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Back Roads Music.


Mission Temple Fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics.
fireworks

Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to
 Stand, by Paul Thorn. Back Porch.

Miles and miles of two-lane blacktop crisscross the rural South, forming a web of connections among myriad small towns with declining populations and evaporating economic bases. The 2000 film O Brother, Where Act Thou? demonstrated that the Depression-era rural South was a place every bit as mythic as the ancient Aegean, and its soundtrack sparked a surge in popularity for what has come to be called "'Americana" music. But what of the postmodern, post-capitalist South? What mythic portals and spiritual wellsprings can be plumbed amid the unincorporated villages, the mill hills, the hollers, the trailer parks. and the few remaining farm communities that dot those two-lane blacktop roads today? And the churches! We sometimes joke that the country in which I reside has more Baptists than people. And let's not Let's Not is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in Boston University Graduate Journal in December 1954. It was written for no payment as a favour to the journal, and later appeared in the collection Buy Jupiter.  forget the Pentecostals out on the edge of town!

Singer-songwriter Paul Thorn's CD Mission Temple Fireworks Stand is a deep, rhythmic, moving tour through the back roads of "white trash (abuse, hardware) white trash - A pejorative term for Intel-based microcomputers, used by NeXT users at UK law firm Linklaters & Paines to contrast these machines with their black NeXT boxes. " spiritually'. The title song is born of Thorn's observation that Pentecostal tent revivals and roadside fireworks stands often use the same kind of tent. So, Thorn thought, why not combine the two? -Mission-Temple Fireworks Stand," he explains in the liner notes liner notes
pl.n.
Explanatory notes about a record album, cassette, or compact disk included on the jacket or in the packaging.
, "though not a literal place is a very tangible place where my current spiritual perspective resides." Imagine the art of Howard Finster The Reverend Howard Finster (December 2, 1916- October 22, 2001) was a folk artist from Summerville, Georgia who claimed to be inspired by God to spread the gospel through the environment of Paradise Garden and over 46,000 pieces of art.  set to music and you're there.

Thorn, the son of a Pentecostal preacher who grew up singing and playing tambourine tambourine (tăm'bərēn`), musical instrument of the percussion family, having a narrow circular frame and a single parchment drumhead, with metal plates or jingles set in the frame.  on the Mississippi sawdust trail, has developed a musical style that combines folk, blues country, gospel, R&B, and rock and roll. The first song on the CD, "Everybody Looks Good at The Starting Line starting line
n. Sports
The point or line at which a race begins.

Noun 1. starting line - a line indicating the location of the start of a race or a game
scratch line, scratch, start
," employs a slow, steady, driving rock beat to carry the theme of perseverance implicit in Adj. 1. implicit in - in the nature of something though not readily apparent; "shortcomings inherent in our approach"; "an underlying meaning"
underlying, inherent
 the song's title. The next song, "Rise Up," picks up the pace slightly and adds some gospel and R&B inflections. It tells the story of a woman finding strength to leave a hopeless marriage and strut "a new life" and is an anthem of self-empowerment. The next song, "Downtown Babylon," offers a sardonic and reflective critique of big-city pretentiousness and is followed by the title song, a rollicking rol·lick·ing  
adj.
Carefree and high-spirited; boisterous: a rollicking celebration.



rol
 gospel-blues which, by its juxtaposition of the sacred and the profane--or the sublime and the ridiculous--reminds us that authentic spirituality is dangerous.

"Mission Temple Fireworks Stand" is followed by one of the CD's more reflective numbers, "Things Left Undone," which begins with the conventional gospel hymn scenario of nearing death and then raises the question, "Will you be counting all the trophies you won/Or will you look back on the things left undone?" The second verse evokes Jesus' teaching on the last judgment in Matthew 25: "When a stranger came knocking did you let him in?/Was there food on your table for a down-and-out friend?" And the third verse visits the theme of forgiveness as one of the things too many people leave undone.

Two later selections pick up the musical pace. "Ain't Livin' in Sin No More." a R&B number about the community reaction to a cohabitating couple who finally marry, exposes the banality of small-town hypocrisy. "Sister Ruby's House of Prayer" is a rocking number that captures the depth of another working-class spiritual discipline--consulting the local palm reader. These two songs are followed by "Angel Too Soon," on the deep grief at the death of a child, the emptiness of the platitudes often used for comfort in such situations, and the undeniable need to rely upon such platitudes despite their shallowness. The final song, "I'm a Lucky Man," is a meditative affirmation of the goodness of life.

Thorn's lyrics combine a gritty realism with a bitter sense of irony--yet remain deeply optimistic. Along this musical journey, Thorn manages to embody what it means to be a prisoner of hope (Zechariah 9:12)--someone fully acquainted with and deeply affected by the troubles and tribulations of life, but affected more deeply still by the stirring and moving of the Spirit beneath, within, and beyond life's trials.

David Fillingim teaches religion and philosophy at Shorter College
For the junior college in Arkansas, see Shorter College (Arkansas).


Shorter College is a Christian liberal arts college, located in Rome, Georgia. The college was founded in 1873 as a women's college, the Cherokee Baptist Female College.
 in Rome, Georgia Nestled in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, Rome is the largest city in and the county seat of Floyd County, Georgia, United States. It is the principal city of the Rome, Georgia Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses all of Floyd County. . Paul Thorn's music and art are available at www.paulthorn.com.
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Author:Fillingim, David
Publication:Sojourners
Date:Nov 1, 2003
Words:704
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