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Corey Voss “Songs of Heaven and Earth Vol. 1” EP Review

Corey Voss

Prime Cuts: The King is Here, Canyons, As It is in Heaven

Overall Grade: 4.5/5

Melodies of worship music need to have an echoing component.  This means that the tunes need to stick with the average congregant so that they can sing them in their leisure personal worship time.  Too often worship songs lack a memorability factor.  This is not so with Corey Voss.  "Songs of Heaven & Earth Vol. 1" is a 5-song EP that prides on having songs with hooks large enough that we can tap our toes to and hum along in a few listens.  Moreover, the songs are made even more palatable with Voss' easy on the ears tenor and producer Kyle Lee's (Michael W. Smith, Dustin Smith) pop-centric underpinnings.

Voss is a member of the All About Worship community and was previously featured on AAW's critically acclaimed album My Pursuit along with his own independent album How Great. Voss, who serves as worship pastor of Gateway Church in Shelbyville, Tennessee, is also the writer behind the songs "Praise The King," and "I Will Call," both featured on the Jaci Velasquez album Trust, as well as the new Selah single, "I Got Saved." In addition, his co-writes with Paul Baloche, "Psalm 92" and "We Come To You, Jesus," were featured on Baloche's album Your Mercy.

Worship leaders would do well to include "The King is Here" as their worship set opener.  Presenting God at his majestic best, the song has an inviting presence effortlessly drawing us into the King's presence.  If you think poetry is dead in worship music, take a listen to Voss' "Canyons." Utilizing the width and breadth of nature's beauty to describe the love of Christ, Voss gives a 3-D read of "Canyons" that involves our hearts, ears, and even eyes.  Integrity Music's new signee Alisa Turner shares her pen and voice with Voss on the power ballad "As It is in Heaven." While Jeannie Lee Riddle ("Revelation Song") co-writes the string-laden prayerful "Don't Ever Let Me Go."  

Not sure why, but Voss has also offered his rendition of "God Who Moves the Mountain."  The song itself is a heart-stopper: you can feel the debris falling as Voss sings about how God moves the mountains of impossibilities in our lives.  The problem, however, is that Jaci Velasquez and Dustin Smith (the song's co-writer) have both recorded not too long ago.  Do we need another version in such a short span of time?       

One minor quibble before we close, the cloud-covered album cover overshadowing a sleepy looking Voss makes this record look like a lullaby album made for kids.  Not sure who gave the okay for the cover art, but it sure doesn't capture the earthiness of how Voss grounds the worship of heaven with such urgency and transparency.  

 

 

Tags : Corey Voss corey voss new ep corey voss interview corey voss songs of heaven and earth vol. 1 ep review Integrity Music dustin smith alisa turner kyle lee

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