Two friends and early collaborators reunite on an excellent remake.
Braveheart Worship
Sheila Walsh
Label: Venture3Media
Length: 11 songs/49
minutes
Having been a
longtime fan of Sheila Walsh I am delighted to discover that the
closing track of Braveheart reunites her on a duet with her
friend and early producer Cliff Richard. Their first duet was a song
called “Drifting” from Walsh’s 1983 UK release of the same
name. The album was released in the US as War of Love (1983)
but lacks the duet. We were robbed! I guess variations between UK and
US releases didn’t stop with The Beatles.
Cliff Richard is not
as well known in the US as he is in the rest of the world but his
over five decade career includes 300 million albums sold. I first
came to know of him through participating in Billy Graham’s 1984
Mission England outreach in Birmingham, England. Cliff Richard was a
special guest. I’ll never forget being in the overflow crowd
outside Villa Park watching on a giant screen as he sang “The Only
Way Out,” a single released in 1982.
Richard may be best
known in this country for the pop songs “We Don’t Talk Anymore”
and “Devil Woman.” He also appeared and sang in some of Billy
Graham’s early movies. Since learning more of him through his music
and biography I appreciate how he navigates Christian faith with fame
in the pop world. Sir Cliff is a gracious gentleman.
To find Walsh and
Richard remaking “It is Well with My Soul” is to witness the
reunion of two friends who “through many dangers, toils and snares
… have already come.” This adaptation includes new words and
melodies that make it come alive. It does not matter if one is
familiar with the original. It’s like a new song, and makes the
album worth having for this alone.
What’s refreshing
is that Walsh takes a similar approach in the style and sound of the
rest of the tracks, which comprise her first full-length in eight
years. All but the hymn remake are new, done in the studio but could
pass for being live but for the absence of crowd noise. Walsh leads
the singing but much of the time is joined in harmony with other
voices.
I have not heard her
more recent prior releases on the Women of Faith label but my guess
is that this is the most contemporary that Walsh has sounded for some
time. Hints of this are reflected on the cover which shows Walsh and
her collaborators in black and leather. Album covers can be
revealing. It’s not so different that she loses the Women of Faith
crowd. I appreciate the artistry.
Past producer, John
Hartley, is back layering the background with soothing washes of
sound. His excellent work is recognizable. In addition to working
with Walsh in the past, he produced Heaven & Earth: A Tapestry
of Worship (1999)
that brought together some popular female artists.
“A Thousand
Hallelujahs” is the perfect opener, cheerful with some Celtic
accents. I would have enjoyed more of the latter. It does not seem to
be as evident in the remainder.
“Love Changes
Everything,” the following song is surprising in that Walsh is
heard only in the background, if at all. I suspect that it is
Jonathan and Rebecca Hart who take the lead as they are part of the
worship team that travels with Walsh. I give her credit for letting
her collaborators shine.
The lyrics in
“Behold Him” point the broken to wholeness:
For every heart that just won’t heal
Behold him
In all the emptiness we feel
Behold him
For every heart that’s on the floor
For shadowed hopes and closing doors
And every moment we fall short
Behold him
Walsh’s heart of
compassion finds expression in lyrics like this which you find
throughout. It’s comfort in a trying time.
Being the author of
over 17 books, writing may have inadvertently eclipsed singing. It’s
been said of John and Charles Wesley that we remember their hymns
more than their numerous writings. There may be something to this,
and I hope it will serve as an encouragement for Walsh to continue in
music. I will never forget her excellent cover of “Love is the
Answer” and “Angels with Dirty Faces” on Say So (1988).
I even vaguely remember being moved by a video of Walsh singing,
“It’s All for You,” that I think was from a Billy Graham
Crusade broadcast.
Walsh’s singing
and writing are like the investor diversifying their assets. God may
use both or one and not the other in a particular situation.
It may be too much
to hope for more collaborations with Cliff Richard, but it would be
an automatic buy for me. I admire them both and it’s so lovely to
hear them singing together again almost 40 years later.
No comments:
Post a Comment