Deitrick Haddon Church On The Moon Zip
Rather than think of the title as silly, think of it as bold and fun, two qualities that help define. The title to the contemporary gospel singer’s fifth effort is tied to the album’s key track, 'Gravity,' which finds observing the beauty of Earth from the Moon.
Jan 25, 2011 - Reppin' the Kingdom (feat. J Moss, Canton Jones, T Haddy & Tye Tribbett) [feat. J Moss, Canton Jones, Tye Tribbett and T Haddy].
It also refers to the futuristic side of the album, which is well aware of the slick club styles of. The singer crafts his own gospel futurism out of these influences, hyping up the word of the Lord with polished synth lines, rock-solid hooks, and that playful way delivers the gospel, where lines like “I ain’t talking about the King of Pop/I’m talkin’ about the Kings of Kings!” feel perfectly natural. Still, as forward-thinking as many tracks are, familiar R&B cuts like the aforementioned “Gravity” anchor the ambitious effort, and if you think has no sense of history, check the doo wop-fueled “Touch Me” or the powerful power ballad “Mighty God.”.
Deitrick Haddon has always had an astoundingly vivid imagination, one that could effectively be described as “next level.” For his fifth Verity Records CD (his 11th project overall), he has now graduated from out-the-box to off-the-planet. CHURCH ON THE MOON is an epic 18-song revelation of one Christian man considering the future of not only believers, but the world at large. “The idea dropped on me out of nowhere and, when something hits your spirit like that, you know it’s a gift from God,” says Haddon. “There are moments when God will give you stuff that is out of this world, and that’s what CHURCH ON THE MOON means to me. There’s so much sadness and craziness going on down here on Earth, I want to take you somewhere else for a while. CHURCH ON THE MOON is Gospel music from another perspective – a record that takes you on a journey.
When the last song has played, you will feel far above any problems that were weighing you down.”. The first single, “Well Done,” is rising up the Gospel radio charts and wowing audiences around the country. Crack serial. The soaring ballad gives rhythm to the last words all true believers want to hear at the end of their Earthly journey.
“I believe God is creating the perfect song out of all our lives. He’s orchestrating the highs and the lowsthe diminuendos and the crescendos. The lyric to our song is our testimony,” says Haddon. “At the end of all of our songs, we should all have the same lyric. God should be able to end our song by saying, ‘Well done my good and faithful servant. You can come on in.’ I thought it was the perfect single to kick off the album.” CHURCH ON THE MOON also features the all-star joint “Reppin’ The Kingdom,” with guest appearances from Tye Tribbet, J Moss, Canton Jones and Deitrick’s cousin, rapper-singer T-Haddy; “Save Somebody,” with Damita Haddon; and the adrenalin laced album opener “Show Stopper,” which puts things in proper perspective by giving God the glory FIRST on the CD. “I just thought, ‘If I do a Church on the Moon concert, I must kick it off introducing Jesus Christ as the Star of the Show!” The arena is jammed, man, packed with a sea of fans / Everybody wanna get a glimpse they wanna see the man / I ain’t talking about the King of Pop / I’m talking ‘bout the King of Kings / He’s about to show us all something, something we ain’t never seen / I’m just in his Entourage, I ain’t talkin’ HBO,/ I’m talkin’ real life, I follow everywhere He go / I’m talkin’ mega star, there’s nobody hotter / His name is Jesus Christ, He’s The Showstopper.