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Review:
Crisp, clear and radiant--these are the inviting rhythms of Roger
Hodges'
best worship project to date, "Big Big God". Are you
thinking of what
it would sound like to have pristine sound production, knitted with
completely
rapturous melodies, all held together with incredible grit through
honest vocals? Stop thinking, start worshiping--with "Big Big
God"! Anyone
who may have had the opportunity to worship in a meeting with Roger
Hodges
knows his approach is a one-way rocket to the courts of God.
Check
out this CD and listen to the sample audio clips at: http://www.worshipmusic.com/rh-cd04.html
I have to confess something--I used to be of the opinion that truly
great albums
and songs would "float" to the top, get picked up by the
majors (labels),
and make it to the masses. After the last two-and-a-half years of
listening
to stacks and stacks of praise & worship CDs, this just isn't
reality
anymore. The rise of the "indie" (independent) praise and
worship projects
has become a legitimate source of TOP quality resource and expression
in that genre's music market. Sure there is a lot of
"fluff" put out
by indies, but the truly great stuff is not only competing with the
big labels,
they are setting the pace in creative and passionate musical prayers
and
devotion. After indie projects like Langley Vineyard's "the
Well", Rita Springer's
"Created To Worship", and WaterDeep's "Enter The
Worship Circle", the
water is gathering for this emerging stream of praise to become a
torrent
of the river of God. And now you can add to that flow of God's
praise,
the rhythmic current of "Big Big God"! This CD belongs in
that category
of top notch projects.
"Big
Big God" begins its spin in your CD-ROM with "You
Are," a power-ballad that
throws out the rules and rushes straight to God, speaking
passionately to
the Father. You will fall to your feet in surrender to Him, as you
sing out:
And
You are the air I breathe
And
You are the song I sing
And
You are redeeming love
I
trust in You alone
You
will be tempted to lock on to this first song and let the [repeat]
function
hold you here for hours! But that, my friend, would be a big, big
mistake.
The six minutes this track plays for will seem far too short to
anyone
who finds themselves on the floor, pouring out the heart to the
Father.
Moving on to the next song, Roger calls us to "rise up" in
the military/march-girded
rhythms of Psalm 33. I really enjoyed this song, as the
music and Hodges' voice invites us to stand in the light of God.
But the
journey has just begun, and as the light, crisp strum of the acoustic
guitar begins to swell into the title track song, you are swept
back
into a personal conversation with God. Thankfulness expressed across
the
breadth of God's character is a constant staple to this great album,
which is
a well balanced feast of lyrical devotion. Of course, there is a
reason
"Big Big God" is the title track to this project--the song
is as infectious
as it is thoughtful. But if you thought this was just another
well-scripted,
studio produced session of nice songs. well, by this third song
you have begun to realize this is much more. In "Big Big
God", Hodges begins
his adding of joyful, creative and honest worship and praise "spontaneous"
moments. And apparently, once he gets started, he can't hold it
back. Throughout the rest of the album, Hodges makes no apologies
for his obvious
attack of enjoyment that lifts this album into a real praise and
worship
experience.
The
joy keeps on going in the boisterous "You Are Faithful",
where this rocket
launches into some very nice musical placements by electric guitar
power-man
Lincoln Brewster. You can't put much better talent on an album,
and
those haven't already heard Brewster's work on his self-titled debut
(from
Integrity Music's youth worship label Vertical Music) will be very
pleasantly
surprised. After a brief settling back, with Kevin Prosch-esque
"The
Son Is Rising", the trip continues with "The Lamb has
Overcome". This has
the same straight-ahead lyrical and progression stylings as
"You Are", but
this time points us to the returning of Jesus.
Just
when you think you have things all figured out, "All that I
Want" is slight
step off the trail, but most welcomed. This song provides good style
contrast,
and again with deeply heartfelt lyrics sung with actual passion
(Wow!
Imagine that!). By this time you are pretty convinced that Roger
Hodges
is the real item--an actual worshiper who recorded what he actually
would do
in a live worship service setting. This time comes to an intimate
juncture
with just voice and acoustic guitar (and a touch of oboe or synth
patch)
laying out the song "You've Captured My Heart". This
intimate worship ballad
is perfect, no other words for it. On the final cut, every
instrument is
pulled back except piano. Then, Hodges just lets it all come
out---passionate prayer, covenant commitment, and loving
thankfulness, with a beautiful
backdrop of sensitive piano playing.
Quite
obviously, this project earns our highest commendation here at
WorshipMusic.com,
the Editor's Choice Award. I actually struggled to find something
wrong with this CD, listening to it for 5 continuous hours (a
record
for me with any CD). Maybe it was because the musicianship was
impeccable.
Maybe because the vocals are just everything you ever wanted to
say to
the Lord. Or, maybe it's because you can't help but get caught up in
the
praise and worship with this album--I am not sure of the reason, but
this
project is flat out excellent. Praise God!
"Big
Big God" and sample audio clips can be found at: http://www.worshipmusic.com/rh-cd04.html
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