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Lay It Down
Artist: Jennifer Knapp
Label: Gotee Records 
Length: 10 tracks/36.22 minutes

Into You
All Consuming Fire
When Nothing Satisfies

Picture: A young woman sits in a darkened corner, her acoustic guitar resting across her knees, singing her heart out to her God.

Picture: That same young woman steps to the front of a stage, and with amps blasting behind her, wails a love song to her Lord.

These two pictures, and a few somewhere in between, are what make Jennifer Knapp who she is, and make her music what it is.

After Knapp's debut disc, people were comparing her to seemingly every other singer/songwriter with even a hint of attitude in her music, from Alanis Morissette to Sheryl Crow. The principal problem with comparing Jennifer Knapp to anybody is that those to whom Knapp is being compared invariably pale beside her.

Knapp sings with pure passion: no breathy, ethereal vocals here, just an incredibly strong wall of voice. The heaviest song on the album, and thus closest to my heart, is "Into You."

     I wanna know You
     Better than I do
     Relieve me from myself, bring me into You

Lyrically, the entire album stays in this same vein. It's all about one person, who wants more than anything to know and touch the Almighty God.

     Alpha and Omega
     Prince of Peace
     O, my King of Kings
     The Great I Am, Jehovah Jireh
     Who cares for me
     The Holy One, the Holy Father of the Blessed Trinity
     All Consuming Fire, burn in me
     (From "All Consuming Fire")

Knapp duets with one of the godmothers of Christian rock music, Margaret Becker, on "When Nothing Satisfies," a song which alternates the cry of one whose sole desire is God, with the words of God: "When nothing satisfies you, hold My hand."

The only misstep here, if it can even be called that, is Knapp's cover of Shawn Colvin's "Diamond in the Rough." It's not that Knapp doesn't have the vocal authority to pull it off; it just seems out of place with the worship of the rest of the album. Making the song fit requires some lyrical re-interpretation.

But, that's a small gripe indeed, given the rest of the album. Simple, passionate, and powerful, but a bit too short at only 36 minutes. More, please!

Josh Marihugh 3/18/2000


 

Situating herself at the pop-end of the acoustic music which has sprung up in the wake of the alt. country movement, Jennifer Knapp has produced an unusually earthy album for the Christian market. Knapp's music would sit well with fans of writers such as Sheryl Crow, but the album is unfortunately lacking obvious singles to take her to Crow's audience. As a whole, however, it is a self-assured recording which deserves to win Knapp attention.

James Stewart 4/4/2000

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