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Gaining my religion: Kanye, Dylan and the pop stars who find God
Keep the Faith ^ | October 13, 2019 | Dorian Lynskey

Posted on 10/13/2019 5:40:44 AM PDT by robowombat

Gaining my religion: Kanye, Dylan and the pop stars who find God

Religion has always been a popular option for celebrities in urgent need of a fresh start because God, unlike Twitter, has a reputation for forgiveness. Kanye West launched his weekly Sunday Service in January after a whirlwind few months during which he swooned over Donald Trump, suggested that slavery was a choice and released the first forgettable album of his career. West has had an inconsistent relationship with his faith. His 2004 single Jesus Walks earned him multiple nominations for Stellar awards (the gospel Grammys) but I Am a God, from the album Yeezus, did not. On the verge of releasing his long-delayed ninth album, Jesus Is King, he seems to be going all in. At a recent listening party, he reportedly declared that he was done with secular music and would be recording only gospel from now on.

In the 1960s, soul music was largely defined by charismatic young gospel stars such as Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin crossing over to secular music, but travelling in the opposite direction poses more of a challenge. While mainstream listeners are by no means allergic to overt expressions of faith — witness, for example, U2, Stormzy, Johnny Cash and vast swathes of reggae — the zeal of the convert is a tougher sell.

For one thing, the music can be offputtingly didactic. When Bob Dylan unveiled his conversion to Christianity on a trilogy of albums starting with 1979’s Slow Train Coming, his hectoring intensity made his early protest songs sound like polite suggestions. For another, a born-again artist’s take-it-or-leave-it repositioning guarantees what Spinal Tap would call more selective appeal.

When Cat Stevens converted to Islam in 1977 and changed his name to Yusuf Islam, he left the music business and didn’t make headlines again until, 12 years later, he popped up to endorse Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa against Salman Rushdie (comments he has since denied). Since the rapper Malice, formerly of the Clipse, found God and cunningly renamed himself No Malice in 2012, he has retreated into the niche of Christian hip-hop. His guest verse on Jesus Is King will be the first time mainstream listeners have heard him in years. Even Rev Al Green, whose unbroken run of gospel albums during the 80s and early 90s was warmly received, disappeared from the charts during that period apart from a duet with Annie Lennox, Put a Little Love in Your Heart. To reject secular music is inevitably to sacrifice sales and profile to a higher calling.

An artist can still make a healthy living in the gospel industry (especially if, like West, you sell Holy Spirit sweatshirts and Jesus Walks socks), but it’s notable that the biggest-selling gospel album of all time remains Aretha Franklin’s Amazing Grace, the 1971 live album in which the minister’s daughter paid tribute to her roots, before returning to soul on subsequent records. Many profoundly religious artists choose to remain in the world of secular music. Joseph Simmons of Run DMC is an ordained minister, but the only album he has released under the name Rev Run, 2005’s Distortion, was no sermon. Born-again Christian Dave Mustaine continues to tour with Megadeth, although he has refused to appear on the same bill as a band called Rotting Christ. It’s perfectly possible tolive according to your faith without letting it dominate your music.

Even those artists who firmly reject secular music tend to have second thoughts eventually. In 1962, Little Richard, who had left rock’n’roll to study theology, was talked into a European comeback tour. On the opening night, fans who expected to hear the hits booed his strictly-gospel set while cheering support act Sam Cooke. The following night, Little Richard abruptly changed tack, kicking off with Long Tall Sally. Showmanship triumphed over spirituality. Similarly, Dylan began his 1980 Slow Train Coming tour by banishing all of his secular material, but when he returned to the road in the autumn, Like a Rolling Stone and Blowin’ in the Wind were back in the set. You can do what you believe God wants you to do, but God isn’t buying concert tickets. With his 1983 album Infidels, Dylan returned to secular music and most of his fans sighed with relief. “Dylan’s audience did not take kindly to hearing their hero parroting beliefs that many of them had already rejected,” said Rolling Stone.

West’s Sunday Services have certainly helped rehabilitate his reputation and provided him with an invigorating new arena, but the sincerity of his commitment is debatable so long as he displays neither humility nor repentance. “It feels like Kanye himself is the centre and the object of this worship,” wrote Naima Cochrane in a damning Vice article this year. His alleged rejection of secular music should therefore be taken with a pinch of salt. For someone as ambitious as West to continue down a path that is bound to bring him less attention and more limited success really would be a miracle.


TOPICS: Charismatic Christian; Current Events; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: bornagain

1 posted on 10/13/2019 5:40:44 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat

Just to keep the facts facty,
Bob Dylan (Shabtai Zisel Zimmerman) left his new-found Christianity to embrace his real Jewish roots.


2 posted on 10/13/2019 6:00:47 AM PDT by Phinneous (By the way, there are Seven Laws for you too! Noahide.org)
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To: robowombat
"Dylan’s audience did not take kindly to hearing their hero parroting beliefs that many of them had already rejected,” said Rolling Stone.

I'm no Dylan fan at all, but perhaps his audience wants to hear oldies only. It's the curse of an established musician: when I saw Paul McCartney in 1989 during his Flowers in the Dirt album tour, I could SEE the audience at MSG get up and leave their seats (for a bathroom break or whatever) during "We Got Married" (which I thought then -and now - is a good song worthy of staying in my seat).

For years, The Who closed with - and played nothing but - oldies. After their 2006 Endless Wire album, they tended to close with "Tea & Theatre," which is an incredibly touching and fitting closer for the Rockers Who Didn't Die Before They Got Old....and the audience eats up that closer. That this is the exception to the rule.

Indeed, one of my favorite comments in this topic is that the best song the Stones have released since Some Girls is Bittersweet Symphony.

But no, it's gotta be religion, sayeth the rag that repeatedly gets into hot water over fake news.

3 posted on 10/13/2019 6:35:05 AM PDT by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s^2)
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To: DoodleBob
Indeed, one of my favorite comments in this topic is that the best song the Stones have released since Some Girls is Bittersweet Symphony.

LOL.

4 posted on 10/13/2019 6:36:32 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: robowombat

Jane Fonda found Jesus too. So what?

She’s still a treasonous Leftist trying to make hell of America while she goes to heaven. And she’s far from alone.


5 posted on 10/13/2019 3:37:26 PM PDT by jjotto (Next week, BOOM!, for sure!)
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To: Phinneous
Just to keep the facts facty, Bob Dylan (Shabtai Zisel Zimmerman) left his new-found Christianity to embrace his real Jewish roots.

Man who led Bob Dylan to Christ says legendary singer is still walking with Jesus - (October 2012)

"Brooklyn-born Messianic Jew Al Kasha, 75, the double Oscar winning songwriter who in 1978 prayed with Bob Dylan at a Bible study in his Beverly Hills home to receive Christ, believes that Dylan never lost his faith despite many rumors to the contrary."

Do you have a more current source for your claim than this one?

FReegards!

1st-Annual-Freeper-Convention-1million-vet-march

6 posted on 10/13/2019 5:09:44 PM PDT by Agamemnon (Darwinism is the glue that holds liberalism together)
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To: DoodleBob

I saw Bob Dylan in 1981. He’d already done a tour or two in the aftermath of Slow Train Coming and felt the backlash so for the show I saw he did a blend of oldies and his newer Christian stuff. It was a great show.


7 posted on 10/13/2019 5:19:14 PM PDT by xp38
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To: Agamemnon

https://www.chabad.org/news/article_cdo/aid/573406/jewish/SingerSongwriter-Bob-Dylan-Joins-Yom-Kippur-Services-in-Atlanta.htm


8 posted on 10/15/2019 5:09:15 PM PDT by Phinneous (By the way, there are Seven Laws for you too! Noahide.org)
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To: Phinneous
Your article is dated 2007. Mine is dated 2012. Seems that my information is more current than yours.

Your article does not say that Dylan has rejected his Christianity at all. The article merely says he read, and recited Jewish/Biblical texts flawlessly at Yom Kippur services in Georgia. Are you saying that a Christian cannot celebrate a traditional Yom Kippur along side Jews in a Temple setting?

I quote from Psalms daily in my prayers and from other Old Testament passages I first learned as a child.

If you do too then you, as a Jew, and I as a Christian share something in common with Bob Dylan - who by all evidences still happens to identify very much a Messianic Jew.

FReegards!

1st-Annual-Freeper-Convention-1million-vet-march

9 posted on 10/16/2019 3:28:17 PM PDT by Agamemnon (Darwinism is the glue that holds liberalism together)
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