Artist: Cindy Morgan
Producer: Wayne Kirkpatrick
Buy it
Perhaps the most underrated singer/songwriter in CCM's postmodern era, Cindy Morgan is still as strong an artist as ever. Although she's a fifteen-year, nine-album veteran in an industry with an average life-expectancy of fifteen months and one album, Morgan is not merely a survivor. She has matured and improved, experimented and learned, and never stopped taking risks.
Her clear, strong voice and cover girl looks had the label stuffing her into the Dance/Pop Diva mold on her debut CD - but her true colors shone through even then. The haunting, worshipful, self-penned piano ballad at its close ("How Could I Ask for More") marked her as a sonic and lyrical force to be reckoned with. That talented young woman has become a truly unique voice in the world of Christian music and Postcards shows how.
After a five year break between albums (Morgan became a mom again after her last), Postcards is a breath of fresh air. In addition to her piano-driven center, Morgan here tries her hand at roots music and semi-industrial pop to largely successful effect.
And she continues to grow lyrically. On 'Enough' she really takes on a confrontational edge worthy of classic troublemaker Steve Taylor. And then there's the jaw-dropping honesty of "Mother," which is a cry to Morgan's own mother over the recent breakdown of their relationship. It is a heartstopper. The urgency of approaching middle age really strips off the nonsense in one's life - and it sure show on this album.
This is certainly among her best albums and improves with successive listens.
Final score: A minus
Thursday, February 01, 2007
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