This book shows how popular music can become a powerful source of spiritual meaning, ethical reflection, and personal transformation. Drawing on more than five decades of attentive listening, Jeff Crosby explores how popular music has functioned as a form of "general revelation"-a way listeners encounter questions of God, purpose, justice, suffering, and hope beyond formal religious institutions. Through seventeen concise, engaging artist portraits, he examines how musicians across pop, rock, soul, folk, and R&B have articulated spiritual longing, wrestled with faith and doubt, and offered listeners imaginative resources for navigating their own interior lives.
The musicians range from globally celebrated figures-Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, George Harrison, Tracy Chapman, Marvin Gaye, Van Morrison, Pink Floyd, Mavis Staples and the Staple Singers, and Cat Stevens/Yusef Islam-to influential but less widely recognized voices such as Judee Sill, Mickey Newbury, Laura Nyro, Brooks Williams, and Chris Rea. Each chapter blends cultural history, lyrical interpretation, and personal reflection, showing how these artists' work emerged from particular social, political, and religious contexts while continuing to speak powerfully to contemporary listeners.
Equal parts memoir, popular music criticism, and spiritual inquiry, the book invites readers to practice "deep listening" as a formative discipline. Each chapter concludes with curated playlists and recommended records that extend the conversation beyond the page. Together, these reflections suggest that attentive listening-to music, memory, and silence-can open paths toward greater clarity, compassion, and grace.