 |
|
 |
 |
 |
21 - 25 of 76 total
|
 |
 |
Drive By Truckers: The Dirty South (2004)
BY: David John Seel, Jr.
This album puts a human face on a social stereotype. Like William Faulkner’s depiction of the Bundrens and Snopes, the band uses Southern regionalism as a window on the universal longings of the human heart.
Read All » |
 |
 |
Eliza Gilkyson: Paradise Hotel (2005)
BY: Denis Haack
Gilkyson has charted her own path and brings a clear voice, crisp lyrics, a passion for justice, and an imagination keen on beauty to shape music that satisfies not as background noise, but as music of the heart.
Read All » |
 |
 |
Eminem: Marshall Mathers (2000)
BY: David John Seel, Jr.
It is impossible to understand youth culture, particularly contemporary pop music culture, without addressing the significance white-rap-MC Marshall Mathers better known by the stage-name Eminem as well as by his angry alter-ego alias, Slim Shady.
Read All » |
 |
 |
Emmylou Harris: Red Dirt Girl (2000)
BY: David John Seel, Jr.
This is music for those who have known loss: a divorce, a prodigal child, the death of a parent, the betrayal of friends, the collapse of a career, or the pain of chronic disease.
Read All » |
 |
 |
Fiona Apple: Extraordinary Machine (2005)
BY: Denis Haack
Fiona Apple,'s "Extraordinary Machine" is intensely personal, an invitation to hear the longings and sorrows of her heart.
Read All » |
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
On my desk is a little vase of flowers cut from our yard, a little reminder of the beauty that is all around if we only have eyes to see. I've needed that reminder after reading the latest news of the horrific oil spill in the Gulf. Such glory in this world, such brokenness. Such hope, such deep need for redemption. These are the realities of life and death we seek to explore on this web site. Thank you for visiting.
Denis & Margie
|
 |
|
 |