Freedom (White Heart album)

{{Infobox album

| name = Freedom

| type = studio

| artist = White Heart

| cover = WhiteHeartFreedom.jpg

| alt =

| released = 1989

| recorded =

| venue =

| studio =

  • The Bennett House and The Castle (Franklin, Tennessee)
  • Digital Recorders and OmniSound Studios (Nashville, Tennessee)

| genre = Christian rock

| length = 52:45 (CD running time)

| label = Sparrow

| producer = Brown Bannister

| prev_title = Emergency Broadcast

| prev_year = 1987

| next_title = Powerhouse

| next_year = 1990

}}

{{Album ratings

|rev1 = AllMusic

|rev1score = {{Rating|4.5|5}}{{AllMusic|last=Masfield |first=Brian |class=album|id=mw0000271477||title=White Heart – Freedom: Review|access-date=}}

}}

Freedom is the sixth album by the Christian rock band White Heart and the last of the band's albums with Sparrow Records.{{cite book

| last = Powell

| first = Mark Allan

| title = Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music

| publisher = Hendrickson Publishers

| year = 2002

| location = Peabody, Massachusetts

| pages = [https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/1033 1033–5]

| isbn = 1-56563-679-1

| url-access = registration

| url = https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/1033

}}

{{cite work|title=White Heart: Freedom|date=1989|publisher=Sparrow Records}} Produced by Brown Bannister, it was also the last album for Tommy Sims, Gordon Kennedy and Chris McHugh, although McHugh returned as a session musician for Tales of Wonder (1992). With Bannister at the production helm and he is best known for producing Amy Grant's albums, he allowed the group to stretch musically and lyrically. It is considered one of White Heart's best albums in Christian rock with both Christian rock and Christian radio (AC/CHR) giving airplay on songs like "Over Me," "Invitation," "The River Will Flow," "Let the Kingdom Come" and "Eighth Wonder." Freedom peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Top Inspirational Albums chart.

Track listing

  1. "Bye Bye Babylon" (Rick Florian, Mark Gersmehl, Gordon Kennedy, Tommy Sims, Billy Smiley) – 4:09
  2. "Sing Your Freedom" (Gersmehl, Kennedy, Sims, Smiley) – 4:53
  3. "Let the Kingdom Come" (Gersmehl, Kennedy, Sims, Smiley) – 5:03
  4. "Over Me" (Gersmehl, Kennedy, Sims, Smiley, Chris McHugh) – 5:15
  5. "Eighth Wonder" (Florian, Gersmehl, Kennedy, McHugh, Smiley) – 4:18
  6. "Power Tools" (Kennedy, McHugh, Smiley) – 4:21
  7. "Invitation" (Kennedy, Sims) – 4:52
  8. "The River Will Flow" (Gersmehl, Smiley) – 6:52
  9. "Set The Bridge On Fire" (Florian, Gersmehl, Kennedy, Smiley) – 4:33 (CD version only)
  10. "Let It Go" (Gersmehl, Kennedy, Sims, Smiley) – 4:11
  11. "I'll Meet You There" (Gersmehl, Sims) – 4:18

Critical reception

AllMusic's Brian Mansfield believes that White Heart "took the album's name to heart, allowing themselves more creative leeway on this than on any previous album. Most Christian arena rock sounds derivative of its secular counterparts -- not 'Freedom;' even its weak spots are undeniably original."

Personnel

White Heart

Additional musicians

Production

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}

  • Peter York – executive producer
  • Brown Bannister – producer
  • Jeff Balding – recording, mixing
  • Byron House – additional engineer
  • Steve Bishir – assistant engineer
  • Shawn McLean – assistant engineer
  • Paula Montondo – assistant engineer
  • Todd Moore – assistant engineer
  • Mark Nevers – assistant engineer
  • Carry Summers – assistant engineer
  • Kevin Twit – assistant engineer
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering at Masterdisk (New York City, New York)
  • Barbara Catanzaro-Hearn – art direction
  • Larry Virgin – art direction, design
  • Mark Tucker – photography

{{div col end}}

Charts

class="wikitable"
Chart (1989)

!Peak
position

US Top Inspirational Albums (Billboard){{cite magazine|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/80s/1989/BB-1989-08-26.pdf|title=Top Inspirational LPs|magazine=Billboard|date=August 26, 1989|page=32}}

| style="text-align:center;"|2

=Year-end charts=

class="wikitable"
Chart (1989)

!Position

US Top Inspirational Albums (Billboard){{cite news|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/80s/1989/BB-1989-12-23.pdf|title=Inspirational LPs Year-end issue|magazine=Billboard|date=December 23, 1989|page=Y-54}}

| style="text-align:center;"|14

=Radio singles=

class="wikitable"

! rowspan="2"|Year

! rowspan="2"|Singles

! colspan="2"|Peak positions

CCM AC
{{Cite book |title=CCM Hot Hits: AC Charts 1978 - 2001 |publisher=AuthorHouse |year=2003 |isbn=1-4107-3294-0 |editor-last=Brothers |editor-first=Jeffrey Lee|page=228}}

! CCM CHR
{{Cite book |title=CCM Hot Hits: Christian Hit Radio - 20 Years of Charts, Artist Bios and More |publisher=CCM Books |year=1999 |isbn=0-8230-7718-7 |editor-last=Brothers |editor-first=Jeffrey Lee|page=178}}

align="center"|1989

| "The River Will Flow"

|align="center"|13

|align="center"|1

align="center"|1989

| "Eighth Wonder"

|align="center"|18

|align="center"|1

1989–90

| "Over Me"

|align="center"|—

|align="center"|3

1989–90

| "I'll Meet You There"

|align="center"|32

|align="center"|—

References