Today at la House an honorary D.Mus was conferred on John Scott, the Organist and Director of Music at St. Thomas 5th Ave.
Dr. Scott mentioned in passing conversation that while he was organist at St. Paul's London they undertook the recording of THE ENTIRE COVERDALE PSALTER IN ANGLICAN CHANT.
I haven't heard the recording yet but I hereby grant it a pre-emptive 5 hedons* solely for the nature of the project.
And the recording is available at Amazon no less! I'm in the middle of a project on the psalter so the recording came right out of my book "budget". Hurrah.
Run out and get this in order to support Coverdale, Anglican Chant, St. Paul's, John Scott, and Your Immortal Soul.
*The hedonometer has lapsed as of late. For those who do not recall, I reserve the inalienable right to review animals, minerals, and vegetables and assign a score ranging from -5 to 5. To score a 5 usually means you wrote a poem and your last name is Alighieri.
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Nov 9, 2007
IT LIVES!!! John Scott and St. Paul's win 5 hedons
Oct 6, 2007
There She Goes...Where?
Today, on a gelato date, I heard a cover of The La's There She Goes play over the radio. With a female vocalist.
My date-wife asked me what I thought the song was about and I gave the answer I've heard: it's about main-lining heroin.
The W'pedia, which you shouldn't ever cite in papers, not that I have, avers the cover is by Sixpence None the Richer. And it's 8 years old. So much for breaking news blogging. Article here.
The La's have been a bit vague about the exact nature of the perkily redundant tune. It's at least ambiguous. Which makes it a curious cover for Sixpence, doesn't it? Especially with a female vocalist? I don't listen to their stuff but I understand that they love Jesus.
Curious.
Sep 28, 2007
Country Music: Now Even Less Atheist
I like country music. Maybe it's not my favorite but I like country music. Especially when it's hot outside, or I wish it was hot outside.
Long have I maintained that there are no avowed atheist country musicians. For one thing it would be career suicide, for another thing what would Nihilist Country sound like anyways? She Thinks My Tractor's the Result of Blind Random Coincidence perhaps. Or, Courtesy of the Red, White, and 3rd Law of Thermodynamics. Or, It Doesn't Matter Where the Green Grass Grows.
Country may be sentimental. It might rush to cheer alcohol and impropriety. It probably encourages people to vote Republican and it definitely doesn't care if it contributes to Global Warming. But underneath it all has always beat a heart that believes in God, however much repentance might be necessary before death.
But, is country getting even more into God? I'm not good at tracking trends but the evidence seems mounting to me. Consider:
- Carrie Underwood (or her savvy career manager) seems dead set on proving Country-Hot Divas love Jesus. Jesus Take the Wheel and her recent single So Small (which apparently she has a writing cred on?) are both less than a Bible verse away from Christianity. Country-Hot Divas might now and then get revenge on cheating men (Before He Cheats), but we all make mistakes and besides that a) revenge is Hot, b) it's for the good of the other girl, and c) he really deserved it for driving a "pretty" truck.
- Brad Paisley is singing about heaven. When I Get to Where I'm Going can't wait to chill with lions and run foot races with grampa. It might be theologically unadorned but the sentiment is eternal.
There have always been Country songs that love Jesus. Just like there have always been Country songs that love tequila and heartbreak. But I wonder if the proportion is increasing.