|
| |
| | Jesus Movement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The music of the Jesus Movement eventually became the full-fledged industry of contemporary Christian music. |  | | Christian music, or Jesus Music, began as an industry within the Jesus Movement. |  | | Perhaps the most illustrative aspect of the Jesus Movement was its communal aspect. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_Movement
(1132 words)
|
|
| |
| | Jesus music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Jesus Music artists were typically hippies and street musicians that had converted to Christianity during the Jesus Movement of the late 1960s. |  | | Jesus Music (aka gospel beat music in the UK) was the name given to American Christian rock artists in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before the Christian music industry had begun to take form. |  | | By the mid 1970s, the phrase Contemporary Christian music had been coined, developing directly out of Jesus Music, and Christian music magazines, radio stations and record labels had begun to pop up around the country. |
|
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_Music
(331 words)
|
|
| |
| | Home - Nancy Honeytree |
 | | Grateful to have been a part of the Christian growth of many folks who were converted during the Jesus Movement, Honeytree's ministry stays "evergreen" as she challenges today's pioneers of the faith to keep pressing onward to their own frontiers. |  | | One of the few female solo artists to emerge from the Jesus Movement, Honeytree's sensitive songs once earned her the nickname the "First Lady of Jesus Music." The bossa nova style "Clean Before My Lord" and the rocking "Rattle Me, Shake Me" became theme songs to Christians in the turbulent 70's. |  | | What a blessing it was to discover that somebody was singing their favorite style of music for Jesus!" says Honeytree. |
|
http://www.honeytree.org
(218 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Cross Movement - Music |
 | | Time Magazine found The Cross Movement's lyrics to be so compelling that they referred to the Ambassador's rap "Blood Spilla" as the voice to educate America on the new pop music. |  | | Musically, Holy Culture is a return to The Cross Movement's East Coast-flavored roots, which the group credits as their main musical influence. |  | | The members of The Cross Movement were originally members of other Christian rap groups who ministered up and down the east coast in the early 1990s. |
|
http://www.christianitytoday.com/music/artists/crossmovement.html
(1062 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Misfit - Reviews |
 | | The "Jesus Movement" was in full swing and we were all swept away, doing all we could to express His love to anyone who would listen. |  | | Musically speaking, it's pretty good to listen back to something you did a few decades ago and not want to change one note. |  | | This album was, simply put, real life set to music. |
|
http://www.the-misfit.com/reviews.htm
(848 words)
|
|
| |
| | Music Review: The Cross Movement: "Human Emergency" |
 | | "The Cross Movement is a team of ministry minded individuals who primarily exist to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ throughout urban areas, and assist in discipling those who believe. |  | | Somebody recently told me that Cross Movement's music is like apologetics in rap form and I totally agree with him. |  | | The more I listened, the more I wanted to learn about this group, so I went to their website www.crossmovement.com. |
|
http://www.emmanuelchurch.net/resources/cd_reviews/rapdancehip/the_cross_movement/cd_review_human_emergency.shtml
(662 words)
|
|
| |
| | Doubt by Jesus Jones CD |
 | | Following their debut album, Jesus Jones released a pair of singles in 1990, "Right Here, Right Now" and "Real, Real, Real," which lifted them into the realm of superstardom, in the United States anyway. |  | | At home in England, they were grouped in with the so-called "grebo" movement--scruffy young men playing speedy pop songs shot through with humor and adolescent ennui--which consisted of bands like the Wonder Stuff, Ned's Atomic Dustbin, and Pop Will Eat Itself, all of which had devout followings throughout Europe. |  | | With "Right Here, Right Now," Jesus Jones secured their place in pop history, albeit as one-hit wonders. |
|
http://www.cduniverse.com/search/xx/music/pid/1109134/a/Doubt.htm
(396 words)
|
|
| |
| | Young Urban Black Male Ministries ---- Philippians 3:10 ---- The Cross Movement |
 | | The Cross Movement is an alliance of solo artists who use who have co-labored with others in the ministry for the past 7 years, using hip-hop as a tool to promote the Gospel of Jesus Christ. |  | | The Cross Movement has been given grace to address the hip-hop culture with the truth of Jesus Christ. |  | | We have also started a record label, Cross Movement Records, and released our 2nd compilation album, |
|
http://www.yubm.org/CrossMvt.htm
(526 words)
|
|
| |
| | cMusicWeb.com: The Cross Movement |
 | | Their first record took CCM listeners by storm: here was a group rapping entirely about Jesus Christ with no apologies. |  | | The Cross Movement is well known as one of the groups that legitimized gospel rap to a mainstream audience. |  | | Creating amazing hip-hop as a ministry, the Cross Movement's latest hits stores on October 26th. |
|
http://cmusicweb.com/hiphop/crossmovement/index.shtml
(231 words)
|
|
| |
| | Compare Prices and Read Reviews on Everything - Teenage Jesus & The Jerks at Epinions.com |
 | | Here are the roots of the no-wave movement, which sprang out of New York with artists like Teenage Jesus, Sonic Youth, and the Contortions. |  | | The brilliance of Teenage Jesus and the Jerks is that, in their music, they combined a vision of nihilism and the psychosis of modern life with an ascetic, tightly-structured musical style. |  | | Frankly, the truth is that Teenage Jesus didn't care what anybody thought of their stuff. |
|
http://www.epinions.com/content_91596426884
(703 words)
|
|
| |
| | Teenage Jesus & the Jerks - Free Music Downloads, Videos, CDs, MP3s, Bio, Merchandise and Links |
 | | Cacophonous, confrontational, and fiercely inaccessible, Teenage Jesus generally played ten- to 15-minute shows, never released a full-length album, and disbanded after a relatively brief existence. |  | | Teenage Jesus & the Jerks - Free Music Downloads, Videos, CDs, MP3s, Bio, Merchandise and Links |  | | Even so, they were instrumental in laying the groundwork for the noise rock movement of the '80s, and their work still sounds as forbidding and uncompromising as anything their spiritual followers recorded. |
|
http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/music/artist/bio/0,,516097,00.html
(363 words)
|
|
| |
| | AAW_poetry_essay |
 | | A Puerto Rican native born in 1901, Jesus Colon is the intellectual founding father of the Nuyorican movement that developed among Puerto Rican novelists, essayists, and poets living in New York City. |  | | This theme is echoed repeatedly in the poetry of the Nuyorican Movement, as shown below. |  | | This essay briefly summarizes the themes in island poetry and the movements that influenced Puerto Rican poetry in the United States. |
|
http://www.ncteamericancollection.org/aaw_poetry_essay.htm
(2397 words)
|
|
| |
| | Various Artists: Yes New York - PopMatters Music Review |
 | | Aside from having incredibly great band names (Teenage Jesus & the Jerks!), these bands represented and pushed forward a movement that captured the zeitgeist of a city and its sound. |  | | Comprised of the "No-Wave" stylings of four bands with four songs each (Mars, D.N.A., James Chance & the Contortions, Teenage Jesus & the Jerks), No New York was brought to life by legendary producer Brian Eno (David Bowie, U2). |  | | In fact, it has been 25 years since the inspiring No New York compilation was released. |
|
http://www.popmatters.com/music/reviews/various/various-yesnewyork.shtml
(1021 words)
|
|
| |
| | Human Superstars - Lyrics - House of Reps Album - The Cross Movement |
 | | Human Superstars - Lyrics - House of Reps Album - The Cross Movement |  | | Behind the scenes Christ rules all the kings, pulls all the strings · They borrow His signet ring · Bring your false gods if you think theyre proper · I gotcha, were about to gamble like Procter · Youve got toevery ones got to take the test · Who is Jesus Christ? |  | | · Were in the era of the human superstar: · Oh, my God! |
|
http://www.crossmovement.com/lyrics/houseofreps/humansuperstars.htm
(1021 words)
|
|
| |
| | Amazon.com: Smoke in the Shadows: Music |
 | | Part of NYC's "No Wave" movement of the late 1970's spoken-word performance artist and confrontationalist Lydia Lunch began her career at the not-so-tender age of 16 as the lead vocalist for Teenage Jesus and the Jerks. |  | | listen to 50 incredible albums: by Jordan Ruud, teenage music elitist |  | | Customers who bought titles by Lydia Lunch also bought titles by these artists: |
|
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B000667GRS?v=glance
(744 words)
|
|
| |
| | TrouserPress.com :: James Chance |
 | | Arriving from Milwaukee with a saxophone on his knee, James (Siegfried) Chance/White/Black quickly became the linchpin of the budding New York no wave movement, appearing in Teenage Jesus and the Jerks with Lydia Lunch. |  | | Similar in all respects except personnel to Off White, Sax Maniac (complete with a cover of "That Old Black Magic") is a fevered masterpiece of white funk. |  | | More than any of his contemporaries, Chance turned harsh, abrasive music into an art form; at one time or another, almost everyone of any importance on the New York art-rock scene was in his band. |
|
http://www.trouserpress.com/entry.php?a=james_chance
(331 words)
|
|
| |
| | Jesus Christ Superstar |
 | | Judas, Jesus, Mary Magdelene, Caiaphas, Annus, and Pontius Pilate, singers who act. |  | | Choreographed movement, production numbers that take the form of mini-pageants. |  | | Judas meets with the Priests of Judaea and resulting from the meeting agrees to betray Jesus for which he will receive 30 pieces of silver in payment. |
|
http://www.nodanw.com/shows_j/jesus_christ_superstar.htm
(521 words)
|
|
| |
| | MagnaPhone Magazine - Pure Music |
 | | Since she nearly single-handedly spearheaded the No-Wave movement in 1976 by forming Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, Lydia Lunch has been a performance artist stunning in her creativity, confrontational vision, and longevity. |  | | In the 80s she collaborated with such underground legends as Richard Kern, Nick Cave, Foetus and Die Haut, and recording some classic solo work such as Queen of Siam and In Limbo. |  | | No, its because the sounds and the smells and the atmosphere only remind me that someday Im going to die, and its probably not going to be with six beautiful young women looking after me on my private island in the tropics. |
|
http://www.magnaphonemagazine.com
(642 words)
|
|
| |
| | A New Jesus Movement |
 | | Jesus Music website, History of the Jesus Movement and an exhaustive description of every Jesus Music performer that every walked the face of the earth. |  | | Jesus Music website, History of the Jesus Movement and an exhaustive description of every Jesus Music performer that every walked the face of the earth plus sound clips. |  | | Another (better) history of the Jesus movement with descriptions of the key people and list of the most collectible Jesus Music albums. |
|
http://members.aol.com/diggamma/rap/jesusmovement3.htm
(636 words)
|
|
| |
| | Jesus Movement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Jesus Movement was the Christian component of the Hippie Movement, composed of the Jesus People or Jesus Freaks. |  | | The Jesus Movement was a counter-counter cultural movement. |  | | Unlike most Christian movements, there was no single leader of the Jesus Movement. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_Movement
(1007 words)
|
|
| |
| | Biblical Theology Bulletin: The family in the Jesus movement |
 | | The purpose of this study is to explore the possible continuity between the Jesus movement before Jesus' death and the movement of his disciples after his resurrection in their attitude towards the family. |  | | This research reveals the importance of the Jesus group and of the households that their preaching reached, in explaining the continuity between the pre- and post-Easter periods of the Jesus movement in their attitude towards family. |  | | According to him, in the early Jesus movement there were two types of disciples: the wandering charismatics, from whom Jesus demanded the renunciation of family ties, and the sedentary followers who remained at home and supported the itinerants. |
|
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0LAL/is_3_34/ai_n6260528
(1326 words)
|
|
| |
| | Talk:Nazarene - Art History Online Reference and Guide |
 | | The movement's view of Jesus accords most closely with those of Unification Church and Islam, which they support the idea of Jesus' non-Trinitarian humanity along with his claim to Messiahship, yet the affinity remains on the theological level and there are no relationships between these faiths and the Netzarim movement. |  | | The movement's view of Jesus accords most closely with those of Unification Church and Islam, which support the idea of Jesus' non-Trinitarian humanity along with his claim to Messiahship, yet the affinity remains on the theological level and there are no relationships between these faiths and the Netzarim movement. |  | | And while the movement's combination of Jewish ritual and belief that Jesus is the Messiah is characteristic of Messianic Judaism, most Messianic Jewish groups share Christian theology, and insist that Jesus was God incarnate, part of the Trinity. |
|
http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/Talk:Nazarene
(1326 words)
|
|
| |
| | Religious Movements Homepage: Jesus People USA |
 | | Three decades after the Jesus People Movement emerged from the youth counter-culture of the 1960s, Jesus People USA is one of only a few communical groups to survive in tact. |  | | Although the "Jesus Movement" was not entirely self-conscious as a movement, they felt as though they were participants in a genuine awakening, comparing themselves to the Great Awakening of the eighteenth century (Enroth:15). |  | | Onlookers knew these young people by various names: "Jesus Freaks," "Jesus People," and "Street Christians." A large proportion of these youthful evangelists for Jesus were only a short while removed from drugs, "free love," and alienation from "straight society." They spoke of a "Jesus Revolution" and believed that the endtimes were near (Enroth:12). |
|
http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/jpusa.html
(2490 words)
|
|
|