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Tag Archives: Christian

A CD for anyone who has asked God “why?”

29 Thursday Sep 2016

Posted by Robert White in CD/Music Review

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

CD Review, Christian, Jaylene Johnson, Potter & Clay, Winnipeg

jaylene-johnson-potter-clay-coverAfter a summer hiatus and a busy beginning to fall, the Arts Connection blog is back with a look at Winnipeg singer/songwriter Jaylene Johnson’s new CD Potter & Clay.

While Johnson’s name may not be recognized by some, she’s been writing and recording music since 1999, received five GMA Covenant Award nominations and a Western Canadian Music Award Nomination.

But, since 2004 she’s faced a number of challenges including a head-on accident on the TransCanada Highway and the near-loss of her voice. Potter & Clay puts into song the lessons she’s learned through those trials and tribulations.

Potter & Clay is probably one of the most introspective CDs I’ve heard in recent days.

It’s probably one of the most introspective CDs I’ve heard in recent days, leading off with lyrics like “There are things I’ve done I never should’ve done/Things I’ve said I never should have said” from the lead track “Fallin’.

The introspection continues with songs like “How Long” (“Who led me to this desert/Was it me or was it You/Am I being punished/For what I did or didn’t do”), “Find Us” (“Find us in our failures/Where we’ve been thrown back to the start/Find us as we question/All the things we used to know”) and “Pray, Pray Again” (“Pray when you’re troubled/Pray when you’re tired/Pray when you’re empty/Sad or uninspired”).

But…underlying this introspection, which I suggest will resonate with most, if not all, of the CD’s listeners, Johnson portrays an overarching sense of hope and trust in God: “Fallin’ into the arms of mercy” (“Fallin'”), “I believe that You are faithful/All-knowing and all-wise/I’ve seen Your mercy moving/Through the corners of my life” (“How Long”), “Find us in the shadows/Find us in the dark/Find us in the corners/Where we don’t think You’d ever go” (“Find Us”) and “We don’t know when/But God’s gonna answer/ Pray, pray again” (“Pray, Pray Again”).

Adding to the beauty of Johnson’s lyrics are production values second to none. Johnson co-produced Potter & Clay with Murray Pulver and created a soundscape that varies from the dulcet tones of “One Tiny Prayer,” “Let the Silence Speak” and “Potter & Clay” to the bluegrass tones of “Pray, Pray Again” and the folk/country of “Fallin'” “How Long” and “This Little Light.”

It’s hard to peg Johnson with any one particular musical style. She has a voice that’s easy on the ears, music that will have you tapping your toes one time and reaching for the tissue the next and lyrics that will touch your soul. Potter & Clay is a CD that will resonate with anyone who has, at any point, looked at their life and asked God “why?”

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For more information on Jaylene Johnson and the Potter & Clay CD go to http://www.jaylenejohnson.com/

To listen to the Arts Connection interview with Jaylene Johnson go to http://artsconnection.ca/content/arts-connection-monday-july-11-2016-jaylene-johnson-potter-clay-cd

“More Than Miracles” more than a simple history of the Scott Mission

14 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by Robert White in Book Review

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Ben Volman, Book Review, Canadian culture, Christian, More Than Miracles, The Scott Mission

More Than Miracles coverThe Scott Mission first came to my attention in the late 1990s when I worked in the Salvation Army’s public relations department in Toronto. At the time, I saw the Scott as one of the myriad of Christian social service ministries serving those in need in the city.

Reading Toronto-area freelance journalist Ben Volman’s new book, More Than Miracles: Elaine Zeidman Markovic and the Story of the Scott Mission, gave me a new appreciation for the Scott, its ministry and the people who have served there.

Volman, with the eye of a journalist and heart of a pastor (he’s also the Toronto director of Chosen People Ministries and the spiritual leader of Kehillat Eytz Chaim/Tree of Life Messianic Congregation) tells of the triumphs and trials of the Scott and those closest to it: the Zeidman family.

A challenge of those writing histories is the delicate balance between glorifying the subject or tearing it apart. Volman manages to balance hagiography with the reality of the Scott’s struggles (especially after the untimely death of Alex Zeidman, its second director.)

While other histories of the Scott have been written – a fact noted by Volman – More Than Miracles recounts its history through the eyes of Elaine Zeideman Markovic, one of the four children of mission founders Morris and Annie Zeidman.

Markovic, along with her brothers Alex and David (who both became directors) and sister Margaret, all contributed in some way to the ministry of the Scott. In her 50-plus years of working at the Scott, Markovic filled a variety of behind-the-scenes roles and Volman sensitively recounts her own struggles with her place in ministry and her ultimate resolution to serve God in whatever role He chose.

One of the strengths of More Than Miracles is Volman’s choices as a writer. As someone who has also written organizational histories, I know the challenge of choosing which document or interview to quote from and how much should be quoted. Volman as struck the right balance between narrating the story and choosing from the myriad of Scott Mission’s ephemera and interviews he’d held. Volman has an uncanny knack for knowing when to speak as the author and when to let a diary entry, letter or person speak.

This sensitivity has led to a well-written book that was a joy to read. Whether you are familiar with the Scott Mission, or just have a passing knowledge of the “Miracle on Spadina,” More Than Miracles should take a place on your to-read list.

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For more information on More Than Miracles check http://castlequaybooks.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=101

“The Masked Saint” sets the bar for Christian filmmakers

20 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by Robert White in Review

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Canadian, Christian, Drama, Movie, Review, The Masked Saint

TheMaskedSaint_27x40_FINALWhen Pastor Chris Samuels, the main character in The Masked Saint (portrayed by Brett Granstaff), is at his lowest, his wife Michelle (Lara Jean Chorostecki) makes as statement that sums up the whole movie:

“You’ve always been that little boy who’s afraid of the bully. Don’t be the bully. You’ve always been a son who’s looking for his father. Now you have to look after the church. You’ve always been a man looking for a second chance. Now you have one.”

The Masked Saint, which opens in Canadian theatres this coming weekend, is based on the novel by pastor Chris Whaley and is based on Whaley’s own career as a professional wrestler in the 1980s. In the movie, after being called to a small church in Michigan, Samuels faces a shrinking congregation, dwindling finances and a hostile neighbourhood. Thinking he’s left the ring for good, Samuels ends up using his wrestling skills as a masked vigilante and then as a way to prop up the congregation’s finances.

Having been disappointed by previous Christian films, I previewed The Masked Saint with some skepticism. But I was disappointed again. The film exceeded my expectations and, in my opinion has reset the bar for other Christian filmmakers.

The Masked Saint presents a solid story with well-developed and believable characters

Unlike other movies in this genre, The Masked Saint presents a solid story with well-developed and believable characters. Chris Samuels isn’t a perfect pastor who has it all together. In much the same way that Eric Liddell found God’s pleasure in running in Chariots of Fire, it isn’t until the saintly Ms Edna (veteran actor Diahann Carroll) encourages Chris to get back into the wrestling ring and use his God-given talents.

Still, The Masked Saint had a few weaknesses. One is in the character of Judd Lumpkin (Patrick McKenna), which comes across as more of a caricature of a controlling church board chair, than a believable character. This makes Lumpkin’s own repentance scene seem slightly contrived. Another weakness would be how some police procedures (the line-up scene) are sacrificed for the sake of increasing tension and conflict. In the end, though, the story and characters overcome any weaknesses.

From producer Cliff McDowell’s home-town of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario substituting for Michigan to the wrestling sequences, The Masked Saint is beautifully shot. And the use of wrestlers-turned-actors Roddy Piper (as the less-than-honest wrestling promoter Nicky Stone) and James Preston Rogers (as the Reaper) add authenticity to the movie.

As Chris Samuels struggles with his calling and the consequences from following that calling, The Masked Saint builds to an inevitable conclusion. That’s not to say it’s a cliched conclusion – there’s still lots of room for doubt and a surprise ending right up until the final scene. And that’s what makes The Masked Saint stand head and shoulders above its peers.

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For information on the Canadian release of The Masked Saint check http://www.p23ent.com/

 

If this is “just getting started,” Carolyn Arends has a bright future

06 Tuesday Oct 2015

Posted by Robert White in CD/Music Review

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Carolyn Arends, CD Review, Christian, singer/songwriter

JGSCoverSinger/songwriter Carolyn Arends titled her 20th anniversary retrospective CD Just Getting Started. If Arends is “just getting started” then I can hardly wait to see what the next 20 years of songs will bring.

Arends released her first album, the now out-of-print I Can Hear You, in 1995. Produced by the legendary Brown Bannister it featured “Seize the Day” and garnered the BC artist a Dove Award nomination. Since then she’s produced 11 CDs/albums (which includes 2 Christmas CDs, a parenthood project and a best-of collection).

Just Getting Started: An acoustic reflection on 20 years of music is an homage to both the music that has gone before and a tribute to the fans who have supported Arends for those two decades.

The CD is a fitting retrospective to one of Canada’s best singers/songwriters

The 12-song compilation starts with a new one: the title track “Just Getting Started.” As she has in the past, Arends demonstrates a deft turn of the phrase: “These are but tastes of the banquet before us/The music is great but just wait for the chorus/From delivery rooms to the dearly departed/Just getting started.”

The remaining 11 songs were selected by her fans. Some were songs Arends hadn’t performed for a while (“it was like meeting old friends and getting to know them again”). Others were perennial favourites, such as “Seize the Day” which was reinvented “on piano in a Billy Joel ‘Piano Man’ kind of direction” for the acoustic CD.

Arends’ songwriting forms the backbone of this CD. Adding meat to those bones are Spencer Capier’s intricate accompaniment on a variety of instruments including mandolin, violin and background vocals. Producer Roy Salmond fleshes out the production while also adding musical touches via, among other instruments, accordion, Wurlitzer, lap steel and percussion. The almost unnoticeable touches on background instrumental touches are one of the components that make this CD shine.

Some of my favourite cuts include “Happy,” “New Years Day” and “Father Thy Will be Done.” But each time I listen to the CD (and it’s been practically every day since it was released), I pick up something I like about the other tracks. I’m sure every song will become someone’s favourite.

Just Getting Started: An acoustic reflection on 20 years of music is a fitting retrospective to one of Canada’s best singers/songwriters. And the CD has me looking forward to Arend’s next 20 years of music.

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Just Getting Started: An acoustic reflection on 20 years of music is available as a free download from http://20.carolynarends.com/

To listen to an interview where Carolyn Arends talks about this project, check http://artsconnection.ca/content/arts-connection-monday-september-21-2015-carolyn-arends-20th-anniversary-cd-renovare

 

 

 

Seeing churches in black and white…photography, that is

29 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Robert White in General

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Canadian culture, Christian, Churches, photography

Most of my artistic endeavours have centred around the written word, either as a journalist, short story writer or, in the past couple of years, as an unpublished novelist. But because I began my writing career as a reporter in weekly newspapers, I was also introduced to news photography.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands of my photos have appeared in newspapers or magazines. Most have been focussed (pun intended) on providing a visual image of a news event or a feature subject. And, of course, I’ve taken photos of family events or trips, almost in all cases looking for the unusual or unique shot that will differentiate the photos from the “normal” photo album or vacation shot.

For the past couple of years, every other Saturday, I get together with about a dozen other men to talk about photography. We’ve talked about how sensor size counts, lenses (length, telephoto versus zoom), depth of field, existing light and photo manipulation with photo software. Our discussions are always enlightening, engaging and, sometimes energetic (but never argumentative).

Out of these discussions arose a the idea for a photo project I started working on last year. The Stone Churches Project will be a collection of black and white photos of the seven limestone churches in downtown Guelph.

Knox from Quebec & Norfolk - blended cropped B & W watermarkedKnox Presbyterian Church. Taken from the corner of Norfolk and Quebec Streets

The project is intended to challenge me on a number of levels.

The first challenge is to begin looking at the churches with an artistic mindset. As a photojournalist, my main reason for taking pictures was to illustrate a story. If, for example I was taking the above photo to accompany a story talking about the role of the church in the community, I would always have made sure there were people in the picture.

Instead, I’m now focusing more on composition, lighting, shading by creating a photo you’d want to put on your wall rather than in the recycle bin.

Lakeside Downton front - blended cropped B&W watermarkedLakeside Downtown front tower on Norfolk Street

My second challenge was seeing things in black and white. At one of my early newspaper gigs, our office was right across the hall from a portrait photographer. Victor was one of my early influences as a photographer and I still appreciate the informal lessons he gave me.

One of those lessons was about the “grey scale” used by Ansel Adams in his stunning landscape photographs. The scale ranks the varying shades of grey from white to black which photographers use to determine shutter speed and aperture size.

I had to learn those all over again for this project. And learn to convert the colour in my viewfinder into black and white.

Shell-Butterfly window - cropped B&W watermarkedLakeside Downtown interior: north-side stained glass window in the late evening.

My final challenge was to overcome my aversion to photo manipulation and learn how to use photo software more effectively.

I’ve always been a purist. That comes naturally when you’re using film and taking photos at a newsworthy event. You only have one chance to get the photo right because, for the most part, you can’t go back and recreate the event.

This becomes a challenge when shooting for black and white. While my digital camera will allow me to shoot in B & W, the photos tend to be flat, with little definition. The photo above was taken in colour and then converted to crisp, clean B & W image. I still don’t manipulate the photos as much as other people I know, but I’m learning.

Where am I going with this project? I’m still debating. Perhaps a book. Perhaps an exhibit. Only time will tell.

For now, I’m just enjoying the journey.

“House of Many Rooms”: treat for the ears, feast for the soul

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Robert White in CD/Music Review

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

CD Review, Christian, Indie pop, Jazz, Laila Biali

Laila Biali - House of Many Rooms cover

From brass fanfare that opens “Shadowlands” to the plaintive closing notes of “Plainclothes Hero,” Laila Biali & the Radiance Project’s new CD, House of Many Rooms is a treat for the ears and a feast for the soul.

Biali, a Vancouver native who now calls New York City home, has played with Sting, Paula Cole and Suzanne Vega. Best known as a jazz pianist, House of Many Rooms is a musical departure for her.

But her fans can thank her husband, and CD co-producer, Ben Wittman for pushing her into recording the CD and sharing these songs with the world.

“He helped me silence the judges in my head,” says Biali in an Arts Connection interview to be broadcast in early May. “Releasing original music like this is sharing something that’s deeply personal and is a higher risk than putting out an album of cover material.”

And deeply personal it is, with songs that explore grief, loss, longing and expectation.

“Sparrow” was written for a friend’s sister whose twins were stillborn, where the pain comes through in the lines “But I can’t feel the kicking inside of me/In the space that my hands overlay.” Biali writes of her own reaction to the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in “Shine” a lullaby-style tune which says “There’s shattered glass beneath our feet/The shards they cut like broken dreams.”

A friend’s battle with cancer is the backbone of “Plainclothes Hero,” while “Little Bird” is an ode to her son and “Home” is one of the best descriptions of Christian community I’ve seen: “This is home for all/You will not be rejected/All of perfect beauty reflected/In your face/In this place.”

House of Many Rooms has an indie-pop feel (one person I’ve shared it with says it reminds them of Hark the Herons – an indie duo which includes downhere bassist Glenn Lavender) with a solid cast of musicians, including Wittman, and vocalists, including the Toronto Mass Choir. “You” with its eerie Haken Continuum is reminiscent of the Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. And “Home” has roots in Biali’s jazz stylings with a steady rhythm section base underpinning the vocal and string arrangements.

Biali first conceived The Radiance Project about six years ago. And two years ago she entered the studio to begin recording House of Many Rooms. The final product has been well worth the wait.

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For more on Laila Biali & The Radiance Project got to http://theradianceproject.com/. And listen to the full interview with her on 94.3 Faith FM on Monday, May 4 at 9:30 p.m. ET (webcast on www.faithfm.org).

“The Name of the Hawk” series offer a new take on the Arthurian legend

15 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Robert White in Book Review

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Arthurian legends, Book Review, Christian, Galahad, Murray Pura

2decover_1160x1637(129)

Pincher Creek, Alberta writer Murray Pura offers a new take on the Arthurian legends through his two The Name of the Hawk series.

The two series are a throwback to the days of Charles Dickens novels and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes mysteries. Authors would release a bit of their stories at a time in the magazines or newspapers before a publisher would release the full story or novel in a book. Pura has taken the e-book route with both The Name of the Hawk series, releasing a volume (in essence a chapter) at a time.

Last year’s series, a six volume novel, introduced the reader to Hawk, a young man ready to leave his island home on the pilgrimage that marked his entry in to adulthood. The not-so-chance arrival of a boatload of Danes changes the direction of Hawk’s journey and adds his love interest Skaytha and her companions to the journey.

After a few physical and spiritual trials, Hawk et al leave the Danes, travel across unknown lands and end up in Jerusalem. There he meets Galahad, one of King Arthur’s Knights of the Round Table. The two reluctantly team up to find the true cross. There’s more than a twist or two in this tale, most of which revolves around the relationship between Hawk and Galahad.

Volume II, released in March, picks up Hawk’s tale, where he and Galahad are tasked to find…

The Holy Grail.

Which shouldn’t really be a surprise, since the grail quest is a key part of the Arthurian story. While this is only the first volume, based on the first series, I’m betting this grail quest ends up taking a markedly different direction than what’s found in other treatments of the legend.

What Pura adds to the mix includes:

1) A nod to the Galad/Galahad controversy: is this the same person but with different spellings or are these two different people? In Pura’s interpretation, these are definitely two sides of the same coin.

2) A compare/contrast approach to Celtic and Roman Christianity: Hawk represents the Celtic approach, which is personal, intuitive and structured around the community. Galahad represents the Roman approach, which  is centred around the church and priests. Pura shows, through the interaction between the two as they, that a melding of both approaches produces a deeper, richer spirituality.

3) A sense of humour: This began in the first series, when Hawk met Galahad and insisted that Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table were fables. And Galahad’s knightly speech patterns remain a constant source of amusement for and ridicule from Hawk.

Pura’s clean, conversational writing style makes the books an easy read. That doesn’t mean they’re simplistic – there’s an unexpected depth to the narrative, especially for those who are fans of the Arthurian genre.

I’m looking forward to the rest of Series II of The Name of the Hawk and eagerly curious about how the grail quest will end. If it’s anything like the search for the true Cross in Series I, it will be nothing like I’ve read in the past.

The Name of the Hawk Series II, published by Helping Hands Press, is available as an e-book at amazon.ca (http://tinyurl.com/ktgfbsn)

Guelph band transforms G.K. Chesterton’s poems into song

03 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Robert White in CD/Music Review

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Canadian culture, CD Review, Christian, Folk/Roots/Jazz, G.K. Chesterton, Guelph

Riddles and Creeds cover Those familiar with G. K. (Gilbert Keith) Chesterton probably know him for his apologetic works (Orthodoxy or The Everlasting Man) or fiction (Father Brown mysteries or The Man Who Was Thursday). Through the Nicole Ensing Band’s 2014 CD, riddles & creeds, you’ll soon learn about Chesterton the poet. Ensing, the worship ministry coordinator at Guelph’s New Life Christian Reformed Church, and producer Ross McKitrick, have transformed 10 of Chesterton’s poems (two songs on the CD are instrumentals) into outstanding songs. Transforming existing poems into song lyrics isn’t as easy as it sounds (I unsuccessfuly tried to do so with Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “Break, Break, Break” after studying it in school). About half the songs were adpated by Ensing and McKitrick, with Ensing soloing on the adaptation on the other half and composing the music for all of the songs but “The Great Minimum,” where she teamed up with McKitrick. “A Child of the Snows,” “The Rolling English Road” and “The Aristocrat” are probably my favourite songs on riddles & creeds, but I don’t think there’s one bad track on the CD. Ensing, sings and plays piano, surrounded herself with a solid band of musicians for this project: Brian Bork (guitar), Sam Fitzpatrick (bass) and Joel Sypkes (drums – and is no longer with the band). The band seems to know when to keep instrumentation to a minimum (“The Great Minimum”) or turned up to 10 (“The Aristocrat”). If I had one quibble with the CD, it’s in the production. There’s often too much “space” between Ensing’s vocals and the rest of the music for my liking, which leads to her vocals getting lost in the mix. riddles & creeds is the perfect introduction to both the Nicole Ensing Band (http://www.nicoleensingband.com/) and the poetry of G.K. Chesterton.

 
 

The enigma and influence of Bruce Cockburn explored in “rumours of glory”

24 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Robert White in Book Review

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Book Review, Bruce Cockburn, Canadian culture, Christian, Folk/Roots music

Rumours of glory - cover

I was one of those young people who almost wore the grooves out of my copy of Dancing in the Dragon’s Jaws in the early 1980s – especially once I was told Bruce Cockburn was a born again Christian and “Wondering Where the Lions Are” was based on a metaphor for Jesus Christ.

I also wasn’t one of those evangelical Christians who tossed their Cockburn collection because of the mild profanity in “If I Had a Rocket Launcher” and the harsher profanity in “Call it Democracy.” I considered the lyrics in context and always felt the songwriter chose the words he knew best conveyed his thoughts.

That’s why Cockburn’s autobiography, rumours of glory, was at the top of my Christmas list this year and became one of the first books I plowed through in my post-Christmas reading binge.

For many evangelical Christians, Cockburn has been an enigma. Coming out in the late 1970s with statements that led many to believe he had a salvation experience, Cockburn’s “witness” in years to come left many scratching their heads about his beliefs.

For those, myself included, who picked up rumours of glory to hear Cockburn use the magic words “born again Christian,” they’ll be sadly disappointed. One encounter Cockburn has with legendary Christian rocker Glen Kaiser (of Resurrection Band fame) will leave no doubt about where Cockburn stands among those in the evangelical camp. Yet, ever the enigma, Cockburn shares about a spiritual experience that seems pull from Christianity and a host of other religions/faiths that he’s been exposed to as a world traveller and observer of human behaviour. Is he or isn’t he a “Christian?” Only God knows for sure.

Putting dogma aside, Cockburn still remains, as a singer/songwriter/guitarist, a key influence on many Canadian musicians, including Christians such as Jacob Moon, Steve Bell, Ali Matthews, Jay Calder, Kev Morse. And rumours of glory is a window onto Cockburn’s creative process, which has evolved and matured over his nearly five decades as a musician. For me, the most enjoyable part of this book was taking a look behind the curtain as he explains the influences and experiences behind his songs. I did find, however, some of the political rants became a little tiring after being repeated a few times.

Does rumours of glory provide a definitive answer to the question “is Bruce Cockburn a born-again Christian?” No. Does rumours of glory provide a look at one artist’s creative process? Yes. And for that reason it’s a must-read for any artist.

Guitarist’s musical vision shines forth on new CD

17 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Robert White in CD/Music Review

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Arts Connection, Canadian culture, CD Review, Christian, Instrumental, Jay Calder, Waterloo Region

Jay Calder - Vision cover

For me, the test of a CD’s quality is how long I keep it in my van CD player. Jay Calder’s new CD, Vision, has passed that test.

My first experience with Jay was at a Couple’s Night Out event in Kitchener a few years ago. Jay was the “warm-up” act for the evening, which featured Alberta humourist Phil Callaway as the keynote speaker. I was awestruck by Jay’s intricate guitar playing and have been a fan ever since.

It’s a challenge to describe Jay’s music because much of what he does is unique in the musical world. Jay’s a solo artist who uses finger-picking, harmonics, open tuning and percussive strikes to make it sound like there’s more than one person playing. The closest comparator I can think of is Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) pioneer and virtuoso guitarist Phil Keaggy. But even that pales because Jay charts his own waters with his music.

Vision is a compilation of original songs, including the rollicking “Seer’s Jam,” the latin-infused “Sincelejo” and “Norah’s Grace;” and adaptations or arrangements like “Be Thou My Vision,” “Great is Thy Faithfulness” and “Breath on Me Breath of God.”

My personal favorites are “The Cupbearer Forgot” based on the story of Joseph’s imprisonment (Genesis 40), “A Longing Fulfilled” and “Silent First Joy Night” a seamless weaving of “Silent Night,” “The First Noel” and “Joy to the World” into one incredible piece.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention veteran producer Roy Salmond’s influence on this CD. Jay describes Roy as “a Canadian treasure…and a monster musically,” assets which shine forth in the quality of the CD’s production.

Instrumentalists often get shortchanged because their music isn’t seen as being radio-friendly for most Christian stations. This is a shame because, as is the case with Vision, the music lifts the listener into the presence of God without lyrics getting in the way.  Get a copy of Vision and let Jay Calder’s music lift, encourage and edify you. You’ll find yourself coming back to it time and time again. I know I do.

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