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Faith Love & Joy - Great Spiritual Inspirations |
Jonathan Butler |
első megjelenés éve: 2010 |
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(2010)
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 CD |
Kérjen árajánlatot! |
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1. | The Annointed
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2. | Following the Light
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3. | Story of Life
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4. | New Life
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5. | Let's Stand Together
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6. | Amen
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7. | I Believe
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8. | Dancing on the Shore
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9. | The Source
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10. | If I Ever Lose This Heaven
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11. | The Spirit
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12. | You Make Me Whole
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13. | Anniversary
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14. | My Only Joy
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Jazz
For the first time ever, N-Coded Music presents Jonathan Butler 'Faith, Love & Joy: Great Spiritual Inspirations', a collection of his very best spiritual selections. This collection spans all his N-Coded releases, gathers his best songs for a true inspirational experience.
Born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa during apartheid, Jonathan Butler started singing and playing acoustic guitar as a child. Racial segregation and poverty during apartheid has been the subject of many of his records. His first single, the first by a black artist played by white radio stations in the racially segregated South Africa, earned a Sarie Award, South Africa's equivalent to the Grammys. At the start of his solo career, Butler was signed to Jive Records in 1977, and in the early 1980s he moved to England where he remained for 17 years. His international breakthrough came in 1987 with his Grammy nominated hit "Lies' and his version of the Staple Singers song 'If You're Ready (Come Go with Me)', which he performed with Ruby Turner.
Butler has maintained a loyal following through 80s, 90s and 2000's in South Africa, the U.S. and Europe with top selling and charting releases on labels such as N-Coded Music, Maranatha, Rendezvous and Mack Avenue. Jonathan Butler's newest album 'So Strong' is also topping the Jazz charts around the world and keeping his fans satisfied.
'Faith, Love & Joy: Great Spiritual Inspirations' delivers a handpicked selection worship songs which explore the deep faith based influence of Jonathan Butler during his prime years with N-Coded Music. A must have for fans of Jonathan Butler, Smooth Jazz, Gospel and the Christian market.
Jonathan Butler
Active Decades: '80s and '00s Born: Oct, 1961 in Cape Town, South Africa Genre: Jazz Styles: Urban, Jazz-Funk, Fusion, Crossover Jazz, Smooth Jazz
South African expatriate Jonathan Butler isn't really a jazz artist, but his laid-back, slightly jazz-tinged approach to R&Bpop has earned the singer/guitarist/songwriter/producer a lot of supporters in the urban contemporary, adult contemporary, quiet storm, and smooth jazzNAC markets. Butler has enjoyed a following since the late '70s, although he reached his commercial peak in the late '80s, and he continues to tour and record in the 21st century. Born in Cape Town, South Africa, in October 1961, Butler was only a child when he started singing and playing acoustic guitar. Butler, who was the youngest of about 12 children, absorbed a variety of music when he was a kid. He was an admirer of South African stars like singer Miriam Makeba, but he was also hip to the American soul and jazz artists who lived thousands of miles away in the United States. Stevie Wonder became a major influence, and so did former-hard bop-guitarist-turned-R&Bpop-singer George Benson. Sadly, Butler learned about the horrors of South Africa's racist apartheid laws at an early age; when he was growing up, South Africa had an oppressive system of racial segregation that was quite comparable to the jim crow laws that plagued the southern U.S. until the early '60s. Apartheid (which, thankfully, has since been abolished) was the subject of some of Butler's '80s recordings. Although he was never a hardcore protest singer à la Gil Scott-Heron, Peter Tosh, or Bob Marley, he wrote some anti-apartheid songs here and there. Butler, who spoke Afrikaans before becoming fluent in English, was a teenager when British producer Clive Calder signed him to the London-based Jive Records in 1977; Introducing Jonathan Butler, his largely instrumental debut album, was released that year and employed Bob Cranshaw (who is best known for his long association with Sonny Rollins) on bass. At the time, Butler was often compared to Benson, a man who, like Butler, has been praised for both his singing and his guitar playing. It wasn't long before the teenage Butler won a Sarie Award, which is the South African equivalent of an American Grammy or a Canadian Juno Award. But Butler didn't remain in South Africa much longer; in the early '80s, he escaped from apartheid and moved to England (where Jive's main office was located, and where Butler remained for 17 years). Butler maintained a loyal following in the '80s and '90s, not only in his native South Africa, but also, in the U.S. and Europe. One of his biggest releases came in 1987, when Jive released a self-titled album that contained a hit cover of the Staple Singers' "If You're Ready (Come With Me)" (which found him performing a duet with British urban contemporary singer Ruby Turner). And Butler's next Jive album, 1988's More Than Friends, was also a big seller; that CD gave us the major hits "Lies" (which was nominated for a Grammy) and "Sarah, Sarah." Butler continued to record for Jive in the early '90s; then, in the late '90s and early 2000s, he provided three albums for N-Coded Music: 1997's Do You Love Me?, 1999's Story of Life, and 2000's The Source. After that, Butler (who turned 40 in October 2001) left N-Coded and moved to Warner Bros., which released Surrender in June 2002. ---Alex Henderson, All Music Guide |
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