Description
Time to Believe is the sophomore album by the American singer Clay Crosse, released on Reunion Records in 1995, distributed by Word and BMG. The album was produced by Peter Bunetta and Rick Chudacoff for Ripe Productions.
His debut album ‘My Place Is With You‘ won critical acclaim and a fair number of fans formed the Crosse posse devoted to the man who sometimes sounds more like Curtis Stigers than Curtis Stigers does! His new album is seamlessly slick and smoothly put together like so many Nashville born CCM albums. There are few surprises but still much to give you listening pleasure. It slides with ease from the stereo speakers and slithers into your soul. You get some nice R’n’B tinged up-tempo stuff life «His Love Is Strong» and «Love From The Sweetest Cup». The voice glides over some nice ballads like the mellow title track and «I Found Myself In You» which go to show that when God distributed the voice boxes he cut Crosse a better deal than most! He clearly has huge talent and is able to interpret other people’s songs. Though his brave stab at the Andrae Crouch classic «Just Like He Said He Would» could be seen by Crouch fans (like me) as something approaching sacrilege! Still, he should be forgiven because there is something pleasing about this blue-eyed soul and anyone who closes an album with such an invigorating version of Patsy Moore‘s «God Is Love» deserves more than a medal! Even better than his debut! [Mike Rimmer, Cross Rhythms, August 1995]
> Apple Music (https://music.apple.com/us/album/time-to-believe/359222661)
CD tracklist:
01. His Love’s Coming Over Me – 4:19
02. Time To Believe – 4:10
03. His Love Is Strong – 3:17
04. I Found Myself In You – 4:16
05. I Turn To You – 3:57
06. Givin’ My Love – 4:06
07. The Rock (That Was Rolled Away) – 4:28
08. Love From The Sweetest Cup – 4:23
09. Just Like He Said He Would – 4:58
10. God Is Love – 4:33
Note: Simultaneously released on cassette and CD by Reunion Records.
A full-page advertisement for the Clay Crosse album Time To Believe was featured in the July 1995 issue of CCM Magazine.




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