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Fall 2007:
Ceili Rain,
John Angotti, Alma
DeRojas, Kristin Fisher |
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Summer 2007: Popple, Chris Padgett, Kitty
Cleveland, Last Day |
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Spring 2007: Popple, Chris Padgett, Kitty
Cleveland, Last Day |
Winter
2006: Catholic Music 2007, Amanda
Vernon, Marie Bellet, Mair Rathburn,
Bethany Music Ministry, Celeste Zepponi |
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October 2006: Nick Alexander, Gretchen Harris, Steve
Angrisano |
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Aug/ Sept 2006: Matt Maher, John Paul II
Tribute, Chris Padgett, John Michael Talbot, Fr. Stan
Fortuna |
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March 2004
Following the success of their last album, “No You No
Me,” Ceili Rain let’s us know that
With The Change In Your
Pocket You Could Change The World. (The long title is
shortened to “Change In Your Pocket,” for the sake of
space on the side of the CD and the sake of sanity for
your reviewer.) The CD has an upbeat and flamboyant,
Celtic-Irish flavored, pop-rock feel to it. The first
song on the CD has lead singer Bob Halligan Jr.
welcoming you to join him and his mates on a wonder
train journey to Ceili Rain-land. Halligan is more
exciting than Mister Rogers and his Magic Kingdom is
more of a Heavenly Kingdom. The song is called “Like A
Train,” it compares the Lord’s love to a train – a big
train—ninety miles high. You can see His love "a comin’
for you." Being an instrument that God can use is the
idea behind the song “Pencil In Your Hand.” We should
give into God’s will and live His Love. Halligan’s
vocals really shine in this song, as almost a cross
between U2’s Bono and Billy Joel. “Stomp” tells us to
throw our worries to the ground and kick them till
they're
dust, and it wouldn’t hurt to let God in while we are
feeling so good. “All I need in the finest hour is my
faith, your power…” are the lyrics to “My Faith, Your
Power. ” It lets us know that we have lost something if
we don’t have Jesus. We're like a bat and glove with no
ball, a tenor without a tune or a dish of
Häagen-Dazs without a spoon.
Jesus was born in a poor, backward time and hung around
tax collectors, fishermen, prostitutes and lepers
instead of the royalty or world leaders He could have
been around. He hung around the place and people who had
no hope. Jesus gave them hope. He still does so today
and it is highlighted wonderfully in the song “I’ll
Stick With My Own.” Ceili Rain should know about those
who are down and out since they help out with Mercy
Corps. Mercy Corps is a not-for-profit
organization that exists to alleviate suffering,
poverty, and oppression by helping people build secure,
productive and just communities. You get the message of
helping out those in need in the title track, "Change in
Your Pocket." Halligan sings about the poor, the
hungry, the sick and dying. The change you spend on the
expensive cup of coffee at the mall could help feed
these people. Is it not our Catholic duty to help these
people? Are we not called to love these people? Halligan
understands that we all have bills to pay as he sings
about them in “Dead Presidents on Parade.” He also has
car insurance, life insurance, health insurance, house
insurance… but there has to be a better way. We have
staving children around the world – there has got to be
a better system to care for us all. Even with it’s deep
messages,
Change In Your Pocket
is still a very
upbeat and insanely uplifting CD that will get you
grooving, as well as thinking.
Standing proud and shouting out loud of Jesus’ amazing
Grace is Canadian Catholic singer Lorraine Hartsook
with her new CD
Be Real. Last year, “Be Real”
was nominated for Album of the Year and awarded Best
Country Gospel Album of the Year by the Saskatchewan
Country Music Association. Hartsook was named
Entertainer, Female Vocalist and Songwriter of the Year
in 1998 by the Country Gospel Music Association for the
Northwest U.S. What is really amazing is Hartsook’s
testimony that centers on her faith journey from needing
to seek the approval of others to a realization that she
needed to accept God’s faithful and unconditional
approval. That is also the idea behind the title track
“Be Real.“ Hartsook says,
“True love cannot be found in external relationships,
but in a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. He is
the one who died out of love for you. It is through
Jesus that you will find your self-worth. It is through
Jesus that you will find the freedom to rejoice and be
real!” The song is really a prayer for healing, healing
one's soul through Jesus’ love. “You give me
strength you give me hope, you’re the reason I survive…”
are the words to “You Promised.” This is a wonderful
country song of praise for Jesus’ complete love for us.
Getting over one's petty views of others and turning
it into the Great commandment (Love One Another) is the
idea behind “Help Love Stand.” Deciding right from
wrong is the focus of “Good Days, Bad Days.” One of
the songs that will touch your heart and that really stands out on
this CD is “Angel Of Mercy.” It's sung from the
point of view of a woman who has lost her children by
early death or miscarriage (part of Hartsook's own
testimony). She sings to the Angel of Mercy to protect them and wonders if they have their
father's or their mother’s looks and what they sound like. She
knows one day, she will see them in Heaven. This is an
excellent song of hope for someone who may have had a
miscarriage and is comforted in knowing others speculate
the same thoughts about their lost children. On the
lighter side is “Heavenly Hoe-Down,” a funny song about
angels wearing cowboy hats around a barbaque grill and
giving praise to God. It is with good reason that
Be Real was nominated Album of the Year.
Remembering what it was like to be chosen as an adopted
child, Lynn Cooper set out to celebrate three of
the most important people that make that exchange of life
possible. She did this with her new EP called
Songs
From The Rocking Chair. Cooper tells us in song the
joys each person involved should share in an adoption. First is
the Adoptive Mother, whose pains and delight together
with her husband's while awaiting this new child
in their lives are highlighted in the song, “You Will Be Here.” “...You
will be here, beloved by another’s love, given
unselfishly, grace giving life..” The other person is,
of course, the Birth Mother. It is a significant and
life changing choice that this woman must make. Cooper
sings about this in “Dance.” Instead of
regret, the birth mother thinks about the wonder life
the adoptive mother can give her child that she herself can not. This song
is the gem of the EP, with not only wonderful vocals by
Cooper, but a stunning arrangement by Craig Willoughby.
His guitar is awesome. Lastly we have the child. This is
emphasized in the song “Just Imagine,” as Cooper’s
daughter, Lauren Cooper, shares vocals with her mother.
The song not only encourages us to see what the child’s
future has, but for us to see ourselves as children.
Songs
From The Rocking Chair teaches us we are
all children of God.
Let’s face it--one
of the most talked about movies for a long time is The Passion Of The Christ. Mel Gibson
has made a masterpiece. It is not just a film, but an
experience. It must be seen on the big screen. I was
fortunate enough to see it in a theatre that had a
wonderful sound system. Since the film does not have
much dialogue it relies heavily on the wonderful
acting of the cast, as well as the beautiful soundtrack
that sets the mood. It was composed by John Debney.
A
life-long Catholic, Debney has composed the soundtrack
for such films as Elf, Welcome To Moooseport,
My Favorite Martian, Doctor Who (TV), Cats
& Dogs, The Princess Diaries, I Know What
you Did Last Summer, as well as Snow Dogs,
Inspector Gadget, Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius,
and the first two Spy Kids movies. "The Passion Of
The Christ" is one of those scores that affects you in a
personal way. It's got a nice fusion of tribal ethnicity
combined with a traditional epic religious film score.
It works well as a modern film score and it also works
completely independently from the film. Debney also had
help in producing this soundtrack by the film’s
director, Mel Gibson. “The soundtrack has a very Middle
Eastern flavor to it," says Debney, but from the
beginning his intention was to compose a World Music
score, with “instruments from all parts of the world and
all time periods and just, you know, have some fun with
it. And that's sort of what we did. We experimented a
lot with different instruments...Then on the other hand,
you do have some traditional moments where it's more
about orchestra and choir.” The soundtrack will bring
you back to images in the film with music from “The
Olive Garden,” “The Flagellation,” and up to the
“Crucifixion.” This soundtrack has reached the number
one spot not only at CatholicMusicNetwork.com,
but throughout the world and even reaching the pop charts
in sales. If you want to be touched again by the film
experience, the soundtrack to “The Passion Of The
Christ” is for you.
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