IMPERIALS LIVE by the Imperials (1973) Impact • R-3215 |
"In many ways, the Imperials were my true introduction to what became known as Contemporary Christian Music, and the first album I had by the Imperials was their 1973 live collection. I was a teenager just beginning to work out my own Christian faith, and I listened to it over and over, impressed with their harmony arrangements, the individual voices, and the songs themselves. I was especially moved by Jesus Made Me Higher and Sherman Andrus' deep sincerity as he talked about the importance of a love relationship with Jesus as the gateway to spiritual growth. I know that this album helped lay the foundation upon which I began to build my own work as a Christian songwriter. The album will always remain an important touchstone in my spiritual and musical life."
-Dwight Liles
Dwight Liles went on to have roughly one thousand of his songs recorded by a virtual "who's who" list of Christian artists over a 30-year span.
That's the kind of reach, the kind of influence that Imperials Live had.
indiana
I had a chance recently to speak separately with Terry Blackwood and with Sherman Andrus of the Imperials and Andrus, Blackwood & Company. Both of them graciously agreed to be interviewed for this blog post and I asked how it was decided that the Imperials would release a double live album in 1973. "We had a good working relationship with the Benson company," Terry Blackwood replied, "but we didn't really make the decision on when records were recorded or released. I guess [producer] Bob MacKenzie was probably the one who said it was time to do a live album. And since we had so many songs available, he just decided we should do a double album."
Bob MacKenzie |
Terry said that MacKenzie was very "high energy" and influential when it came to things like song selection. "But Bob was more of a motivator for us than a great producer," Blackwood stated, candidly. Sherman Andrus said that MacKenzie, who was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in the year 2000, had a lot of clout within the Benson company and was the main producer for a while for the Imperials, Tim Sheppard, and the other contemporary artists on the Impact label. "He had very strong opinions, musically and otherwise," Andrus said. "He was a very hard working guy. Unfortunately, he died rather young. I don't know the nature of his illness, but he worked so hard I wouldn't be surprised if it was stress-related." MacKenzie was also responsible for Sherman Andrus becoming an Imperial (more about that a little later). Bob MacKenzie passed away in October of 2000. He was only 62 years old.
The Tivoli Theatre in its prime |
This album was released the same year that Andrae Crouch & the Disciples recorded a live album at the famed Carnegie Hall in New York City. I asked Terry what caused the Imperials to settle on the Tivoli Theatre in the mid-sized city of Richmond, Indiana. "We had been working with a promoter in Indiana quite a bit," he answered. "His name was Jan Clark. And he took us all over Indiana - well, all around the area where he lived. In fact, Indiana was one of the states where we were most popular. We sang at colleges and auditoriums all over Indiana."
The historic Tivoli Theatre, originally opened in 1928, was damaged by fire in the mid-80s and later fell into near-total disrepair. For a while, a jewelry store (Hoppe Jewelers) operated from the front of the building. It also became a movie theater ("Sidewalk Cinema"). From what I've been able to dig up online, it is now permanently closed but the building is still there.
Terry continued: "Indiana is probably the state where we were most in demand. I'm not sure why, exactly. They just really liked what we did."
So...it would be a 2-record set recorded live at the Tivoli Theatre in the Hoosier state. But let's back it up a bit and learn more about what led up to this moment.
beginnings
Jake Hess was born in 1927 to poor sharecroppers in Alabama. He had eleven brothers and sisters. At age 16, Hess started singing with gospel quartets. By the time the early 60s rolled around, Jake Hess was a legendary singer of southern gospel music, having sung with The Statesmen from 1948 to 1963.
Jake Hess |
At that point, Hess had the idea to hand pick those that he considered to be the best singers at each position in order to create something of a "super group." Normally, a new group would be formed by auditioning young or "unattached" singers. But Hess approached successful, well-known singers who were already established in other groups and offered them the chance to be a part of this new endeavor. Those who initially said yes were: tenor singer Sherrill Nielsen from the Speer Family; baritone Gary McSpadden who was with the Oak Ridge Boys at the time; and a smooth bass singer from L.A. named Armond Morales, along with pianist Henry Slaughter, both coming over from the Weatherford Quartet.
This new group would be called Jake Hess and the Imperials.
Jake Hess' new venture would differ from other groups in a couple of important ways. First, there was a morals clause that members of the Imperials were required to sign. This was important because, unbeknownst to many devotees of southern gospel music, many of the members of the most popular groups...well...let's just say they didn't exactly walk the straight and narrow when not on stage. Alcoholism and womanizing was rampant. Hess had no patience with all of that. Later on, Hess decided to use electric guitars and drums on stage, which raised eyebrows and caused some grumbling back in the 60s.
Jake Hess and the Imperials hit the ground running, recording multiple albums per year in the early days of their existence. In 1966, Nielsen left the group and was replaced by a young singer with a crystal clear tenor voice from Lansing, Michigan by the name of Jim Murray. After that, Slaughter left the group and was replaced by an Italian New Yorker named Joe Moscheo. Next to go would be McSpadden (the only man who could ever say that he sang with the Statesmen, Oak Ridge Boys, Imperials, and Bill Gaither Trio, four huge franchise names in gospel music). McSpadden was replaced by Roger Wiles. But a huge blow came when doctors told Jake Hess that his health was such that he needed to come off the road, effectively forcing him into an early retirement.
In the liner notes of the 1967 New Dimensions album, Imperials founder Jake Hess wrote these words:
"...most of my professional dreams were about organizing the Imperials. Now, if you ever had to turn a dream loose about the time it seemed to be the brightest, you know something of what I felt when the doctor said I couldn't travel with the boys anymore...I'm proud to have been associated with the Imperials. The next time you see them on stage you can say to yourself, old Hess may be at home in his living room, but there's his dream, in a new dimension, bigger than ever - Jim, Terry, Roger, Armond and Joe."
Hess' considerable shoes were capably filled by the son of a first-generation gospel singer from the deep south. His name was Terry Blackwood.
At this point, the Imperials began to experiment - ever so slightly - with music that was just beyond the boundaries of southern gospel. 1968's New Dimensions included the youth group favorite He's Everything to Me and a show tune/pop song titled The Impossible Dream. Imperials...Now, also released in '68, had a campfire/folk vibe and contained a cover of the secular hit A Thing Called Love. In 1969, they put out a groovy rendition of The Rascals' People Got To Be Free and a handful of youth-oriented Ralph Carmichael songs on their Love is the Thing! release. Little by little, the Imperials were becoming more "hip" and less "square."
With Duke Ellington, Mike Douglas and Jimmy Dean |
Their talent and impressive vocal blend began to open doors for them. It was during this time that the Imperials started doing live appearances and TV work with the likes of mainstream entertainers Mike Douglas, Jimmy Dean and Carol Channing. It's probably worth noting that they also became the backup vocal group for the King of Rock and Roll - Elvis Aron Presley.
vegas
I wrote at length in a recent post about Elvis Presley's Christian upbringing and undying love for gospel music. To revisit those details, click HERE. The Imperials served as backing vocalists for Presley off and on (mostly on) from 1966 thru 1972. They backed him on the Grammy-winning He Touched Me album, which featured Elvis singing several Imperials songs, as arranged by the group; they backed him on the motion picture release Elvis: That's the Way It Is; and they backed him live on stage in Las Vegas after the Jordanaires decided to stay in Nashville and focus on being studio singers.
The Imperials with Elvis in the motion picture That's the Way It Is |
So the Jordanaires, the Imperials, and J.D. Sumner & the Stamps all served as backing vocalists for Presley's Vegas gigs and live tours. He was the biggest pop music star in the world at that time, and yet it seems he was determined to have gospel singers on stage with him. I asked Terry Blackwood, who grew up in the same neck of the woods and whose name is synonymous with gospel music, to shed some light on the connection.
A replica of the church Elvis attended as a child stands today in Tupelo, MS |
"Well, Elvis was born in Tupelo," Blackwood said, "and I was born in Mississippi as well. He lived in a little shotgun house and had nothing, no money. They were just poor people, as were the Blackwood Brothers. My people were sharecroppers down in Choctaw County, Mississippi. But there was a lot of Gospel influence in Elvis' life, even as a kid. He attended the Assembly of God church there." Terry said that when the Blackwoods relocated to Memphis, they began attending First Assembly of God on McLemore Avenue. By this time, Presley had been "discovered" and had moved to Memphis as well. "Whenever Elvis heard that the Blackwood Brothers were going to be at First Assembly," Terry recalls, "he would leave Graceland and go over to McLemore and listen to the Blackwood Brothers sing. And that's where I first met Elvis. So he'd been a gospel music fan all his life."
We've all heard by now of the all-night singing sessions in Presley's penthouse hotel suite in Vegas. But did that really happen? I asked Terry Blackwood. "Oh, yes," he maintained. "When we were in Vegas, we would finish the second show and he would invite us up to the penthouse and we would sing gospel music around the piano. We wouldn't sing his rock and roll hits, we would sing his favorite gospel songs."
Blackwood told of one particular night when this impromptu singing session in Presley's suite seemed to really strike a chord in the heart of one of the invited guests: "There was one particular night that we were up there and Mama Cass of the Mamas & the Papas came upstairs, and she was standing around the piano with us. Joe [Moscheo] was at the piano and we were standing around, singing. Somebody suggested Amazing Grace. So we started singing Amazing Grace and I looked over at Mama Cass and she was crying. We finished all four verses of Amazing Grace, and after we finished, there was just a hush over the room. And she said, 'That's the first time I've sang that song since I was a little girl.'"
"I really believe that the Holy Spirit was always pulling on Elvis' heart, I really do," said Blackwood. "Every time we would go to that penthouse and we would sing gospel music, he would get tears in his eyes. I really do think that Elvis had a good heart. But he was just overwhelmed with success. I don't think he sought it; I think he just wanted to make a record for his mother and from there it just exploded. It was just more than he could handle. If Elvis could've made it as a gospel singer, I believe he would have. But by that time, the people demanded the songs that he had made famous."
I mentioned how unusual it was for a major secular star to include Christian music in his concerts. "He couldn't do a whole show of nothing but gospel, but he would always include songs like How Great Thou Art," Terry said. "We would do songs like that on stage with him, and especially up in the penthouse, we'd do them. There were also a lot of black gospel groups that Elvis liked - the Harmonizing Four and all of those west coast black gospel groups. That's the kind of stuff we would listen to when we were in the penthouse."
During the Elvis years, Roger Wiles left the group and was replaced for a very brief time by Larry Gatlin. But Gatlin quickly got an opportunity to go to Nashville and focus on a country career. So he was replaced by Greg Gordon. The Imperials were looking and sounding less and less like your daddy's southern gospel group and more like some kind of gospel-pop crossover band. In 1970, it is true that the group released a single-disc live album, recorded in St. Louis, that was in many ways a throwback to their southern gospel roots. But then came Time to Get It Together.
The iconic "One Way" graphic on the front cover...the modern illustration of a hipper-looking group on the back cover...and especially the songs - secular covers of the likes of Simon & Garfunkel and The Beatles, as well as Jesus Rock written by Larry Norman and Michael Omartian...it all combined to signal that the Imperials were doing a new thing.
"I think we had gotten into kind of a rut with the typical four-part southern gospel harmonies," Terry Blackwood admitted. "We wanted to stretch ourselves and try something new. I would say that there was an attempt to change the music, yes, to make us different from the rest of the southern gospel crowd.
Little did they know just how different. They weren't aware of it quite yet, but they were getting ready to break the color barrier.
bridges
"I loved Andrae," said Sherman Andrus. He was talking, of course, about Andrae Crouch, songwriter, singer, musician and bridge builder. Andrus continued: "I give Andrae most of the credit for my being able to do what I did. I came from Louisiana, that's where I was born. And I went out to California when I was about 18 years old, and I didn't know anybody. And Andrae heard me sing in a choir. And he said if he ever got a male group, he wanted to talk to me. At that time, he had a mixed groups of girls and guys called The COGICS (the Church of God in Christ Singers). So he just heard me in a church, singing in the choir, and he introduced himself to me. You know, everybody was real friendly back then."
Well, that might've been more than just a friendly personality on Andrae's part. I think it might've been a divinely-inspired appointment.
"Well, I was in the National Guard," Sherman said, "and I went away on active duty. But when I came back from the Guard, Andrae had already contacted my sister and said he had put a male group together and he wanted me to sing. And when I joined, he made me the lead singer of the group." Sherman's trademark humility was on display when he added, "He obviously heard something that nobody else heard!"
Sherman joined Andrae, Bili Thedford, Perry Morgan and Ruben Fernandez to form Andrae Crouch & the Disciples, a pivotal, contemporary group that would form a bridge between black gospel and Jesus music. "The guys were great," Andrus said, "but Andrae's tutelage was the thing that really helped me. See, he was contemporary. He was trying to have a contemporary group, and I had just come from the South where I was trying to sing like all the old black quartets, with all of this growling and carrying on, and he and his sister Sandra both would always tell me, 'No, no, no, don't sing like that. Use your pretty voice!' I mean, I was singing like what I heard growing up! But Andrae told me to sing the pretty stuff and said he would sing the hard stuff. And so that's how I evolved into that group."
Sherman told me the hardest thing he ever did was to leave Andrae Crouch & the Disciples. "Because there was no problem," he explained. "It's just that God has a way of troubling the water. You don't know why you feel the way you feel, you just know that He has something else for you. I just knew it was best for me to get out of the group."
Sherman said that in the end, he felt that his departure ended up being good for both Andrae and himself. "My dream was to make a living for my family and to minister for my entire life through music," he said. "And I knew I couldn't do that with Andrae. But when I went with the Imperials, that introduced me to a whole different sector of the country."
So Sherman Andrus ended up as the only human alive to have been a member of two of the most dynamic, storied franchises in Christian music history. And in so doing, he helped the Imperials break the color barrier in southern gospel music. "Sherman was the first black man, to my knowledge, to ever be in a southern gospel quartet," his friend and former musical mate Terry Blackwood stated. Perhaps remembering briefly what the world was like in the early 70s, Blackwood said, "We took a chance."
"Adding Sherman to the group was Bob MacKenzie's idea," said Blackwood. "Sherman had been with Andrae and was working as a soloist, and MacKenzie said, 'I know a guy who would probably fit right into the group.' So when Greg Gordon left, Joe called Sherman and asked if he would be interested."
Andrus admits to having been quite nervous about the audition.
"When I joined the group, they were the greatest voices you'll ever hear in any kind of group," Sherman said. "They actually sent for me to come and audition. And because I hadn't been singing much, I didn't think I had done a good job. But they wanted me. And my wife Winnie asked me, 'Well, what do you think?' And I told her I felt like I was singing for my life! Now, don't get this wrong, and I don't mean this in a braggadocios way, but on the West Coast with Andrae, I was the lead singer and everything revolved around me. And I didn't have to learn parts or anything, I was it! But these guys? Everybody could sing!"
"I think at that time, Sherman was anxious to do it," said Terry Blackwood. "Obviously, he had never been in a white group before. It was a big change for him and a big change for us."
And it would mark the second time that Sherman Andrus had been a part of a group of bridge builders. Andrae's group found great success building bridges between the black church and the Jesus people, which was no small task. But the Imperials had an equally tough task at hand: building bridges between southern gospel culture (which permeated much of the traditional church world at that time) and this vast audience of believers out there who were ready for a cultural expression with which they could identify. And to be a visible demonstration of the unity that could be achieved where race relations were concerned. Win-win.
As I write this post in 2021, there's been a lot of talk in recent days about racists, race in America, systemic racism, etc. Millennials and Gen Z can be forgiven, perhaps, because they are simply believing what they've been told in public schools and higher ed, or what they hear from their media and pop culture sources. But people my age have short memories all of a sudden. I remember when there was clear, identifiable racism being practiced and expressed as part of daily life. Having been born in 1962, I was alive and walking around on the planet when segregation was still a thing...when separate rest rooms and water fountains were still a thing. I grew up in Alabama, where my favorite college football team (Roll Tide!) did not have a single black player until 1971. We have traveled such an incredible distance. And I think the story today should not be 'How many racists are left?' but rather, 'Look how far we've come!'
But yes, things were still tenuous in the early 70s, and Terry Blackwood was right when he said the Imperials took a chance by adding Andrus to the lineup. I asked Terry how the Imperials' audience responded to Sherman. "Our audiences loved him," he answered. "They responded very positively to him. In fact, I never heard one word of negative feedback. At least not to us. Some of the southern gospel people may have had a problem with it, but they wouldn't tell us that. I imagine it was just something that was said in the back rooms, I don't know. But having Sherman in the group never hurt us at all, especially not with the people. As someone has said, singers don't buy tickets, people do. So when you're needing to sell tickets for concerts, you want the congregation, the people, to buy the tickets. And I think we had great success with Sherman.
tcb
Andrus told me that one thing most people probably would not have guessed is that he was actually more conservative than the other guys in the group. He joined the Imperials during the tail end of the Elvis years, and singing in Vegas sort of ate away at his conscience at first. "I grew up with the idea that if you sang anything but gospel music, you were gonna bust hell wide open," Andrus told me, with a smile in his voice. "So in Las Vegas, I was the most uncomfortable guy on stage! I did what I was supposed to do, but it frightened me because of my upbringing. So that was part of what the guys learned about me as we went along. But I was very conservative."
Andrus was able to take part in the whole Elvis experience during his early days with the Imperials. There are literally thousands of stories out there about Presley's legendary generosity. Here's one more from Sherman Andrus:
"Elvis made me feel so special. I didn't think he would be as outgoing with me as he was. But he was just like a big country boy. And he welcomed me the minute the guys brought me to his suite. He said, 'Now you're one of us. You're a member of the Memphis Mafia.' And I joked around with him, and I said, 'Yeah, but all the guys that you say are part of the Memphis Mafia, you give these TCB chains to. And I don't have one.' And he said, 'I'm gonna get you one.' A few nights later we were all at the Desert Inn backing up Jimmy Dean. Elvis waited until the curtains were almost opened, and he put these jewelry boxes in each of our hands. So when the curtain opened, there we stood with jewelry boxes in our hands. So we did our little segment and went back to the green room, and when we checked our boxes, everybody had a bracelet. Except for me. I had a bracelet and a TCB necklace. The guy was very thoughtful."
Sherman agrees with Terry that there was more to Elvis than Jailhouse Rock and Blue Suede Shoes. Something much deeper. In fact, strange as it might sound, Andrus told me he believes Presley was actually anointed by God to do what he did. "I talked to him about that," Andrus revealed. "I said, 'I have never seen anybody loved the way you are.' People just loved him. I told him, 'It's not a natural thing. That's a God-given thing. That's not something a man could give to you. They love you because God's hand is on you.' And he agreed with me."
"He was quite a guy," Sherman recalls.
This man from conservative Louisiana, who felt entirely uncomfortable about even singing in Las Vegas hotels told me, "I thank God that we were able to sing with him. It was one of the great thrills of my life, getting to hang with Elvis and just to see how God blessed him."
Well, all good things usually come to an end, and the time did come when the Imperials just could no longer afford to be at Colonel Tom Parker's beck and call any longer.
Colonel Tom Parker with Elvis |
"When you worked with Elvis, you kind of just had to put the rest of your contacts on hold until he called," explained Terry Blackwood. "If he called, great. But if he didn't, you just sat there by the phone waiting for a call. Actually, it wasn't Elvis that would call you, it was Tom Diskin, Colonel Tom Parker's assistant. In fact, I never spoke a word to the Colonel. Never. Joe was actually the spokesman for the group; he's the one who kind of got us into the Elvis arena. Joe's the one who talked for the group, but I don't think he ever talked to the Colonel either! He talked to Tom Diskin, his assistant, because the Colonel wouldn't talk to us! Joe would ask the Colonel a question, and then the Colonel would lean over to Tom and say, 'Tell him I said such-and-such.'" Blackwood chuckled as he said, "I don't think he was necessarily trying to be mean, but he made it seem like, 'You know what, you guys aren't really necessary. We could find anybody to do this.' "
"He didn't realize that he had probably the best male group he could get," Terry Blackwood stated.
The Imperials ceased working with Elvis Presley due to scheduling conflicts. Within a year, they would stop backing Jimmy Dean as well.
'lost our marbles'
"The very first album I did with the Imperials had a brown cover and was just called Imperials," Andrus recalls. "And it would be perfect for today. But back then, people really thought that we had messed up!" Sherman said the group wanted his first outing to be something special, because there were rumors and stories going around within the industry about how Sherman being with the Imperials just might "mess everything up." "So we put out this album in 1972," he said, "with songs written by Kris Kristofferson, Stevie Wonder, Ray Stevens, Richard Carpenter and Carole King. I think we only had one or two songs that were outright gospel. But the album's production was incredible. The guy who wrote out all of the arrangements was a man named Bergen White."
"But when that album came out, people thought we had lost our marbles," Sherman said. "I loved the production on it, and it would be great for now. But it wasn't received so well back then. That record didn't do anything."
"So then here comes the live album," said Andrus.
side 1
Can't see it with your eyes, hold it in your hand
Like the wind that covers our land
Strong enough to rule the heart of any man
This thing called love
It can lift you up, it can put you down
Take your world and turn it all around
Ever since time, nothing's ever been found stronger than love
Cue up the Jesus Music heavy hitters. Next, the Imperials would cover songs by Larry Norman and Andrae Crouch. Terry Blackwood was featured over a driving beat on Norman's youth group anthem, Sweet Sweet Song of Salvation. I asked Terry if the songs they chose to record caused young people from the Jesus Movement to give the Imperials a listen. "Of course, yes," he answered, enthusiastically. And then he told a story about what I can only assume was the famed Explo '72.
Andrae Crouch and Larry Norman |
After Confidence, we finally hear the spoken word coming from Joe Moscheo. Joe begins by saying some very nice things about Sherman...but then regrettably repeats a few cringe-worthy prepared jokes/remarks that haven't aged well. There's a video making the rounds on YouTube of Jimmy Dean doing the same thing while introducing the group on his television show. I'm sure it was something Sherman just had to put up with a lot back in the day. Then again, it really was a different time...I was watching some old reruns of Sanford & Son and The Jeffersons with my kids a few years ago, and we were all shocked to hear the 'n-word' being used by the black characters on those network TV shows, like it was nothing. Needless to say, we're all a lot more sensitive to such things today.
side 2
From Three Dog Night to Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. I hate to repeat myself...but what other southern gospel group could begin to get away with this?! The guys deliver a very smooth rendition of Teach Your Children by CSNY. I was curious about how the Imperials' audiences responded to all of the secular cover tunes that they worked into their shows. "Well, at that point we could do no wrong," Terry Blackwood candidly stated. "Everything we did, people loved. I think they accepted it because they knew that our lives were consistent. And this material that we did was different, it was unlike anything they had ever heard. And so they just loved everything we sang. If we'd had moral issues or things like that, it would've been tougher. But I think our reputations were such that the people understood that hey, these guys are trying to do something a little different. Let's encourage them."
Who really cares when your song is sung
When you've seen all you wanted to see
And become what you wanted to be
And you still don't really know where you belong
Where do you fly when your dreams have kissed you goodbye
When your friends have gone and here you are alone
When there's no place for you to hide
No one to take your side
And you feel like the only one out on your own
To a Love that never ends
To the One whose arms are open wide
Run on inside
You should have come sooner
credits
side 3
Water, water, I just gotta be over on the other side
It won't be long now, 'cause I'm movin' on
In the mornin' you're gonna find me gone
Movin' over on the other side
Movin' over on the other side
Come on and follow me, you'll be satisfied
No more lonesome city misery over on the other side
That's why everybody ought to be over on the other side
Now don't you tell me to get at work at nine
I'm gonna do things in my own sweet time
Movin' over on the other side
Come on and follow me, you'll be satisfied
On the other side (the sun will shine)
On the other side (we'll learn to be content)
I know (where the grass is green)
We're gonna step ashore (and the air is clean)
There we'll weep no more
Leave your troubles far behind on the other side
Next up is yet another mainstream cover tune. The Imperials take on Invocation by The Carpenters...and it is a thing of beauty. The arrangement, the majestic harmony and exquisite blend...completely a capella, and without being drenched in reverb. Of course, today you would hear a track like this and think to yourself, "I wonder how much of that had to be fixed in the studio?" Turns out the answer is none.
"Back then, I don't think we knew that you could go into the studio and fix your vocals," Terry Blackwood admitted. "So I think that everything on here is actually what went down on tape. Of course, they mixed it in the studio, but we didn't do any adjustments to the vocals. That's unheard of nowadays." Yes. Yes, it is.
So Omartian was young, and was already a respected session player for secular bands, but Jesus (and a girl named Stormie) had gotten a hold of his heart and he was actually involved on the periphery of the Jesus Movement. So this becomes one more alliance between the Imperials and the Jesus people. With Gordon gone, Sherman Andrus took the lead on the song now, and made it his own. Sherman took it to another level.
side 4
Jesus
Jesus, come back to earth
From the segregation
And the love of death
The destruction of love
"...Lord, we thank You for all that You've done here tonight. We thank You for the presence of Your Holy Spirit. We're not trying to take any of the glory or any of the honor away from You, Lord. We came here to praise and lift up Your name...and we pray, Lord, that everyone that's here tonight...just let them come closer to You, Lord...and let this night stand out in their lives as a night that they have really, indeed, decided to follow You..."