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For the Living of These Days

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Download links and information about For the Living of These Days by Spooner Oldham, Kate Campbell. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Gospel, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 45:39 minutes.

Artist: Spooner Oldham, Kate Campbell
Release date: 2006
Genre: Gospel, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 14
Duration: 45:39
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Jesus Christ 2:45
2. If I Ever Get to Heaven 2:19
3. Without Him 2:20
4. Be Thou My Vision 3:46
5. Pray of Thomas Merton 2:49
6. God of Grace and God of Glory 4:33
7. Dark Night of the Soul 4:08
8. When I Let Jesus Take My Hand 2:49
9. Terrible Mercy 3:43
10. Would They Love Him Down In Shreveport 2:54
11. There's a Wideness In God's Mercy 2:42
12. They Killed Him 3:55
13. Faces In the Water 3:54
14. There Is a Balm In Gilead 3:02

Details

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Although country and Anglo-American folk have a lot of common heritage (both are descendants of Celtic, Welsh, and British folk), the two have often parted company in a big way when it comes to political and social attitudes. Folk has long been a bastion of liberal activism, whereas country is one area of the music world in which neocons are not hard to find — which is why the Dixie Chicks caught so much flack for criticizing the George W. Bush Administration in 2003 (no one on the folk circuit is going to boycott Ani DiFranco or Phranc for opposing the neocon agenda). Folk audiences, on the whole, are disdainful of the modern country/pop/gospel artists who openly support far-right organizations like the Christian Coalition, but that doesn't mean that folk has to be secular or that the folk scene is anti-religion — and For the Living of These Days is a perfect example of a Christian-themed folk album. With this 2006 recording (which boasts Spooner Oldham on piano and organ), Southern singer/songwriter Kate Campbell maintains both a Christian focus and a folk orientation. This 45-minute CD is definitely country-influenced, but the performances are more folk than country; that is true on Campbell's own songs as well as inspired performances of Woody Guthrie's "Jesus Christ," Bobby Braddock's "Would They Love Him Down in Shreveport," and Kris Kristofferson's "They Killed Him." For the Living of These Days is not a heavily political release, and yet, some of the material does acknowledge the more liberal/progressive strains of Christianity. "They Killed Him," with Kristofferson's favorable reference to Hindu activist Mahatma Gandhi, is not exactly typical of the sentiments one associates with a Jerry Falwell sermon. Bottom line: For the Living of These Days is excellent as both a Christian album and a folk album.