(11-16-2003) Christian Album is Bono-fied -- Los Angeles Times *

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that follows U2.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

dsmith2904

ONE love, blood, life
Joined
Apr 17, 2002
Messages
12,290
Location
Just keep me where the light is
Christian Album is Bono-fied

By Randy Lewis, Times Staff Writer

When Bono speaks, Christian musicians listen.

That's the short explanation for "In the Name of Love: Artists United for Africa," an album due in January featuring U2 songs recorded by Christian pop acts, with part of the proceeds going to fight AIDS in Africa.

U2's singer has been a passionate voice urging Western nations to put some of their resources into stemming the AIDS epidemic in Africa.

So last December, in conjunction with World AIDS Day, Bono went on tour in the South and Midwest ? not on stage in concert halls and sports arenas but to low-key gatherings in hotels and convention centers.

He particularly urged Christians to reach out to the 42 million people worldwide that the United Nations estimates are living with HIV/AIDS, 70% of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa.

"It bewilders me that anyone can call themselves followers of Christ and not see that AIDS is the leprosy spoken about in the New Testament," he told a group in Iowa. "God is at work here."

And while in Kentucky he told an audience, "I'm not here as a do-gooder. This is not a cause; it's an emergency." That's one reason the singer helped establish the DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa) organization.

In Nashville, he caught the ears of Christian musicians and record executives based there, leading to the "In the Name of Love" project.

It's due Jan. 27 from Sparrow Records and includes treatments of U2 material by Jars of Clay, Audio Adrenaline, Sixpence None the Richer, Tait, Chris Tomlin, Pillar, Grits, Sanctus Real, tobyMac and others. All the tracks were newly recorded for this album, except for one existing track for which licensing is being negotiated.

U2 has long incorporated Christian beliefs into its music, although the band members have frequently distanced themselves from organized religion. But their viewpoints have created a strong following among Christian fans and musicians.

"There aren't many bands who can say they weren't influenced by U2," Audio Adrenaline bassist Will McGinniss says. "That said, once the notion came around of doing a U2 tribute record we were on board hook, line and sinker."

The Nashville-based quartet's selection, "Gloria," from U2's 1981 album, "October," "was not a song we probably would have picked," McGinniss says, noting that Sparrow execs decided who would record which songs. "But in high school it was one I totally loved. I'm a bass player, and that's one of the first bass solos I ever learned. So it was a pretty cool thing for me to be able to put that on a tribute record."

He sees the project as much more than a tip of the hat to U2.

"If it had been just another U2 album with no one to gain from it, we probably would have passed," McGinniss says. "But since we do feel there's a direct link to helping people, we said yes."

"The record itself does not have any direct correlation to Bono or U2," notes Sparrow media marketing director Caren Joy Lantz. "The idea came from artists who attended that meeting and got excited about using their platform as artists in the Christian music community to get members of the church, the evangelical church specifically, involved in helping."

Sparrow hopes the album will have an appeal that extends beyond the traditional Christian pop audience.

Consequently, it will be promoted to the Christian audience by Sparrow's regular distributor, Chordant Distribution, and to secular listeners by EMI's distribution. Lantz said the percentage of proceeds earmarked for AIDS relief efforts is being determined.

"The level of interest among the Christian artist community for a project like this has been strong for several years," Lantz says. "These artists have a voice to a very specific audience, an audience wary of outsiders, but with vast financial and spiritual resources that will make a difference in the lives of the millions of men, women and children on the continent of Africa affected by the AIDS crisis."

-- Los Angeles Times
 
Christian Artists

100% bOB said:
I haven't heard of very many of these artists on the tribute cd. Am I really that old? :sad:

Well... :) Jars of Clay, Audio Adrenaline, & Sixpense were relatively new groups in the early 90s and have maintained their popularity. Tait & tobymac are two members of DC Talk, who have a similar history, but have since gone on to produce solo projects. The others, I'm not as familiar with. However, I've heard the names mentioned & have assumed they're newer bands/artists. I have not paid much attention to the Christian Music Industry for the past 6-8 years. Just FYI. Hope it helped.

Nichelle
 
Back
Top Bottom