$8.99

Sold by music on Tradebit
The world's largest download marketplace
3,251,083 satisfied buyers
Shopper Award

MP3 Mike Farris - Salvation in Lights

Turn of the century New Orleans black gospel fused with a heaping helping of Memphis soul.

11 MP3 Songs in this album (45:20) !
Related styles: Blues: New Orleans Blues, Pop: Pop, Spiritual

People who are interested in Al Green Sam Cooke Staple Singers should consider this download.


Details:
Salvation in Lights (INO Records) is a traveling tent-revival of an album, working its way up the banks of the Mississippi River from New Orleans through Memphis and onto points north. Recorded at the same Nashville house-studio where White Stripes/Raconteurs leader Jack White recorded Loretta Lynn''s award-winning Van Lear Rose album, Farris'' sophomore solo effort uses the musical language of spirituals, timeless stories of struggle, some of which are centuries-old slave spirituals, and soul to tell a uniquely redemptive story.

"When I''m playing music, it''s like prayer to me," Farris says. "I''m closer to God than I ever am, outside of my prayer. That''s the best way I can portray what I''m feeling in my heart."

Farris recorded Salvation in Lights with a band that included Johnny Cash''s longtime bassist Dave Roe, singer Ann McCrary - daughter of the Fairfield Four''s founder, the Rev. Sam McCrary and a host of top shelf Nashville musicians. Farris plants his own roots deep, down to traditional songs like "Oh Mary Don''t You Weep" and "Can''t No Grave Hold My Body Down." "A Change Is Gonna Come" and "I''ll Take You There" come from a soul movement that identified with struggle and the ongoing search for transcendence and peace to songs that are turn-of-the-century New Orleans Gospel.

"Something about that music, it moves me like nothing else," Farris says. "Hearing somebody like Skip James or Mavis Staples sing, it''s painful to me, it''s spiritual, it''s deep and it''s enlightening. It''s like somebody shedding a little bit of light on the soul, on what makes people really tick."

Original songs like "Selah! Selah!" and "The Lonely Road" evoke late-period Stax soul and Willie Mitchell''s horn-drenched Hi Records funk. Some bear the influence of Tom Waits and Bob Dylan, and others find their groove somewhere between the "oom-pah" of a Crescent City funeral band and the "boom-chick" of a Johnny Cash railroad.

"When I was growing up, we had five records in my family - and three of them were by Johnny Cash," Farris says. "I didn''t realize how much that stuff was engrained in my being."

Perhaps nothing, though, reflects Farris'' own journey so perfectly as "Precious Lord, Take My Hand." Written by Thomas A. Dorsey, a writer and performer of bawdy blues tunes who later became the "Father of Gospel Music," the song''s plea to "guide my feet to the light," is one that Farris has made his own. He transforms the gospel favorite into a sanctified blues shuffle punctuated with bright, celebratory bursts of horns and slide guitar. "That was the last song we recorded for the album," he says. "Every time we''d do a session, I''d try it. I just felt like it had to get on there."

That song''s lyrics parallel Farris'' own life story.

"If not for the grace of God I would surely be dead or wishing I were dead." Farris says. "My life is a testament that God has an unique and special place for everyone. God will use people no matter how tattered and torn. Just surrender to His love and trust in His grace."

File Data

This file is sold by music, an independent seller on Tradebit.

Our Reviews
© Tradebit 2004-2024
All files are property of their respective owners
Questions about this file? Contact music
DMCA/Copyright or marketplace issues? Contact Tradebit