’t think twice Robert Berman Robert is a Sunday School teacher, music nerd, and acoustic guitar enthusiast. He lives in rural Tennessee with his wife and three boys. about adding this to your collection, and catch Wilson live if at all possible. 48 May 2019 Subscribe for Free...