He Leadeth Me (album)

He Leadeth Me is a gospel album by American gospel/soul singer Cissy Houston, released in 1997 on A & M Records.[1] All the tracks were written and arranged by Houston. The album was produced, mastered and mixed by Joel Moss.

He Leadeth Me
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 23, 1997 (U.S.)
Recorded1996
GenreGospel, R&B
Length49:54
LabelA & M Records
ProducerJoel Moss, Cissy Houston
Cissy Houston chronology
Face To Face
(1996)
He Leadeth Me
(1997)
Love Is Holding You'
(2001)

The album earned Houston a Grammy Award in 1998 for Best Traditional Gospel Album for a second year following her previous win for the same category in 1997.[2]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Deep River/Campbell"Cissy Houston5:06
2."Prayer Will Change It"Cissy Houston3:34
3."He Leadeth Me"Cissy Houston4:13
4."Shelter in the Time of Storm"Cissy Houston4:53
5."Count Your Blessings"Cissy Houston4:45
6."Glory Train"Cissy Houston4:58
7."In His Arms"Cissy Houston5:31
8."Stop, Look and Listen"Cissy Houston5:55
9."Every Day Every Hour"Cissy Houston5:25
10."Father, Son, Holy Ghost Is Me"Cissy Houston5:36
11."He Changed My Life"Cissy Houston5:05

Personnel

  • Arranged By – Jimmy Vivino, Ouida Harding
  • Arranged By, Producer, Vocals – Cissy Houston
  • Engineer, Mixed, Mastered, Producer – Joel Moss
  • Choir – Kevin Alford, Ingrid Arthur, Anita Jackson,
  • Trombone - Richie Rosenberg
  • Jerry Vivino - Saxophone [Alto]
  • Strings - Julien Barber, Elena Barere, Lamar Alsop, David Heiss, Jean Ingraham, Paul Peabody, Dan Mullen, Laura Seaton, Sue Pray, Pam Zimmerman, Marty Sweet, Lisa Steinberg
  • Synthesizer - Bette Sussman
  • Drums – Steve Jordan
  • Jimmy Vivino - Guitar [Electric]
  • Bass – T. M. Stevens
  • Trumpet, Horn - Earl Gardner
  • Patience Higgins - Saxophone [Baritone]
  • Darmon Meader - Saxophone [Tenor]
  • Edited By, Mastered By – Bernie Grundman
  • Engineer – Paul J. Falcone, Mark Johnson
  • Engineer [Assistant] - Ted Wolhsen
  • Organ – Rudy Copeland
  • Organ [Hammond] - Leon Pendarvis
  • Percussion – Steve Forman
  • Piano, Organ – Ouida Harding
gollark: Probably, yes. I have a friend who likes programming language theory a lot but doesn't really expect to be able to get work in that (eventually).
gollark: The theoretical stuff isn't necessarily worse depending on what you want to do.
gollark: There are still more "industry-oriented" options for studying it and some which are less so.
gollark: Computer science isn't software engineering, though. CS is meant to teach more theory-oriented stuff.
gollark: As in, you think the majority of them don't *ask* for it, or you think the majority don't need degree-related skills?

References

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