
Sparkle
Artist: Sarah Jahn
Label: Warner Alliance, 1997
By: Chris Parks
You can't judge a book by its cover, or so the saying
goes. The general principle may be applied to recorded music and, thankfully,
applies literally to Sarah Jahn's debut release on Warner Alliance records,
Sparkle.
With the faux packaging cover, the artsy pictures
of the artist on each page, and the multiple typefaces and scattered layouts
common in almost any magazine ad, the packaging seems to promise this week's
pop queen. And Sarah Jahn's rapid journey from music major at a Christian
college to signed recording artist (see the Tollbooth's interview) might
be taken, by the cynical, as proof that she is this week's pop queen,
picked to record copies of what's hot, and packaged for the market. But,
happily, the music inside delivers better.
Sarah has the chops to be taken seriously. Her
vocals are smooth and strong, so that the lyrics come through clearly.
I find good comparisons difficult to make, but Sarah's voice doesn't have
the edge of a Tiffany Arbuckle or an Alanis Morrisette, or the little-girl
quality of a Leigh Bingham Nash. Sarah's voice has a strength not
unlike Annie Lennox of the 80s band "The Eurythmics." I might even call
it an r&b feel.
The edge that there is to the songs on Sparkle
is produced more by the interplay of lyrical and musical arrangement than
by vocal quality. For instance in "Chronic," a stripped down musical arrangement
layers various keyboard and guitar effects just below a plaintive vocal
track. The result conveys an intense desire for healing without vocal histrionics
or musical frenzy.
The music is largely retro in style. There are acoustic
and electric guitars, some jangly, and some jazzy tinges played by Matt
Bronleewe and Glenn Rosenstein. There is an almost bewildering variety
of acoustic and electronic keyboards (accordion, piano, 70's-style electronic
keyboard effects, and Hammond organ) played by Jeremy Bose. Miguel De Jesus
plays the bass. In describing the finished product, Sarah displays
a sense of humor: the liner notes contain a disclaimer that the album was
"recorded and mixed using the most inappropriate combination of digital
and analog technology" and stating that the resulting sound, along with
any flaws, was "approved by the artist. So don't even go there, pancake."
On the lyrical side, Sarah is not content to rely
on the formulas for pop hits in general or CCM hits in particular.
She wrote or co-wrote most of the songs on the album, and with her various
writing partners, she covers a wide variety of territory with refreshing
honesty.
In opposition to the CCM-standard formulaic profession
of faith, "Paradox" welcomes doubt as an opportunity for growth in faith:
I can trust the Lord with all my might
In the light of what I know.
But if I close the door on doubt I find
That the light can never grow.
Two prominent and related themes are memory and the passage
of time, with their inevitable losses. "Drinking Water" focuses on the
relentless pace of everyday life:
The world is spinning
Only further complicating
Life's ambitions
Adding to my inhibitions
The sun is rising
Always shining with or without me.
There's no stopping everything.
The positives and negatives of memory appear in "Face:"
"The old feeling comes again and makes its unwelcome.....Remembrance can
often be soothing."
Songs like "Brand New Name" ("Feel the memory/
See the shaken structures/In the past/ In the Pain/ Cleanse the dusty dwelling/
Call my heart a brand new name") and "Crucible" ("Is it the hurting now
or/ Knowing where I have been/ That makes me
turn around / and turn right back again") speak an intense desire for healing
from the ravages of time.
Healing of various hurts is another prominent theme.
"Chronic" describes the struggles Sarah's mother has had with Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome:
This is not CCM standard "I'm a Christian and my life
is unmitigated blessing" triumphalism in glitzy packaging. But while expressing
longing, she ends the album expressing her faith and hope in songs like
"Lullaby," "I Found the Time," and "Home."
This is a strong, very listenable first album, from
a young artist not content to follow the formula for hits in the CCM market,
and whose future seems promising.
   
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