Religious music for less than devout


We have a thread " Jazz for someone who doesn’t like jazz. " In a similar vein perhaps "Religious music for the less than devout".

"people get ready" - Rod Stewart
"Amazing Grace" - Jessye Norman
2009 "Duets" - Five Blind Boys of Alabama, The - entire CD
1988 "Sweet Fellowship" - Acappella, the entire CD

In 1989 I was working in NJ, I may have been the only guy on the job who did not know he was working for the Irish Mafia. I would lend people the CD "Sweet Fellowship" and they were willing to pay for it but never return it:

"Here is $20 kid, go buy yourself another cuz youz can’t have mine back. Now don’t ever ask me again."


timothywright
Angel Band  Stanley Brothers
Life is a Railroad  Johnny Cash

As long as sincere and not canned and spammed.
Just below comfort and hope and hard work and good deeds, religion has inspired some our most profound artistic expressions. 

@213runnin, and Buddy's recordings (he converted the couple's Nashville home's front parlour into a studio, and records there. When Julie isn't feeling well, he runs a mic upstairs and records her in bed!) have a very unique, "alive" sound. Sometimes a little brash, like live music.

I forgot to mention the recordings of Minneapolis church choirs and organists made by speaker designer Robert Fulton, released as LP's on his ARK label. INCREDIBLE sound quality! Very transparent, with great inner detail (you can hear each individual voice in the choir), and very deep bass. The pipe organ's pedal notes will made your listening room walls shudder! 

May I second "Christo Redemptor" this time by Charlie Musselwhite. His version is much longer (11 minutes) and has many changes in tempo. It is a very complex and sophisticated piece

This thread will cost me some funds as I send all my money to Amazon.

Thank you to every one for their recommendations. I had 4 CDs arrive this morning, I have been "mining" this topic. The suggestions are not going to waste.