Entire Shop
Shows
Artists
Music
DVD
Games
>
Sign In
Your
cart
is empty
Music
:
Rock
:
Neo-Prog
:
Sola Scriptura
Sola Scriptura
Neal Morse / CD / 2007
Zoom
Send to Friend
Be the first to
review this product
!
Artist
Neal Morse
Format
CD
Genre
Rock
Label Name
Metal Blade
Producer
Neal Morse
Release Date
2007 03 06
Song List
1: The Door: Introduction/In the Name of God/All I Ask For/Mercy for Sale/Keep (29:13)
2: The Conflict: Do You Know My Name?/Party to the Lie/Underground/Two Down, O (25:00)
3: Heaven in My Heart (5:10)
4: The Conclusion: Randy's Jam/Long Night's Journey/Re-Introduction/Come out o (16:34)
Style.Categories
Neo-Prog, Christian Rock
This product CANNOT be returned once it has been opened.
click here
for more information on our general return policy.
In-Stock
: Ships within 24 hours
Guitar maniac and songwriter
Neal Morse
is no stranger to conceptual albums, having been the founder of
Spock's Beard
.
Morse
decided to leave the band and pursue his own vision of uniting his faith with his music unabashedly and without subtlety. He did this first on the double album
Testimony
in 2003, followed it up in 2005 with
?
, and continues it on his most ambitious and perhaps most controversial project yet in
Sola Scriptura
. With a rhythm section of bassist
Randy George
and drummer
Mike Portnoy
from tech-
metal
progenitors
Dream Theater
,
Morse
also enlisted the help of fellow guitar wizard
Paul Gilbert
on a few tracks, and employed strings, a French horn, and a chorus of backing vocalists to help him realize the project. At the risk of oversimplifying,
Morse
has written a work based around
Martin Luther
's posting his thesis on the Wittenburg Door and bringing about the Reformation, the great schism where Protestantism was created.
Morse
claims in his brief liner essay that he had no knowledge of
Luther
's rabid anti-Semitism when he wrote the album and considered not recording it when he learned this. He also says "...but I feel that the main point is that the way God used him to protest false religion is still a good example of courage and boldness for a Godly cause." Hmmm. One has to wonder what those who practice Judaism feel about this. There is more to disagree with here, because not only in his album's lyrics but in his strange disclaimer at the end of his notes about not singling out only one church needing reform -- he does just this nonetheless by celebrating the great contributions of the Wesleyans and the Pentecostals.
Morse
, who uses his own approximations of
Gregorian chant
and high
sacred choral
music that far preceded the Reformation, seemingly doesn't see the contributions made by the Church to the culture of the West and to music in general. There is some ignorance in
Morse
's lofty intentions not only of histories both religious and social, but of culture in particular -- he should have never written that disclaimer because he's opened himself to speculations about his own sense of prejudice.
Does this make the music bad? Hardly. As
prog
heads into the 21st century, it's genuinely creative, innovative as it weaves elements of
jazz
and
classical
music as well Afro-Caribbean rhythms into his metallic attack. His beautifully dovetailed lyrical segments are almost seamless in that they travel from
Luther
's original problematics and arguments with the Catholic Church to the fall of Babylon and the renewal of a new Christian faith as the result of mass repentance. As a Church in
Morse
's use of scripture is both literal and liberal here, this can be slippery, but his musicality cannot be faulted. His is an unbelievably gifted man whose sense of a whole contains all the pretensions of
prog
's original excesses, but his sense of weeding down
instrumental
passages, time shifts, and thematic and textural changes is almost always tasteful and instinctually in keeping with his
rock & roll
guitar player's heart. The four tracks on this set are divided into numerous subsections that are always warranted in context with the production angle of this music, making it as big as the history he's trying to portray and as close to scale as possible. Musically,
Sola Scriptura
is as close to brilliant as it gets. There are other issues involved, as pointed out here, and these too are simply questions of interpretation. To his credit,
Morse
invites discussion at his website. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
$14.25
List Price:
$17.98
Save: $3.73 (21%)
USER REVIEWS
write your own review
No Reviews
© 2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Content provided by
All Music Guide ®
, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
You May Also Like:
I Love New York: The Complete Unrated First Season [3 Discs]
$39.98
$30.39
Flavor of Love 2: The Complete Unrated Second Season Wowwww! [3 Discs]
$39.98
$24.99
VH1 Metal Mania: Stripped Across America Tour Live
$16.98
$13.15
VH1 Celebrity Fit Club Bootcamp Workout DVD
$19.99
$14.99
Join the shop newsletter and be the first to know about special offers, discounts and VH1 exclusives:
Home
|
Shows
|
Artists
|
Music
|
DVD
|
Books
|
Cart
FAQ
|
Account
|
Order Status
|
Contact Us
|
Become an Affiliate
Terms of Use
|
Privacy Statement
E-commerce on this website is brought to you by MTVN Direct Inc. powered by Vcommerce.
© MTV Networks. © and TM MTV Networks. All Rights Reserved