This is a frustrating and increasingly tedious book that wants to be a definitive history of Christian rock music but fails on multiple fronts to meet the basic standards of historical writing.
First, there are no citations whatsoever. For a book briefly describing the histories of hundreds of different bands, there's simply no sense where Thompson gets his information. Some of it reads like personal recollection, which makes sense given Thompson's long history covering the industry for True Tunes News, and presumably much of it comes from raiding his own archival interviews and reporting, but none of that is explained. Further, there's too much information that obviously must have come from other publications, and Thompson simply doesn't give them the credit they deserve. There is a resources page in the back of the book that lists numerous industry magazines and a few books. But which info came from which sources? Where can we as readers go to double check info or get more context? It remains a mystery.
And that's a problem because I found several factual errors in the book surrounding just the one band with which I'm most familiar (Petra). The name of the coffeehouse where they began. The number of records they sold in the 1970s. How established they were by 1980. All wrong. On top of that, there are laughable statements like when Thompson describes Stryper this way: "as big or bigger than bands such as Def Leppard or Whitesnake." That would be Def Leppard, whose best-selling album is 12x platinum; Whitesnake, whose best-selling album is 8x platinun; and Stryper, whose best-selling album is 1x platinum. Stryper was a big band in their heyday, but they were nowhere close to Whitesnake or Def Leppard. You can tell because most people still know "Pour Some Sugar on Me" and "Here I Go Again" even today, while many fewer recall "To Hell With the Devil."
Thompson generally relies on subjective statements like this rather than on the data that would actually be relevant to statements about popularity and relevance: record sales, radio airplay, etc. The result is a weird mix of praising bands for their hazily defined popularity and praising unpopular bands for their artistic authenticity, with the unstated – or sometimes overtly stated – idea that to be popular is to be artistically inauthentic. Thompson is much happier devoting two pages to the indie alt-rock bands he likes, like Sixpence None the Richer, than a few paragraphs to the world's best-selling arena-rock bands, like Petra. Bands like Daniel Amos, The Call, Adam Again, The Choir, etc., are all important parts of Christian rock history. How important? It's hard to say because all we learn from this book is that Thompson really, really likes them.
Finally, the book is occasionally interesting and informative, especially in the first half, describing the evolution from Jesus Music to CCM in the 1970s and early 1980s. But too often, it reads more like an awards-ceremony acceptance speech, rushing to make sure every band gets mentioned, regardless of how important or peripheral they are to the story of that evolution. Because the number of bands proliferates, especially starting in the early 1980s, that means the book increasingly becomes nothing more than a paragraph-by-paragraph name-check. Without any kind of organization – by year, genre, or record label – other than its decade-by-decade chapter breakdown, the book ends up jumping around.
For example, these bands appear one after the other from pp. 62-70: 2nd Chapter of Acts (formed in 1972), Keith Green (first record released in 1977), Pat Terry Band (1974), Petra (formed in 1972, first record in 1974), DeGarmo and Key (1978), Michael Omartian (1974), Sweet Comfort Band (formed in 1973, first album in 1977), Mark Heard (1976), Resurrection Band (formed before Petra in 1972, demo in 1974, first LP in 1978). Chronologically, this is a mess; stylistically, what does Omartian – a keyboardist who isn't rock 'n' roll by even a generous definition of the genre and went on to greater success as a producer in the 1980s – have to do with Rez Band? Or folk rocker Mark Heard with Petra? How is Keith Green, a piano-playing singer-songwriter who was at the peak of his popularity at his death in 1981, relevant to the careers of guitar-driven rock bands formed in the early 1970s?
In a world with too few attempts to tell the early history of CCM, it's especially frustrating to read such a disjointed, subjective, and skewed attempt, one whose occasional flashes of insight are so thoroughly overwhelmed by lack of organization and true scholarship.