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Incredibly enough, in his distinguished 30-year career Del McCoury had never recorded a gospel album, an oddity for a man of such deep faith. Well, Del and the boys (Ronnie and Rob McCoury, Jason Carter, and new stand-up bassist Alan Bartram) have finally delivered The Promised Land, and it's full of bountiful blessings. The great gospel songwriter Alfred E. Brumley figures prominently in the proceedings, with fully half of the album's 14 songs coming from his prolific pen. Del himself authored one of the strongest numbers, "Ain't Nothin' Gonna Come Up Today (Me and the Lord Can't Handle)," a steady-rolling bluegrass item on which Del asserts his unswerving faith in the Lord's guiding hand. A nice change of pace is provided in "Five Flat Rocks," a close-harmonized retelling of the David and Goliath story done as a spare, thumping country blues boogie that trundles along under the power of only two stinging acoustic guitars -- no banjo, fiddle, or mandolin, a true rarity in the McCoury catalog. For sheer instrumental bravado coupled to elegantly restrained quartet testifying, check out "Led by the Master's Hand," which opens with sparks flying from Rob's surging banjo lead, followed by Ronnie's fleet-fingered mandolin solo, which in turn gives way to Jason Carter's jubilant fiddle. Although there are some stern warnings about the wages of sin -- "Don't Put Off Until Tomorrow" being a notable example -- the mood here is celebratory, not dour. Perfect, and perfectly moving. David McGee, Barnes & Noble