Home
Make It Loud!
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Make It Loud!
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
Make It Loud!
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
At the outset of
Martha Munizzi
's fifth album, the live set
Make It Loud!
, she justifies the title with a series of lengthy songs in an uptempo mode. The leadoff title song has a distinct hip-hop feel, with even a little rap thrown in, suggesting that
Munizzi
is trying to be the
P!nk
or
Fergie
of the contemporary gospel field. Songs like
"Excellent"
have more of a traditional gospel choir feel. But after
"My God Is a Big God"
(which, counting the main track and the reprise, runs over 14 minutes),
opts to make it soft for the rest of the disc, beginning with the acoustic ballad
"No One Higher."
Joined by other singers, notably
Danielle Munizzi
, who takes over lead on
"Your Love Oh God,"
and
Lori Morrison
on
"Never Stop Singing,"
takes the album in a far gentler direction. The quietude is odd given the title and the frantic beginning, and the album seems to sputter out on the fade of
"Until,"
as if it were stopping before a livelier finish. There is some typically emotional
singing here, but the album is unbalanced. ~ William Ruhlmann
Martha Munizzi
's fifth album, the live set
Make It Loud!
, she justifies the title with a series of lengthy songs in an uptempo mode. The leadoff title song has a distinct hip-hop feel, with even a little rap thrown in, suggesting that
Munizzi
is trying to be the
P!nk
or
Fergie
of the contemporary gospel field. Songs like
"Excellent"
have more of a traditional gospel choir feel. But after
"My God Is a Big God"
(which, counting the main track and the reprise, runs over 14 minutes),
opts to make it soft for the rest of the disc, beginning with the acoustic ballad
"No One Higher."
Joined by other singers, notably
Danielle Munizzi
, who takes over lead on
"Your Love Oh God,"
and
Lori Morrison
on
"Never Stop Singing,"
takes the album in a far gentler direction. The quietude is odd given the title and the frantic beginning, and the album seems to sputter out on the fade of
"Until,"
as if it were stopping before a livelier finish. There is some typically emotional
singing here, but the album is unbalanced. ~ William Ruhlmann