Alabaster Box – Michael Ehret

Alabaster Box
Wellspring Records, 1999
Reviewed by Michael Ehret
Published on Dec 15, 1999

With a CeCe Winans album, it’s easy to sit back and just enjoy
because she makes it sound so effortless. On her fourth solo album,

Alabaster Box, Winans cradles the listener in her arms as if
to say, “Let me sing for you. You just relax and I’ll make the
world go away for 45 minutes or so.”

But, you know what Winans accomplished this time around did not
come as easily as it sounds.
Alabaster Box is the debut project for Winans’ new record
label, Wellspring Gospel, so there is a lot riding on this project.
As well, she wrote or co-wrote five of the songs on this project —
and they are good, solid, songs.

Opening with a short, a capella, rendition of “Fill My Cup,”
which segues beautifully into the rousing “Kings of Kings (He’s A
Wonder)” it’s clear Winans’ cup is overflowing at this point.
Co-written by Winans and gospel great Fred Hammond, who also
produced the track, this song is praise and adoration to God from
the first note.

“The truth reaches the clouds/Your mercy never runs out/We give
You honor/Be thou exalted above the heavens and above the earth/I
give all Glory unto Your name/King of Kings and Lord of Lords/Lover
of my soul Jehovah/One and only God, I AM/Jesus Christ the Holy
Lamb”

Many songs have been described as “percolating” — well, this
one really does. As Winans builds through the bridge it’s all you
can do to keep from standing and swaying, arms uplifted to Heaven,
in praise. And there’s still 10 more songs to go. Lord have
mercy!

Since 1987 when Winans first began recording for Sparrow Records
with her brother, BeBe, she has been developing her God-given
talents. (She is the sister of the men in the gospel group The
Winans and the daughter of Mom and Pop Winans, longtime names on
the gospel music circuit. Other Winans abound in the gospel/CCM
industry, including Angie & Debbie and a new group this year of
the sons of the men in The Winans, Winans Phase 2 — talk about a
family business.)

Keeping in line with the family practice of stradling genre
lines,
Alabaster Box has elements of both gospel and CCM included,
although it is more in the vein of her Grammy-winning gospel
release
Alone in His Presence from 1996, than 1997’s more
pop-oriented
Everlasting Love.

What never changes though is Winans’ phenomenal voice. If she
sought it, she could be a bigger pop diva than Whitney Houston ever
was and though only time will tell, she certainly seems to have the
talent to rank right up there with the Queen, herself. But, Winans’
goals are different.

In this album’s title song, a classic Winans ballad written by
Janice Sjostran, Winans makes it clear what her life’s ambition is
— as well as the theme of this disc — service to Jesus Christ,
her Lord. Taking a story from the gospel of Luke about how Mary
Magdalene anointed Jesus with expensive perfume, Winans sings from
Mary’s point of view:

“And I’ve come to pour my praise on Him like oil from Mary’s
alabaster box/Don’t be angry if I wash His feet with my tears and I
dry them with my hair/You weren’t there the night He found me/You
did not feel what I felt When He wrapped His loving arms around
me/And you don’t know the cost of the oil in my alabaster box”

This is a disc of 12 highlights. Among them are the song “One
And The Same,” on which Winans duets (or would that be septets?)
with the group Take 6 — it’s a magical moment.

Additional highlights:

* “He’s Not On His Knees Yet” — A song about a friend who’s not
come to know Jesus yet and so hasn’t found his full potential. Sung
as a prayer to God to keep this friend safe until he does realize
his need for God.

* “Higher Place Of Praise” — Another gem co-written by Winans
and Hammond, this one is a little mid-tempo call and response
number between Winans and a gospel choir about going beyond the
norm in worship, to a higher place where praise is pure and the
worshiper is not just following the order of worship in the church
bulletin.

* “It Wasn’t Easy” — Written by Winans from Jesus’ point of
view, this song is about the sacrifice Christ made on the cross for
the sins of the world. “I didn’t have to do it/But I did it
anyway/’Cause I really love you/So much I took your place/I died
for your sins”

Winans has come a long way since the days when she was singing
with her brother. Those were great days — these are better ones.
I’m already looking forward to her next project.

Rating: A

Leave a Reply