![]() ![]() ![]() Iowa-based 38th Parallel’s debut is well-crafted, but it may be too precise for its genre, more focused on big sounds than subtlety. Like PAX 217, this new Squint act sounds like P.O.D. This sounds a little flat all through, though, and falls short of the heights of his Heart of Worship, one of the best modern worship records. The best track may be yet another redo of his powerful Lord, Let Your Glory Fall, despite an out-of-place drum loop on the second verse. The rocking Amazing and anthemic Blessed Be Your Name prove a ho-hum start: not bad, but nothing special. The book is a thoughtful, thought-provoking account of a presumptive subculture emerging and enlarging today.īrit worship leader Matt Redman’s fourth stateside release is a bit of a letdown. Others, including one who is anonymous, remain in some stage of closeted discomfort. Some of the writers are living openly lesbian rabbinical lives. More than 50 answered their call to tell personal stories it seems no coincidence that the number selected for publication is the Hebrew equivalent of the word life. The editors have built a book on 18 experiential essays, including their own. Rutgers University Press, 262 pages, $24. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |