With the Christian Holy Week approaching quickly (and this is one of those years when the Western Churches and the Orthodox Church observe Holy Week's events at the same time), what better occasion than to have Gene Marshall tell us about Jesus.
That's right, Gene is going to tell us, not sing to us. Oh, he sings a little, but mostly he's going to read a statement. A sermon of sorts. When I hear a record such as "Let Jesus Save You", I wonder a couple of things.
First, did the song-poet understand how lyricism works, as opposed to prose? There is nothing in the spoken word section here that could have reasonably, or even unreasonably, been set to a melody. And second, was the song-poet satisfied with this performance? Gene gives a good sermon, I'll say that. But presumably, the lyricist (sic) paid for a song. What we have here, aside from about 10 seconds of instrumental passages is:
Gene singing: 40 seconds
Gene talking: 100 seconds
Download: Gene Marshall - Let Jesus Save You
Play:
The folks at Preview were nice enough to team up two Christian songs on one 45. It wasn't automatically going to be that way - can you imagine the song-poet of either of these sides taking a gander at the flip side and having it be either of the two songs heard in this post (you'll have to listen to those songs to get what I'm joking about).
Anyway, "On This Mountain" is an actual song, and if nothing else, Gene provides an excellent vocal, with an appropriate aching tone in spots, unfortunately not in the service of anything special in the way of lyrics (the line "He died for all colors: black and white, you see" seems particularly half-baked) or of backing support. Indeed, the instrumental section has to be among the more low-energy solo sections I've heard on a Preview disc, and the keyboardist and bass player don't really seem to be working from the same chord changes during this section.
Download: Gene Marshall - On This Mountain
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