February 2014 John Patitucci -Phil Keaggy - Nick Manson - Last days final hour news prophecy update - Video
PUBLISHED:  Feb 10, 2013
DESCRIPTION:
February 2014 Last days final hour news prophecy update - John Patitucci - Phil Keaggy - Nick Manson tribute to Roby Duke - I Shall See God
Roby Duke - Come Let Us Reason (1984)
1984 (10 Tracks) 1. Come Let Us Reason 2. All Lost 3. I'm Persuaded 4. Watching for You 5. Fight the Fight 6. Win or Lose 7. Here I Am 8. Closer to You 9. Lay it Down 10. There is Just One Way 1989 (10 Tracks) 1. I Try (Walk in the Park) 2. Dreams Alive 3. I Shall See God 4. Moon Over Me (Waiting For You) 5. Rain 6. Down To Business 7. Nonetheless 8. Modern Man (Want Will Steal Your Heart Away) 9. Maybe 10. Thief On The Hill 1986 (10 Tracks) 1. I Know You Mister 2. I've Come Too Far 3. This Is Not A Game 4. Runaway (Say So) 5. Another Night 6. I'll Survive 7. Talk To Me 8. Can't Let You Go 9. It's Up To You 10. Here For You. 1980 (10 Tracks) 1. Love is Here to Stay 2. Time to Stand 3. Seasons of Change 4. Carpenter (Do What You Got to Do) 5. Feel It Comin' 6. O Magnify the Lord 7. Can't Stop Runnin' 8. Rested in Your Love 9. Not the Same 10. Promised Land
Phil Keaggy Keagg was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame by P.O.D. guitarist Jason Truby On October 29, 2007 He also released Acoustic Cafe, an album, that with the exception of "You Have My Heart," is a collection of covers ranging from Bob Dylan ("If Not For You," "Make You Feel My Love") to Cyndi Lauper ("Time After Time"). Many of the songs are duets, such as the Beatles' "In My Life" with Randy Stonehill and the Everly Brothers "All I Have to Do is Dream" with Jeremy Casella. Phil Keaggy (born Philip Tyler Keaggy, in Youngstown, Ohio on March 23, 1951) is an American acoustic and electric guitarist and vocalist who has released more than 50 albums and contributed to many more recordings in both the contemporary Christian music and mainstream markets. He is a seven-time recipient of the GMA Dove Award for Instrumental Album of the Year, and was twice nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rock Gospel Album. He has frequently been listed as one of the world's top-three "finger-style", as well as "finger-picking", guitarists by Guitar Player Magazine readers' polls. 1986 saw the release of Way Back Home. The album consisted of quieter acoustic numbers, including a new take on 1981's "Let Everything Else Go" and "Maker of the Universe," a ballad about the incarnation of Christ. The album also emphasized one of the prominent themes in Keaggy's music: family.

The next year Phil Keaggy released his second instrumental album, The Wind and the Wheat. The album reflects the "New Age" instrumental sounds of the day. The Wind and the Wheat won the guitarist his first Dove Award, an honor that he received in 1988. Also in 1988, Keaggy and Stonehill would team up with singer Margaret Becker, former Wings drummer Joe English and others as the Compassion All Star Band. The group released a subsequent live album One by One.

In 1989, Keaggy teamed up with Randy Stonehill, vocalist Russ Taff, bassist Rick Cua, Derri Daugherty, Mark Heard, Steve Taylor and other musicians to create Phil Keaggy and Sunday's Child. Lynn Nichols, guitarist for the 1977 Keaggy Band, produced the Sunday's Child project. The title track in particular recalled the sounds of the 1960s, and that, along with an album cover that resembled that of the classic image of With The Beatles, I wanted a black and white photo of my daughter Olivia sitting on a guitar case, with this Gretsch anniversary model standing up behind her against this concrete wall, and she's got a little white flower wreath in her hair. She's about four years old, and...I just loved that cover. So when the album came out, I wasn't really knocked out by the Beatles thing, because it didn't look like the Beatles to me! It was my goofy face and then these three guys in the background, one of which was Lynn Nichols, the producer. And I thought, "Oh, I don't care for this."Phil Keaggy and Sunday's Child," and to me, that was Olivia, being as she's my daughter. For Sunday's Child, not only did we resort to using vintage guitars and amps, but I resorted back to old ways of playing. The rock leads are shorter and more precise. More to the point, What I think comes through this album is that sense of longing, of love, of suffering and in all of this there can be hope. Everyone has to find their way to God and I hope people will see Jesus in my life and this album as a guide along the way."

One track, "I've Just Begun (Again)," was first written when Keaggy was 17, and was updated for this album. In addition to his own material, Keaggy recorded two Mark Heard songs for the album: "I Always Do" and "Everything is Alright." The recordings would appear again on subsequent tribute albums to Heard. One of the tribute albums, Orphans of God, was listed at #25 in the book, CCM Presents: The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music.
follow us on Twitter      Contact      Privacy Policy      Terms of Service
Copyright © BANDMINE // All Right Reserved
Return to top