When I Come to the Altar
Carl Victor
Performed By
Carl Victor
Album UPC
889211096411
CD Baby Track ID
5315133
Label
Gjn Recording Group LLC
Released
2007-01-01
BPM
120
Rated
0
ISRC
ushm91450184
Year
2007
Spotify Plays
15
Writers
Writer
Carl Victor
Pub Co
Carl Victor
Composer
Carl Victor
ClearanceDubset,Facebook Sync License,Traditional Sync,YouTube Sync ServiceOne Stop
Rights Controlled
Master and Publishing Grant
Rights
One-Stop: Master + 100% Pub Grant
Original/Cover/Public Domain
original
Country
United States - Oklahoma
Description
An Eclectic blend of jazz, gospel and New Age audio story telling
Notes
This project is actually two separate endeavors combined into one project. The first seven selections were produced by Marvin McElvaney, President of Thanks records. Marvin invested nearly six months and thousands of dollars {i.e. mixing hours at his own expense} To capture what we initially envisioned. The coming together of Jazz/fusion and Gospel. Because the message of Jesus Christ is paramount, these are songs with lyrics. Still the goal was to infuse the religious message with a sense of the freedom of jazz. I look at this as an experiment because though the songs may be finished, capturing the spirit of the vision is still, for me, a long way off.
That brings me to the 'second' half of this project, which I recorded and mixed myself. Done digitally at Liberty Church here in Oklahoma City, I wanted to just "play" more, so many of the selections have minimal or no vocals. Jazz is just the accent that my playing bears, but I do believe there is a place for the extended solo in religious music. I don't want to offend real Jazz players or listeners by my interpretations but thats just how the songs unfolded themselves.
So listen, enjoy and meditate!
That brings me to the 'second' half of this project, which I recorded and mixed myself. Done digitally at Liberty Church here in Oklahoma City, I wanted to just "play" more, so many of the selections have minimal or no vocals. Jazz is just the accent that my playing bears, but I do believe there is a place for the extended solo in religious music. I don't want to offend real Jazz players or listeners by my interpretations but thats just how the songs unfolded themselves.
So listen, enjoy and meditate!
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