Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief

Monday, 24 November 2025

Stride Magazine: Five entries in Prog 50

Stride Magazine has a new series is called 'Five' which simply involves writing about five linked items. The first articles in the series can be found here and here. My latest article for Stride Magazine is part of this series and is entitled 'Five entries in Prog 50'.

The article is a piece about five entries found in Prog 50 an encyclopaedia of Prog Rock edited by artist and musician Maurizio Galia which has helped me go back in time and discover what I missed when I followed Punk and New Wave in the 1970's rather than Prog Rock:

'Galia is a Prog rocker, as keyboardist and singer with Aquael. Also, a skilled artist and illustrator, his images enhance Prog 50 considerably. Together with his collaborators, he has documented fifty years of Prog Rock with over 1,000 musicians from the America’s, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and South Africa mentioned. As Peter Gabriel states in his Foreword, Galia ‘has carefully assembled … a veritable army of progsters; all mounted and ready – ready to challenge any non-believers, in whatever shape or form they are found’.'

I recently wrote another article for Stride, this time about my 'Five Trios' series of poems. 'Five Trios' is a series of five long poems on thin places and sacred spaces in Essex and East London, each of which are also located within the Diocese of Chelmsford. The five poems in the series are:
These poems have been published by Amethyst Review and International Times.

The article explores the inspiration for the series and includes information about each of the locations included.

Several years ago, Stride published a series of texts by authors about themselves and their poetry called 'Deflated Ego'. My article on 'Five Trios was part of a new 'Deflated Ego' series. Authors were invited to choose their own approach to the piece, be that self-interview, review, manifesto, contextual/social material, statement of poetics, personal comment, or whatever. The first pieces in this new 'Deflated Ego' series can be read here and here.

To read my poems published by Stride, click here, here, here, here, here, and here. My poems published in Amethyst Review are: 'Runwell', 'Are/Are Not', 'Attend, attend' and 'Maritain, Green, Beckett and Anderson in conversation down through the ages'.

I am among those whose poetry has been included in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces, a recent anthology from Amethyst Press. I also had a poem included in All Shall Be Well: Poems for Julian of Norwich, the first Amethyst Press anthology of new poems.

IT have also published several of my poems, beginning with 'The ABC of creativity', which covers attention, beginning and creation, and lastly 'The Edge of Chaos', a state of existence poem.

Stride magazine was founded in 1982. Since then it has had various incarnations, most recently in an online edition since the late 20th century. You can visit its earlier incarnation at http://stridemagazine.co.uk.

I have read the poetry featured in Stride and, in particular, the work of its editor Rupert Loydell over many years and was very pleased that Rupert gave a poetry reading when I was at St Stephen Walbrook.

Rupert Loydell is the editor of Stride magazine, contributing editor to International Times and a writer and abstract artist. He has many books of poetry and several collaborative publications in print, and has edited anthologies for Shearsman, KFS and Salt. His critical writing has appeared in Punk & Post-Punk (which he is on the editorial board of), Journal of Writing and Creative Practice, New Writing, English, Text, Axon, Short Fiction in Theory and Practice, Musicology Research, Revenant, The Quint: an interdisciplinary journal from the north and Journal of Visual Art Practice. He has also contributed chapters to Brian Eno. Oblique Music (Bloomsbury, 2016), Critical Essays on Twin Peaks: The Return (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), Music in Twin Peaks: Listen to the Sounds (Routledge, 2021) and Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022).

Rupert has recently contributed several guest posts to 'Between'. These have been interviews musicians including Nick Battle and Steve Scott who contributed to the early days of christian rock in the UK. I have also published an interview with Rupert himself in which he shares his thoughts on that same period of christian rock, as well as speaking about other aspects of his career and interests. These posts can be read here, here, and here.

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Aquael - Ziggurat.

International Times: 'A Deep Dive' - 'Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere'

My latest review for International Times is on Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere:

'The synopsis of ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere’ is essentially to be found in lines from an early Bruce Springsteen song, ‘Darkness on the Edge of Town’:

Well, everybody’s got a secret, Sonny
Something that they just can’t face
Some folks spend their whole lives trying to keep it
They carry it with them every step that they take

‘Til someday they just cut it loose
Cut it loose or let it drag ’em down
Where no one asks any questions
Or looks too long in your face
In the darkness on the edge of town
In the darkness on the edge of town

What Springsteen initially can’t face is his troubled relationship with his troubled father. In the film he is told this to his face by his girlfriend Faye (a composite character, rather than an actual person). Eventually, he leaves New Jersey – his hometown, which triggers memories for him all the time he remains there – and through talking therapies gains necessary understanding of his mental health challenges, including greater understanding of and an improved relationship with his father.'

My earlier pieces for IT are: an interview with the artist Alexander de Cadenet; an interview with artist, poet, priest Spencer Reece, an interview with the poet Chris Emery, an interview with Jago Cooper, Director of the the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, a profile of singer-songwriter Bill Fay, plus reviews of: 'Great Art Explained' by James Payne; 'Down River: In Search of David Ackles' by Mark Brend; 'Headwater' by Rev Simpkins; 'The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art' by Jonathan A. Anderson; 'Breaking Lines' at the Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, albums by Deacon Blue, Mumford and Sons, and Andrew Rumsey, also by Joy Oladokun and Michael Kiwanaku; 'Nolan's Africa' by Andrew Turley; Mavis Staples in concert at Union Chapel; T Bone Burnett's 'The Other Side' and Peter Case live in Leytonstone; Helaine Blumenfeld's 'Together' exhibition, 'What Is and Might Be and then Otherwise' by David Miller; 'Giacometti in Paris' by Michael Peppiatt, the first Pissabed Prophet album; and 'Religion and Contemporary Art: A Curious Accord', a book which derives from a 2017 symposium organised by the Association of Scholars of Christianity in the History of Art.

Several of my short stories have been published by IT including three about Nicola Ravenscroft's EarthAngel sculptures (then called mudcubs), which we exhibited at St Andrew's Wickford in 2022. The first story in the series is 'The Mudcubs and the O Zone holes'. The second is 'The Mudcubs and the Clean-Up King', and the third is 'The mudcubs and the Wall'. My other short stories to have been published by International Times are 'The Black Rain', a story about the impact of violence in our media, 'The New Dark Ages', a story about principles and understandings that are gradually fading away from our modern societies, and 'The curious glasses', a story based on the butterfly effect.

IT have also published several of my poems, including 'The ABC of creativity', which covers attention, beginning and creation, and 'The Edge of Chaos', a state of existence poem. Also published have been three poems from my 'Five Trios' series. 'Barking' is about St Margaret’s Barking and Barking Abbey and draws on my time as a curate at St Margaret's. 'Bradwell' is a celebration of the history of the Chapel of St Peter-on-the-Wall, the Othona Community, and of pilgrimage to those places. Broomfield in Essex became a village of artists following the arrival of Revd John Rutherford in 1930. His daughter, the artist Rosemary Rutherford, also moved with them and made the vicarage a base for her artwork including paintings and stained glass. Then, Gwynneth Holt and Thomas Bayliss Huxley-Jones moved to Broomfield in 1949 where they shared a large studio in their garden and both achieved high personal success. 'Broomfield' reviews their stories, work, legacy and motivations.

To read my poems published by Stride, click here, here, here, here, here, and here. My poems published in Amethyst Review are: 'Runwell', 'Are/Are Not', 'Attend, attend' and 'Maritain, Green, Beckett and Anderson in conversation down through the ages'.

I am among those whose poetry has been included in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces, a recent anthology from Amethyst Press. I also had a poem included in All Shall Be Well: Poems for Julian of Norwich, the first Amethyst Press anthology of new poems.

'Five Trios' is a series of poems on thin places and sacred spaces in the Diocese of Chelmsford. The five poems in the series are:
These poems have been published by Amethyst Review and International Times.

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Bruce Springsteen - Atlantic City.

Church Times - Book review: Re-Digging Art’s Foundations: Essays on gospel and art by David Thistlethwaite

My latest book review for Church Times is on Re-Digging Art’s Foundations: Essays on gospel and art by David Thistlethwaite:

'DAVID THISTLETHWAITE is an artist who has also studied art history, researched art theory, and dealt in Old Master and Modern British art for a leading Bond Street gallery. This collection of essays contains material that spans his career and adds to the ideas explored in his earlier book The Art of God and the Religions of Art.

The essays, summarising Thistlethwaite’s main thesis regarding art, tell the story of how those ideas developed as his career played out. Thistlethwaite writes out of an appreciation for the approaches to art originally developed by Francis Schaeffer and Hans R. Rookmaaker. These aim to identify and criticise the world-view expressed through the work of artists and to encourage art that reflects a Christian world-view.'

Other of my pieces for Church Times can be found here. My writing for ArtWay can be found here. My pieces for Artlyst are here, those for Seen & Unseen are here, and those for Art+Christianity are here.

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Cliff Richard - Up In Canada.

Sunday, 23 November 2025

Windows on the world (546)


Norwich, 2025

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Fleet Foxes - White Winter Hymnal.

Thursday, 20 November 2025

Rupert Loydell: Guest posts and interview (3)

I am very pleased to be able to publish today an interview I have undertaken with Rupert Loydell about aspects of his career and interests.

Rupert Loydell is the editor of Stride magazine, contributing editor to International Times and a writer and abstract artist. He has many books of poetry and several collaborative publications in print, and has edited anthologies for Shearsman, KFS and Salt. His critical writing has appeared in Punk & Post-Punk (which he is on the editorial board of), Journal of Writing and Creative Practice, New Writing, English, Text, Axon, Short Fiction in Theory and Practice, Musicology Research, Revenant, The Quint: an interdisciplinary journal from the north and Journal of Visual Art Practice. He has also contributed chapters to Brian Eno. Oblique Music (Bloomsbury, 2016), Critical Essays on Twin Peaks: The Return (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), Music in Twin Peaks: Listen to the Sounds (Routledge, 2021) and Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022).

Rupert has undertaken research on christian rock which has resulted in several interviews, reviews and articles that were published in Punk & Post-Punk journal, an academic publication, as well as feeding into a piece for Ship of Fools. His research has also included the interview with Nick Battle published as the second post in this series. Nick Battle has had a long and varied career in the music business, including spells in significant Post-Punk christian rock bands such as After The Fire (ATF) and Writz. Rupert's interview with Nick explores the moment when Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) and mainstream rock diverged, and bands like ATF and Writz headed into the latter, perhaps paving the way for U2 and others writing about faith and doubt. Rupert's work has also included writing about Larry NormanSteve Scott, Steve Taylor and Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus.

This short series will add to the material about Jesus Rock, CCM and spirituality in rock music which has been published here previously. See the first post in this series for a listing of previous posts on these themes - click here - and the second post (a guest post by Rupert Loydell) which is an interview with musician Nick Battle - click here. The series will then continue with new interviews conducted by Rupert with both Steve Scott and Nick Battle. 

Rupert Loydell: Constructing the world
Creativity and spirituality in the polyphonic practices of a poet-painter.

Born in London, Rupert Loydell studied visual arts and creative writing for a creative arts degree at Crewe & Alsager College, Cheshire (now MMU) and took his MA in Creative Writing at Plymouth University. He continues to practice as a fine artist, as well as write. Much of his work engages with aspects of spirituality and belief.

He and I came to know each other through the Greenbelt Festival and found that we share many interests in art, literature, poetry, music and the exploration of beliefs. In this interview we explore some of that ground while also engaging with the breadth of his interests and practice.

JE: You have written clusters of poems about faith and doubt and often respond 'to other people’s notions of faith, belief or action'. What stimulates your interest in faith and how do you view your engagement with it?

RL: I grew up attending a Baptist Church in London. Both of my parents were deacons there, were involved in running the youth group when I was too young to attend, and my dad was a lay preacher. So I was brought up to believe in traditional nonconformist Christianity, although I later realised the way some things had been taught was fairly liberal. 

I guess like all teenagers I rebelled, or thought I did, asking questions, rejecting some answers, etc. Over the following years I also discovered that I don't like evangelism, happy-clappy songs, and that I like mystery and ritual. I read a lot of Thomas Merton and other writers who challenged me on social issues, community and ideas about mysticism, as well as what I can only refer to as postmodern theologians such as Mark C Taylor, whose work overlaps with philosophy, cultural theory, and post-Wittgenstein ideas about language.

I guess I am not very trusting of experiential belief any more, and am appalled by the ideas that anyone thinks they have the right to impose their ideas, rituals or rules on anyone else. The institutional church mostly appals me, and I have also seen organisations such as the Greenbelt Festival, which I was involved in for many years as a writer, artist, curator and organiser, tie themselves in knots over the arts, liberal theology, social action, etc.

Most of my writing is me trying to sort through what is around me – news, other people, books and music – and make some kind of sense of it for myself. I don't expect answers, but hope to see connections between and ways of understanding what is going on. That would include ideas of faith and spirituality and how it affects and underpins individuals, organisations and even countries. At the moment that's pretty much my engagement with faith and doubt. Certainty is very worrying, it tends to lead to censorship, exclusion and injustice.

JE: You've just said that you're not very trusting of experiential belief any more but you continue to be inspired by and to explore aspects of faith and doubt, what is it about the nature of belief that keeps you engaged with it in terms of your art, poetry and other writings?

RL: Some of it, I'm sure, how I was brought up, some of it is a desire to understand and know what's going on... why the world is as it is, how we fit in to it. There's clearly some sort of need built into humans for religion, ritual and belief, a sense of order, and that includes me. I want to believe more than I find it possible to do. As I get older I become less and less certain of anything, and more and more sceptical of dogma and conviction.

JE: What do you think your exploration of belief in your art and writings might offer to those who are trusting of experiential belief?

RL: Well, anybody who thinks about things will find something to think about. Once we step away from content, narrative and storytelling, then we are into deep waters, have to start thinking about ideas such as the construction of meaning, how language and paint work, how we understand the world. Belief and faith and doubt are dependent upon these things as much as anything else.

I am not trying to encourage disbelief, but to understand belief. I find it hard to talk to people who are simply sure about everything in a simplistic manner, and wish to inflict that upon others. The world is more complex than that, and we all experience things differently – it's one of the strange things about being human, that we can never truly know anyone else in the way we inhabit ourselves.

JE: Is there any way in which you think God might be working through your art and writing?

RL: I struggle with that idea. Divine intervention doesn't seem to happen very much, so why should it happen with regard to my writing or painting? 

It may be off the point a little, but I remember sitting in a boatshed in Norfolk, when I used to teach sailing there, and listening to a leader praying for dry weather the next day. Since we were in the middle of a drought, it seemed to me there were probably farmers elsewhere praying for rain for their crops... 

For me any creation of the solar system, animals and humans, and weather and nature systems, is enough. Why would God then interfere with what he has created? There seems evidence of a flood, but it didn't cover the world, and what we have is a story about it, a narrative assembled after the event.

When we make art or poetry, or performances, music or whatever, they then have to stand alone with an audience. If we are didactic or make something that can only be comprehended in one way, then it will be boring. There is nothing worse than poetry which tries to persuade you about something, even when that is a good cause. Propaganda is propaganda, whatever its subject matter. I am more inclined to think of art and writing as simply being offered to a potential audience, am happy when I get responses from readers or a painting finds a home.

JE: Preloved Metaphors is a collection of poems exploring the process and effects of language and writing. You write because you’re 'interested in how we (society) and I (just me) deal with the changing world around us, which we understand through language'. As 'language is how we think and construct our world', how are you seeking to use it and what worlds are you creating?

RL: I guess I am trying to articulate my interior world? To make use of language's slippage, the multi-meanings words have, how syntax and form can be questioned and deconstructed. I think by drawing attention to something, that is how language works, I might challenge readers to think about what language is and how they use it; indeed how it is used around and indeed against us.

JE: One of your earlier books was called A Conference of Voices, an attempt to acknowledge not only your use of collage, but dialogues between yourself and source material (or their authors), and yourself and readers. Why is assemblage, collage, and dialogue an important element in your practice? 

RL: I guess that book tried to foreground the idea of polyphony, as a way of dealing with what a series of previous poems had called 'Background Noise', that sieving of information I referred to earlier.  Also the recognition of many points of view, the constant dialogue between humans and each other, the way language changes and evolves, and how different languages work in relation to each other. (Think, for example, of the languages used in medical practice, or games, or critical theory, in contrast to The Sun or computer magazines.)

In a 2021 edition of Wire magazine, the musician Vicki Bennett suggested that, '[c]ollage makes sense of things in a manner that our brain understands. Because of these fragmented parts and the way we assemble information, collage is like the working of the brain.' I totally agree. It is how films work, with visual cuts and jumps in time; how we read online; how we channel surf our TVs; how we experience the world. We only smooth it out later, making it into stories, focussed narratives, yet we don't have to. For well over a century now, art, fiction, poetry and music have understood that re-presentation, collage, remix and writing back to earlier work are useful creative techniques; in fact may be the only creative techniques we have ever had.

We select, contextualise, change, edit, and organise. Our shopping lists, manuscripts, sermons and experience. Any conclusion we come to is tentative and of the moment. I embrace that in my work. I should stress that there are many authors writing in a similar manner, mostly on the back of British linguistically innovative poetry and the American L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poets. There is a lineage stretching from Modernist authors such as Eliot and Pound through the Beats, the Black Mountain, New York and Cambridge schools to the present. It also includes concrete, visual, digital and performance poetry. 

JE: There is a breadth of engagement across your career in terms of themes, collaborators, dialogue partners, media and practice (from writing to teaching to publishing). As you look back across your career what stands out for you as significant from the breadth of your engagement?

RL: I think there are several things. One was the fact I did a degree in Creative Arts, that not only allowed me to study visual art and creative writing but also looked at how the arts interacted with each other, how they were different, how they could be integrated. This meant that although I cannot dance and cannot read music, I could understand and write about other art forms, and also be involved with dance, music and theatre through collaboration with and facilitating others. 

I think all this led me to understand that creativity is the same process/reaction across the art forms. It relies on others, whether that is formal collaboration or as editor, producer or 'dialogue partner' (a nice term!) and also on finding ways to process the world around us, be those specific written forms, the language of paint and collage, or how music at is most reductive is – to paraphrase John Cage – 'an arrangement of sounds in space'. 

I'm very interested in getting beyond self-expression and more into that understanding of materials, especially how pliable and plastic and fluid language is, especially because I genuinely think that language is how we think about and construct the world, the recognition of which would be the second significant thing to mention.

JE: You write a lot about music including the complex and neglected area of Jesus Rock in the UK. You viewed its birth as it emerged from coffee bars and churches inspired by visitors from America like Liberation Suite and Larry Norman. At the Greenbelt Festival you performed poetry and sold books on the fringe, and went to gigs by After the Fire and Writz. What is it about this period and the ways in which UK Jesus Rock diverged from the US multi-million-dollar Christian Contemporary Music (CCM) scene that continues to intrigue you?

RL: So part of it is trying to make sense of what was going on then, some of it is a kind of nostalgia, and there is also the fact that there is little academic research being done on it. One of my pieces in Punk & Post-Punk journal was actually submitted by the university for the Research Excellence Framework (REF) which is how research funding is allocated by the government, because it was so original in its discussion.

When Greenbelt started it was new and exciting, demanding that the arts could be part of the church (in its widest sense), and then also opening itself up to experiment and discussion. For many years it understood that if you knew what you believed then you could have an intelligent discussion with, say, a white witch or Buddhist about their beliefs and belief systems; that you could provide a safe space for LGBT people at the festival; and expect professionalism from artistes. There was, of course, some kickback: I remember being told off for selling a book with the word Tarot in the title (the same person did not like it when I suggested that 'occult' simply meant 'secret'); and an art exhibition about The Body we curated was censored because there were male genitalia on show in a very traditional figurative painting. For a while there was a liberal embracing of the arts, but it seems to me it got legalistic and censorious again... People wanted evangelical surety and community involvement rather than professional practice. The only place Greenbelt later seemed to tolerate more open ideas of 'spirituality' was on the music mainstage, where it was happy to promote the likes of Mike Scott from the Waterboys.

Anyway, I am grateful to Greenbelt, Cornerstone, CIVA and many friends and contacts for years of frank discussion about the arts. It still seems to me that Steve Fairnie from Writz was right that musicians who were Christians weren't obliged to sing about, especially only about, their beliefs on stage or albums. After the Fire (ATF) and Writz (later Famous Names, The Technos etc.) were ahead of the game in simply being professional groups who wanted to make music. Nowadays, no-one questions songs about faith and doubt any more, and my students don't even know U2 were sometimes called a Christian band. 

ATF and Writz were part of my late 70s and early 80s growing up, and the many concerts I used to go to. In hindsight they both made good pop that stands up to the music around them at the time. I saw U2 at one of their first London gigs thanks to a schoolfriend who had Irish connections. They were a great band, along with the likes of XTC, Simple Minds, Magazine, Talking Heads and loads of others. I saw U2 again the year after but then not until the War tour in Stoke-on-Trent. I think they have at the very least been consistently interesting, although I have not been sold on every album. But I like their discussions about faith and doubt, and I am especially interested in the way they use spectacle to hold a crowd's attention. 

Larry Norman is an enigma, who I think I am as attracted to as an outsider and loner as much as a personality and musician. I saw him several times in London in the 70s, spoke to him many times at Greenbelt, and we ended up corresponding in the last few years of his life. Like many musicians he seemed to rely on bullshit and self-publicity to fuel his career, but he could also be wise, profound and produce astonishingly enigmatic and subtle lyrics and music. Norman of course managed to get the blame for starting CCM but also be disregarded by them. At his best, mostly back in the day, he was an accomplished songwriter and performer.

JE: Together with other artist-poets, you create both paintings and poems. In your experience, does that combination change the nature of either or both and what synergies do you see between the two?

RL: They feel like very different activities to me, although occasionally I have written back to paintings, or given them a written context. Mostly, however, I have talked about them, often in interviews or presentations. Painting, for me, is much more about a slow consideration of colour and form and when a piece can be finished, whereas I work much more quickly on each poem's edit and revision. One can keep drafts of poems, but a painting changes every time you add a layer.

JE: How does the making of art compare with the writing of poems for you? What are the similarities and differences?

RL: They are both creative acts, but these days I find it easier to push language around, to play with it, than I do paint. I tend to spend time with my art-in-progress and then add to it, whereas back in the day it was more like writing poems: I would add, sand back, throw paint, let it dry, turn it round, etc. They are both, however, ways for me to answer back myself, to try and answer problems I perhaps stupidly create.

JE: Many of your poems about The Annunciation derive from paintings of that story. What connections between art, poetry and story have inspired you in relation to your exploration of The Annunciation? 

RL: I guess my fascination with The Annunciation began with Fra Angelico's Annunciation paintings, especially the ones in Cortona and San Giovanni Valdarno. The latter is probably the least known, and when I first saw it was simply in a room you visited by squeezing through a narrow door next to a church altar. Now, of course, there is a small museum, with an entry fee.

For some reason I became fascinated by the idea of something 'alien' – that is something unfamiliar or other, not a bug-eyed monster – intruding into the human realm, and the effects of that visitation and intervention. There are lots of other Annunciation paintings in Italy of course but I also started researching poems and stories, paintings, sculptures and video art, on the same theme.

My first Annunciation pieces were part of a wider series of poems focussed mostly on Italy, but after that I collaborated with the writer Sarah Cave, who was more interested in Marian theology than me. We did a number of small pamphlets, a booklet, and a Shearsman book together. These included many re-imaginings of annunciations, some silly (a conspiracy poem about CIA being part of AnnunCIAtion), some funny (Joseph moaning about being ignored), some simply working from different versions: romantic, urban, Pre-Raphaelite, abstract, etc.

I'm someone who reads a lot, so I tend to immerse myself in research and then have a burst of writing to generate lots of raw material I can work with and refine. At the moment I am working on a sequence about time travel, memory, nostalgia, history and time itself. I'm not sure what triggered that though, although I know some contemporary ideas of physics and time are in the mix, along with some dystopian fiction.

JE: Your own art practice has included an abstract Stations of the Cross and a series of Tower of Babel paintings. You've said that your paintings are concerned with the spiritual; or perhaps that, as a painter, you are concerned with the spiritual. Yet, you don't think there are any automatic links between the spiritual and art, and that most of what the art world calls spirituality seems to be aesthetic experience. There is a tightrope to be walked here as a painter. How do you walk that tightrope?

RL: Mostly by focussing on the paint (or collage or drawing), the image, itself.  You don't learn a new language overnight, so the language of visual art takes time to understand. When you do begin to understand that both figurative and abstract painting use the same language, but the latter is not very interested in narrative, implied or literal, then a whole new world opens up.

The Tower of Babel paintings were very much a response to the visual shape of the tower in traditional paintings, including an image in a Children's Bible that my mum found at the time and returned to me. So it is actually about grids and ascent and colour; and the differences between the individual paintings. I often work in series, so that ideas and images accumulate and differ. I might compare it to the small changes in minimalist music, which the repetition highlights.

The Stations of the Cross series used a sequence of small paintings as contemplative objects. The Stations work using symbolic colour (black/red for crucifixion, blue for Mary) but also contain ideas of books and texts, division and conflict in reoccuring motifs and shapes. 

By placing art in a different context there was a new audience, the chance to discuss visual art and also in churches in Exeter and Cornwall to 'use' the work as part of liturgy. The work showed in several UK cathedrals and churches, alongside a medieval altarpiece in a museum, in a hospital and then several small galleries on the West Coast of the United States. The project was partially funded by the Arts Council as part of the millennium celebrations, but also because it was seeking a new audience, perhaps a new or continuing dialogue.

I think as a person I am intrigued by spirituality, mostly from a Christian perspective, although I think the Bible is full of mythology, poetry and elusive parables and stories, not to mention strange visions. I'm currently reading Adam Steiner's new book on Nick Cave, where he notes that for Cave 'The Bible became a space of creative antagonism', which I find a fascinating idea. Although I don't often draw on the characters and stories of the Bible in the way Cave does, it is part of my life: Noah's Ark, Adam and Eve, the Nativity and many other stories are part of me. I'm fascinated and repulsed by those who take things too literally, and drawn to creative artists like Cave who tough it out in the world, fighting doubt and despair, observing and commenting on life in their work.

So mostly my belief and the accompanying doubt are part of me and therefore inform what I produce which is informed by the world around me: what I hear, read, see, hear and experience. But it is rarely the subject matter of my work, certainly not in any direct or obvious way. I've only just got into Nick Cave's music, but Leonard Cohen seems another musician who discusses spirituality and faith; and on the book front I'd mention Tim Winton, Cormac McCarthy and Flannery O'Connor. None of them are afraid of (to use a cliché) getting their hands dirty, of the dirty, depressing, spoilt, vicious world we live in. I'm constantly encouraged when I find new authors who come up with different ways to discuss things. Recently I have been reading Shane McCrae's poetry, which discusses creation and spirituality in his poems about 'The Hastily Assembled Angel'. It's marvellous stuff. It also reminds me to mention the musician and poet Steve Scott, who urged me and many others at various conferences and in his books to find a useful metaphor and run with it... I haven't quite done that across all my work, but it has certainly informed my thinking and the way I work.

JE: I wonder what Steiner's quote that 'The Bible became a space of creative antagonism' for Nick Cave might mean for you?

RL: That the complexities of The Bible, its contradictory stories and ideas, are an endless source of ideas which challenge, annoy and confuse. If you can't understand it in terms of parables, metaphor, allusion, folklore, mythology and human editing and interference (think about how many other gospels and Bibles books were excluded), let alone how it fits alongside other faiths, it makes no sense at all. That antagonism, is a provocation; The Bible is a book that produces more questions than answers, like all good books do.

Experience Stride magazine: https://stridemagazine.blogspot.com/ 

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After The Fire - Starflight.

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

Rupert Loydell: Guest Posts and interview (2)

I am very pleased to be able to publish today a guest post from Rupert Loydell, which will then be followed by an interview that I have conducted with Rupert about aspects of his career and interests.

Rupert's guest post is an interview with musician Nick Battle that was undertaken as part of his research on christian rock. This research resulted in several interviews, reviews and articles that were published in Punk & Post-Punk journal, an academic publication, as well as feeding into a piece for Ship of Fools. Nick Battle has had a long and varied career in the music business, including spells in significant Post-Punk christian rock bands such as After The Fire (ATF) and Writz. Rupert's interview with Nick explores the moment when Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) and mainstream rock diverged, and bands like ATF and Writz headed into the latter, perhaps paving the way for U2 and others writing about faith and doubt. Rupert's work has also included writing about Larry Norman, Steve Scott and Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus.

Rupert Loydell is the editor of Stride magazine, contributing editor to International Times and a writer and abstract artist. He has many books of poetry and several collaborative publications in print, and has edited anthologies for Shearsman, KFS and Salt. His critical writing has appeared in Punk & Post-Punk (which he is on the editorial board of), Journal of Writing and Creative Practice, New Writing, English, Text, Axon, Short Fiction in Theory and Practice, Musicology Research, Revenant, The Quint: an interdisciplinary journal from the north and Journal of Visual Art Practice. He has also contributed chapters to Brian Eno. Oblique Music (Bloomsbury, 2016), Critical Essays on Twin Peaks: The Return (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), Music in Twin Peaks: Listen to the Sounds (Routledge, 2021) and Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022).

This short series will add to the material about Jesus Rock, CCM and spirituality in rock music which has been published here previously. See the first post in this series for a listing of previous posts on these themes - click here.

The only army who would shoot their own soldiers: An interview with Nick Battle

Nick Battle has been called a 'music industry mogul', having enjoyed a long and varied career in the music industry. He was in seventies rock bands After The Fire and Writz, worked at IRS records in the eighties as an A&R man, and was a record plugger from 1988-1993 with his clients including George Benson, Sir Cliff Richard, Ronnie Wood, Take That, Clannad, and Paul Hardcastle among many others.

In 1993 he helped start the music publisher Windswept Pacific Music Ltd and introduced Simon Fuller (his former client) and the Spice Girls to the company. At the height of the company's success they enjoyed 44 top 40 hits in one year with a team of just two creative staff.

He has had his songs recorded by the actress Jane Horrocks, Sir Cliff Richard and Phixx, has written with Gary Barlow, Tony Swain, Chris Eaton and David Grant, and as an Executive Producer in the noughties he made records with Russell Watson, Michael Ball (four albums) the Honeyriders and Engelbert Humperdinck. Michael and Engelbert also recorded Nick’s songs. He has also served on the Ivor Novello Awards committee as well as the MPA Pop Publishers committee.

Between 1993 and 2003 his first wife fought a ten year battle with cancer and this led to him founding the Gravel Road Trust, a registered charity for carers and patients dealing with long term illness and also the bereaved.

In 2008 he wrote his autobiography, Big Boys Don’t Cry and subsequently two more books. He is regularly featured on BBC local radio and has featured on The Jeremy Vine Show on Radio 2 talking about music, sex and celebrity. He has his own radio show, Men @ Work, on Premier Radio and currently runs a small music publishing company. He also manages the record producer Kipper, as well as the actress Elizabeth McGovern’s band, Sadie and The Hotheads.

I was interested in talking to Nick Battle because of his longevity in the music business, which might offer a different perspective on some of the Christian bands involved in punk and post-punk, and on how music has changed generally. Also because he has described himself as 'a shop-soiled Christian' and isn't afraid to speak his mind. I'd originally planned to follow up my previous articles on Christian music (Loydell 2019a, 2019b, 2021) with a piece focussed on the band After the Fire, but technical issues meant Battle's was the only interview completed.

After the Fire were formed by keyboard player Peter Banks in 1971. They were a trio from 1971-1972 and 1973-73 (when Andy Piercy, lead singer and guitarist joined), and a quartet from 1975-1977. Nick Battle (bass) and Ivor Twidell (drums) joined Banks and Piercy in 1977. This line-up released a prog rock album, Signs of Change in 1978, on their own label, and – following the exit of Battle – re-emerged playing punchy new wave songs as a short-lived trio (with Piercy now on doubleneck bass/guitar) before John Russell joined on guitar. Piercy continued on bass and the quartet signed to CBS, releasing a further three albums in 1979, 1980 and 1982 before disbanding.

Battle joined Writz, an arty postpunk pop band fronted by Bev Sage and Steve Fairnie, who recorded an album for Electric (1979), before he moved in to production, A & R, promotion and management. I started the interview by returning to those 1970s bands.

Rupert Loydell: Can you tell me how you ended up in After the Fire and then Writz? I have no knowledge of your previous musical engagements!

Nick Battle: I’d been to Greenbelt1 in 1976 as a punter and had weaved backstage with Pete ‘Willie’ Williams and met Bryn Haworth and he became my pen pal and a real source of encouragement. When Robin Childs left After The Fire it was in Sounds, a music paper of the time. I wrote to the band, sent a demo and a photo of me playing a gold top Antoria Les Paul and got the audition and subsequently the job. Within a relatively short space of time with the band I wanted to play pop songs and at the time Andy & Pete didn’t quite get it. I was hopelessly immature and a lot younger and impatient for success. I knew prog rock as it was then was over, and I was courted by Fish Co who became Writz and hooked up with them. They were a colourful group of misfits like myself and we became a pop group with a dash of punk.

Of course if I’d known what great pop songs Andy & Pete could write… Speaking of which I’d have to say ‘One Rule For You’ (After the Fire, 1979) is my absolute favourite. And as for Fairnie & Rowles and Fish Co. I loved, ‘Across The Table’ from the album, Beneath The Laughter (Fish Co., 1978).

RL: In either of those groups did you feel part of a group of likeminded bands who were somehow breaking away from the Christian subculture? I mean we’re used to U2 and others talking about spirituality, faith & doubt, politics and belief these days, but I remember a big backlash against After the Fire in the early days: reviewers, even supportive ones like John Gill, felt it necessary to make excuses for your beliefs, whilst there were always DJs like the one at The Marquee happy to play lots of Black Sabbath and other [at least seemingly] anti-Christian songs before you came on.

NB: So when I was with ATF at times you could feel a real sense of spiritual awareness when performing, especially on songs like, ‘Now That I’ve Found’ (on After the Fire, 1978), there was a point in the song when you became aware of something bigger than you being present. I was a very young just 19 and very open and the feeling of aligning with this power and playing… well I felt like I was exactly in synchronicity with this force.

RL: Writz had a very different attitude to After the Fire, more fun and flamboyant than ATF, less rock and more art – would that be a fair comment?

NB: Yes. We were colourful, party people who loved great pop music. Especially Blondie & my pal Steve Allen’s band Deaf School and Ian Dury & The Blockheads. Fairnie brought his whole art school take on things to the band.

RL: What did you make of the vitriol aimed at Fairnie when he used to talk about wanting to entertain and play music, not preach; his interview in Ship of Fools (1979), which was a fairly liberal Christian magazine, for instance, was a bit tense round the edges.

NB: It’s such a long time ago and by todays standards laughable. I will say this though, some of us were on a collision course… it doesn’t merit discussing. At the time it felt like Christians were the only army who would shoot their own soldiers. They did it out of fear without any understanding. When they did it hurt us all. In different ways. The late and lovely John Pac from Parchment was one of the few supportive voices in the wilderness.

RL: And what was your take on the Christian subculture at the time? There clearly wasn’t enough momentum or big enough marketplace for it to be like CCM (Contemporary Christian Music) in America, so what was it about?

NB: I didn’t care about it. I simply wanted to make music. I have always disliked all the nonsense and small-minded thinking. You don’t talk about Bill Gates operating in a Christian subculture yet he along with his wife Melinda have done more than most to try and make this earth a better place in which to live. I seem to remember someone else trying to do that a few thousand years ago.

RL: Bev Sage has talked about how devastating the break up of Writz and then Famous Names was for them, even though The Technos (and variations thereof) arose from the ashes. (Loydell, 2019b) What’s your take on it looking back.

NB: You know I wrote about this in my autobiography, Big Boys Don't Cry, back in 2007. For my part I had nothing left to give. I wasn’t singing or writing songs for the band, something which I’ve done ok with since, and I had a pretty rampant ego. There was no money, I was homeless and I left and went back home to Sheffield.

RL: I think the next time I saw you was at a Shock gig in London, where they were doing a photoshoot before the evening concert. Am I right in thinking you moved into A&R and management? How was that?

NB: I ended up tour managing Shock a lovely bunch of people that I’d met when Fairnie got me to dress up as a bear at the Famous Names show at The Venue in London. That was the night I was nearly taken out by two lady female wrestlers. Life with Fairnie was never dull!

RL: You also released some solo music at the time?

NB: Through the New Romantic Scene I met Richard Burgess and John L.Walters from Landscape. Both were really encouraging and John produced two tracks for me ‘Big Boys Don’t Cry’ (which is on youtube and I now think is visually comedy gold) and another I’d co-written called ‘On My Own Again’ with my pal Karel Fialka who I would later sign to Miles Copeland’s IRS Records and have a Top 10 hit with. Incidentally, the tracks feature Annie McCaig and Mo McCafferty as she was then (now Mo Turner) on backing vocals from Nutshell before they became Network 3 and signed to EMI.

RL: From the outside of the music biz it’s hard to tell whether record companies respond to what’s happening around them in the music scene, or actually try and mould bands into current trends (which may, of course, have evolved more naturally). I’m thinking of the way After the Fire ended up looking somewhat New Romantic, or the way Landscape reinvented themselves from jazz-rock into leather-clad new romantic funksters. Shock and The Technos were part of the slippage from post-punk to New Romantic weren’t they?

NB: If you’re smart you see a wave coming and catch it. Look at Geldof and The Boomtown Rats, Adam Ant, and The Police. Steve and Bev were always very aware of trends and stuff going on around them. When they came to me with the demo of ‘Falling In Love Again’ I was the in-house producer along with my pal Simon Humphrey at a tiny record company in Finchley. We went in and replicated exactly what Steve & Bev had done with Dave Hewson on the demo: he is an incredible arranger, and it was their most successful record. (Techno Twins, 1981) However no one ever saw a penny from it. Least of all Steve & Bev who had signed to the label. We had made other records like the Sporting Life album ( 1981) and also an album of poetry with Steve Turner but we never saw any money for those either.

We would get paid £50 per track as an advance to play and produce and if we wrote a song at all we had to assign that for Life Of Copyright for free and we’d end up with 15-20 pence in the pound each, once everybody had taken their slice. I have a record at home Simon Humphrey and I co-wrote and they haven’t even bothered to list us as the writers! And I sang backing vocals on it as well! Let’s just say it was a steep learning curve for us all. It's something which I have never repeated since.

RL: Nowadays, we’re all used to CD reissue campaigns: definitive, remastered, reimagined, repackaged etc, but there was a time when music seemed more linear, a musical genre or movement was abandoned as a new one emerged. I am aware that’s a simplification, and ignores the whole issue of MP3s and digital dissemination, not to mention ideas of postmodernism, where everything happens all the time, but is it even possible for anyone to know what’s going on know? Does it even matter?

NB: It doesn’t matter anymore. When I was kid we would invest in an artist and carry their album round with us as a symbol of cool. The digital age has destroyed that, now it’s all about that one song people will largely stream, even downloads are disappearing.

RL: It's been suggested that music superstars were a product of the 20th Century, and that the likes of Kylie, U2 and Madonna were the last of the megastars. Nowadays people perhaps have a few hit singles (with quite low sales compared to a few decades ago) and then fade away. Meanwhile, other bands hold down day jobs and quite happily home-record on their computers and distribute their music online. Is the music industry going to survive? Is it adapting fast enough?

NB: It has never adapted fast enough. Always slow, cumbersome, and arrogant. The gatekeepers of the music industry didn’t see the digital tsunami heading their way. What they failed to understand is that if they didn’t protect the artist and their art there would be nothing of any substance left. Which is for the most part what we’re left with. The upside though, is that now it’s a little like the 1960s, when new record labels sprang up like Island, A&M , Chrysalis: there will be a way forward eventually but it’s unlikely to happen for my generation of old farts!

RL: Will we ever see the likes of punk and post-punk again? Were they as life-changing as is sometimes suggested?

NB: No they weren’t. The only movement of any substance was from the Woodstock generation. They may have been stoned out of their gourd half the time but they espoused peace and love. Two things we see readily identified in the four gospels.

RL: Is music more disposable now? MP3s for a week, delete and move on… Perhaps other art forms, or digital games, have replaced music?

NB: Yes, gaming is the new rock and roll, but my son still loves to play the piano. He’s eleven and his favourite artists are The Beatles, Elton John & Queen.

I hope it will swing back. There’s always hope and a rich musical treasure chest for subsequent generations to dive into.

RL: Nowadays, spirituality, doubt and belief, are everywhere in song lyrics, yet Christianity is perhaps the least cool religion or belief system in contemporary music. Why do you think that is?

NB: It’s never been cool to be a Christian. I don’t why and I don’t give a toss. If faith was about being cool then as the song says, ‘Heaven Help Us All’.

RL: Do you think ATF and Writz helped pave the way for the likes of U2 to openly discuss faith issues in pop or rock music? Or was it going to happen anyway? What’s your take on the idea of a hidden history to be told, a subculture that emerged in the 1960s, had it’s moment and then stopped because the UK couldn’t support it. I guess some survivors moved to the States or into church music, but thankfully there’s no bands touring church halls as far as I can see!

NB: Not really. U2 were always going to be different. They came to see us as Writz at the Marquee by the way and I hear were not that impressed. I saw them very early on at Hemel Hempstead with The Comsat Angels and even then Bono had this authority about him.

A fight broke out in the crowd. The band stopped and Bono said something like this: ‘You ! You and your like are not welcome here. Those of you around him gently ease him out.’ To the best of my recollection that’s what happened and then the band kicked in exactly where they’d left off.

It was awesome but also like a God thing. Shit happened but it was dealt with firmly and no one else got hurt. Imagine if Jagger had succeeded like that at Altamont?

You see where music is at its best is with a sense of provenance. We operate at our best not when we think we’re great but where there is genuine humility and a desire to have the best fun imaginable. And when we are doing what we have been created to do well there is nothing better. It is the most fun you can have with your clothes on.

RL: Thanks for your time!

NB: A pleasure Rupert! I think a pint is in order…

NOTE

1. ‘Greenbelt is a festival of arts, faith and justice. The best you’ve never heard of. Greenbelt saw its first edition way back in 1974 and has hosted its annual festival every single year since’ (Greenbelt website 2019).

REFERENCES

After The Fire (1978), Signs of Change, vinyl album, London: Rapid Records.

—— (1979), 'One Rule For You', 7" single, London: CBS.

—— (1979), Laser Love, vinyl album, London: CBS.


—— (1980), 80-f, vinyl album, London: CBS.


—— (1982), Batteries Not Included, vinyl album, London: CBS.

Battle, Nick (1982), 'Big Boys Don't Cry', promo song and video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0TUnetFN3M Accessed 28 Aug 2021. (Also collected on Various Artists (1983), Curious Collection, vinyl album, London: Street Tunes)

Battle, Nick (2007), Big Boys Don't Cry: The Autobiography of Nick Battle, Milton Keynes: Authentic Media.

Fairnie, Steve (1979), ‘Ship of Fools interview: 1979, Steve Fairnie of Writz’, in S. Jenkins and S. Goddard (eds.), Ship of Fools, vol. 2, London: Ship of Fools, pp. 24–37.


Fish Co. (1978), Beneath the Laughter, vinyl album, London: Grapevine.


Greenbelt Festival (n.d.), ‘What is Greenbelt?’, Greenbelt website, https://www.greenbelt.org.uk/greenbelt-festival/. Accessed 16 April 2019.

Loydell, Rupert (2019a), ‘Weird religious backgrounds: Larry Norman, Jesus rock and an interview with Gregory Alan Thornbury’, Punk & Post-Punk, 8:1, pp. 121-35

Loydell, Rupert (2019b), ‘Fun, fashion, faith and flamboyance: An interview with Bev Sage, Punk & Post-Punk, 8:3, pp. 449-460

Loydell, Rupert (2021), ‘We don’t hide from vague: An interview with the Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus’, Punk & Post-Punk, 10:1, pp. 141–148.

Techno Twins (1981), 'Falling in Love Again', 7" single, London: PRT.

This Sporting Life (1981), This Sporting Life, vinyl album, Munich: Jupiter

Writz (1979), Writz, vinyl album, London: Electric.


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Nick Battle - Shine (Misha) (feat. Kipper)

Monday, 17 November 2025

Rupert Loydell: Guest posts and interview (1)

I will shortly be publishing a guest post from Rupert Loydell, which will then be followed by an interview that I have conducted with Rupert about aspects of his career and interests. 

Rupert's guest post is an interview with musician Nick Battle that was undertaken as part of his research on christian rock. This research resulted in several interviews, reviews and articles that were published in Punk & Post-Punk journal, an acdemic publication, as well as feeding into a piece for Ship of Fools. Nick Battle has had a long and varied career in the music business, including spells in significant Post-Punk christian rock bands such as After The Fire (ATF) and Writz. Rupert's interview with Nick explores the moment when Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) and mainstream rock diverged, and bands like ATF and Writz headed into the latter, perhaps paving the way for U2 and others writing about faith and doubt. Rupert's work has also included writing about Larry Norman, Steve Scott and Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus.

Rupert Loydell is the editor of Stride magazine, contributing editor to International Times and a writer and abstract artist. He has many books of poetry and several collaborative publications in print, and has edited anthologies for Shearsman, KFS and Salt. His critical writing has appeared in Punk & Post-Punk (which he is on the editorial board of), Journal of Writing and Creative Practice, New Writing, English, Text, Axon, Short Fiction in Theory and Practice, Musicology Research, Revenant, The Quint: an interdisciplinary journal from the north and Journal of Visual Art Practice. He has also contributed chapters to Brian Eno. Oblique Music (Bloomsbury, 2016), Critical Essays on Twin Peaks: The Return (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), Music in Twin Peaks: Listen to the Sounds (Routledge, 2021) and Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music (Palgrave Macmillan, 2022). 

This short series will add to the material about Jesus Rock, CCM and spirituality in rock music which has been published here previously. This material includes a series on the spirituality of U2 which sets out the main characteristics of their spirituality, examines their roots, makes links between their spirituality and themes in contemporary theology and, considers three reasons why their spirituality has connected with popular culture. It is called 'Tryin' to throw your arms around the world' and can be read by clicking here - 1234567

Stride Magazine has a new series is called 'Five' which simply involves writing about five linked items. The first articles in the series can be found here and here. My piece for the series which is on entries in Prog 50 will be published on 24 November.

Additionally, my co-authored book The Secret Chord explored aspects of a similar interplay between faith and music (and the Arts, more broadly). Posts related to the themes of The Secret Chord can be found here.

Check out the following too, to explore further:
Read also my dialogues with musician and poet Steve Scott here, here, here, here, and here, plus my other posts on CCM. In a series of blog posts for Deus Ex Musica I shared rock and pop songs for Easter, Lent, Epiphany and New Year


Rock ‘n’ Roll merged blues (with its spiritual strand) and Country music (tapping its white gospel) while Soul music adapted much of its sound and content from Black Gospel. For both, their gestures and movements were adopted from Pentecostalism. Some, such as Jerry Lee Lewis and Sam Cooke, felt guilt at secularising Gospel while others, like Johnny Cash, arrived at a hard earned integration of faith and music. All experienced opposition from a Church angry at its songs and influence being appropriated for secular ends. This opposition fed a narrative that, on both sides, equated rock and pop with hedonism and rebellion. The born again Cliff Richard was often perceived (both positively and negatively) as the only alternative. Within this context the Biblical language and imagery of Bob Dylan and Van Morrison was largely overlooked, although Dylan spoke eloquently about the influence of scripture within the tradition of American music on which he drew.

With the majority of Soul stars having begun singing in Church, many of the most effective integrations of faith and music were found there with Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On and the Gospel-folk of the Staple Singers being among the best and most socially committed examples. Gospel featured directly with Billy Preston, Edwin Hawkins Singers and Aretha Franklin’s gospel albums. Mainstream use of Christian themes or imagery in rock were initially either unsustained (e.g. Blind Faith’s ‘Presence of the Lord’ and Norman Greenbaum’s ‘Spirit in the Sky’) or obscure (e.g. C.O.B.’s Moyshe McStiff and the Tartan Lancers of the Sacred Heart and Bill Fay’s Time of the Last Persecution).

However, this changed in three ways. First, the Church began to appropriate rock and pop to speak explicitly about Christian faith. This led to the emergence of a new genre, Contemporary Christian Music (CCM), with interaction between CCM and the mainstream. Mainstream artists such as Philip Bailey, David Grant, Al Green, Larry Norman and Candi Staton developed CCM careers while artists originally within CCM such as Delirious?, Martyn Joseph, Julie Miller, Leslie (Sam) Phillips, Sixpence None The Richer and Switchfoot achieved varying levels of mainstream exposure and success. 

Second, the biblical language and imagery of stars like Bob Dylan, Van Morrison and Bruce Springsteen began to be understood and appreciated (helped to varying degrees by explicitly ‘Christian’ periods in the work of Dylan and Van the Man). 

Third, musicians such as After The Fire, The Alarm, T. Bone Burnett, The Call, Peter Case, Bruce Cockburn, Extreme, Galactic Cowboys, Innocence Mission, Kings X, Maria McKee, Buddy & Julie Miller, Moby, Over The Rhine, Ricky Ross, 16 Horsepower, U2, The Violent Femmes, Gillian Welch, Jim White, and Victoria Williams rather than singing about the light (of Christ) instead sang about the world which they saw through the light (of Christ). As rock and pop fragmented into a myriad of genres, this approach to the expression of faith continues in the work of Eric Bibb, Blessid Union of Souls, Creed, Brandon Flowers, Good Charlotte, Ben Harper, Michael Kiwanuka, Ed Kowalczyk, Lifehouse, Live, Low, Neal Morse, Mumford and Sons, Robert Randolph and the Family Band, Scott Stapp, Social Distortion, and Woven Hand.

I've created a playlist on Spotify called 'Closer to the light'. 'Closer To The Light' is a song by Bruce Cockburn that he said "was written addressed to the late Mark Heard ... He was a fantastic songwriter. His death sent a shockwave through our whole community, and what that did in me was that song." As a result, 'Closer to the Light' is a song that straddles both CCM and mainstream artists suggesting that both can bring us closer to the light. Similarly, this playlist, which includes blues, choral, classical, country, folk, gospel, jazz, pop, rap, rock, and soul music, aims to straddle music from both CCM and the mainstream which also brings us closer to the light.

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Writz - Night Nurse.