I'm kind of surprised I didn't write about In Another Land earlier. I suspect this may be longer than it needs to be (likely a lot longer), sorry in advance but you should stick around anyway - it may be worth it. In terms of watershed albums this is right near the top of the most influential albums I have ever heard. The album was released in 1976 and a number of the older kids knew about him, but I was pretty clueless about Christian music. I was at a youth conference in '77 or '78 (things get fuzzy ) and the cool kids (who were likely four or five years older) were talking about an upcoming concert he was going to have in Vancouver, likely the Queen Elizabeth theatre but honestly the details are sketchy. The fact I remember anything at all is kind of amazing. It was the youth group dances in the late '70s and early '80s where I first got a taste of his music. The big dance songs were "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music" and "The Roc...
Author's note: Written from a Canadian perspective where the band never really caught on after their one big hit. Unbeknownst to be I'd been aware of Madness for a long time ... one of the nerdy kids in high school who was very much into those bands who were part of the first round of English new wave acts. He had a very large ghetto blaster and he'd always be by his locker blaring out music. Whereas most of us were into Prism, or Trooper or The Cars this guy loved The Buzzcocks, The Clash and Madness. I remember hearing "One Step Beyond" (and liking it) but had no idea who it was. When "Our House" broke over here, it was infectious. Most people in North America, of which I was one, had no idea the band had been around for years. They may have looked like a bunch of fresh faced kids but they'd been around for years by 1983. I find it strange that "Our House" managed to crack the top 10 in the US without an album behind. The Rise & Fall...