Walk By Faith
Transcription
Walk By Faith
CCM_11.04_cover.v1 10/6/04 1:22 PM Page 1 CCM_11.04_InsideCCM.v8 10/6/04 1:47 PM Page 3 contents November 2004 34 The Heart of Worship Unlike Ugg boots or the trendy rock band of the moment, the longevity of the modern praise resurgence has proven it’s not just a fad. As more songs for the church continue to emerge, we catch up with Chris Tomlin, Shane & Shane and Phillips, Craig & Dean—three artists who’ve each managed to carve out a unique path in the world of worship. B Y RO B E R T M I N E O cover story in review 26 55 Music: It’s a great month for Christian music with new discs from Jeremy Camp, Point of Grace, tobyMac and more. 60 Books: The inside track on Rebecca St. James’ new book. 64 Tour: Andy Argyrakis gets us a backstage pass to the “In the Name Love Tour.” The Big Picture After two massively popular worship discs and five years removed from pop music terrain, Michael W. Smith makes his long-awaited return with Healing Rain. Find out what inspired these songs, what other projects Smitty has in the works (think: big screen) and much more. B Y RO B E R TA C ROT E AU features 40 Here We Go. It’s a wrap for GRITS’ second disc of 2004, Dichotomy B, a valentine to the group’s fans after 10 years in the music biz. Now at the end of their contract with Gotee, these free agents have a lot on their minds— namely, how their socially aware rhymes can reach further than ever before. B Y L O U I S R . C A R L O Z O 44 Great Things Come to Those Who… Wait! With a new label, plenty of newfound creative freedom and the continued passion of frontman Michael Johnston, Smalltown Poets is back after four years with It’s Later Than It’s Ever Been. Now C A RO L I N E M I T C H E L L provides the first look at why the band left in the first place and what’s next on the horizon. 46 departments 05 From the Editor: People in a box? 09 The Insider: Hurricane watch at this year’s “Night of Joy,” what your favorite artists want for Christmas and more. 20 The Reel: Previews of The Incredibles, Christmas with the Kranks and artists’ DVD picks. 22 Ones to Watch: Monk and Neagle, Planetshakers 66 20 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About: Jars of Clay 68 Everything That’s On My Mind with Charlie Peacock 70 CCM Hall of Fame: Randy Stonehill CCM List-O-Rama Giddy up as C H R I S W E L L reveals the Christian songs that make him think of cowboys. Plus, five reasons to give thanks this month. CCM_11.04_Editorial.v7 10/6/04 2:25 PM Page 5 fromtheeditor MWS circa 1990 “So Then, What Is a Christian Artist?” That’s an odd question coming from the editor of CCM (Contemporary Christian Music)—don’t ya think? After all, this magazine has been addressing that inquiry for more than a quarter century. In fact, CCM has been playing a lead role in actually helping define the term “Christian artist.” But look at the cover of this month’s issue. If you’re like me, you’re reminded of just how much it’s not answered. Think about it. Michael W. Smith: an immensely talented, good-hearted believer, who’s widely regarded as the king of Christian pop. Wouldn’t it make sense that he’d be the epitome of a truly Christian artist? My answer would be, “Yes.” And in being so, I believe his amazing career puts a spotlight on the awkwardness of the question—and definition. Consider the basics. Is a Christian artist simply any artist who’s a believer, no matter what his or her work looks or sounds like? Or do they have to both be a Christian and create intentionally ministry-oriented art/music? What if they meet those requirements yet record for a mainstream record label? And what about public lifestyle? Any specific requirements there? CCM MAGAZINE Your Christian Music Magazine Since 1978 volume 27 issue 5 For those whose lives are strengthened through faith-informed music, CCM Magazine goes behind the scenes to celebrate the artistry of Christian music. CCM Magazine is a publication of Salem Publishing, a division of Salem Communications. •••• ••••••• CCM Magazine Publisher James R. Cumbee Associate Publisher & Editor in Chief Roberta Croteau Editor Jay Swartzendruber Managing Editor Stephanie Ottosen Contributing & Reviews Editor Christa Farris Remember Michael W. Smith’s earliest years? In practically every way, he seemed to fit neatly into the most rigid definition of the term “Christian artist.” But then came 1986’s The Big Picture—and with it, lyrics that were extremely broad thematically. Now, one couldn’t say that Michael was simply using music as tool only to sing praise or evangelize. And weren’t those the only two things that music was “good for”? Michael was singing about the complexities of life from a Christian perspective. And when Go West Young Man came out in 1990, that’s when Michael really complicated things. He went “secular.” Sure, the album was every bit as faith-evident as The Big Picture (if not more so), but Michael pursued mainstream radio and landed a big pop hit with “Place in This World.” (And that wouldn’t be his last one either.) I often think that God’s definition of “Christian artist” is much broader than mine. I’m the kind of guy who likes things to fit neatly into place. Life is more comfortable that way. The trouble is, folks like Johnny Cash and even Switchfoot have never fit neatly into place. Remember, it was Switchfoot bassist Tim Foreman who uttered these compelling words to Rolling Stone last year: “We’re Christian by faith, not genre.” I was once asked in an interview what I would say to Christian music fans who say such musicians have compromised their faith or “sold out.” Straight up? I would let them know that “I used to be one of you.” As I grew older, I became increasingly aware of how the Lord Jesus conducted Himself during His incarnation. He was very much in the world yet not of it. Christ was accused of far worse than “selling out” because He spent so much time in relationships with the lost, reckless and disenfranchised. Likewise, the Word of God calls believers to be salt and light in our own culture. Yes, the Lord gifts many artists for their calling to make music for the church, and that is extremely important and beautiful. Other artists He equips to connect with everyday people. In the same way David sat before King Saul and played the harp with the anointing of the Holy Spirit, most of today’s Spirit-filled mainstream artists are creating works saturated with a redemptive, life-affirming perspective. The same Holy Spirit that worked through David’s instrumentals and, later, his Psalmic laments also works today in songs that ask important questions, celebrate relational purity, mourn with those who mourn, esteem servant leadership and encourage bold living—just for starters. So where does all this leave the “Christian artist”? Outside a box? Undefined? As much as I don’t like it, I’m having to come to terms with the fact that any closed-off, “concrete” definition of Christian artist is most likely a man-made definition. The more I look into what the Bible’s take is on Christian artists, the more I find myself in expansive, sometimes unnerving, grace-filled territory. Jay Swartzendruber [email protected] Art Director Lee Steffen Associate Art Director Ben De Rienzo Production Director Ross E. Cluver Contributing Editors Andy Argyrakis, Joan Brasher, Michael Card, Janet Chismar, Michael Ciani, Kent Morris, Michael Nolan, Charlie Peacock, Chris Well Contributors Patrick Andrew, Louis R. Carlozo, Anthony DeBarros, Li Liu, Robert Mineo, Jessica Robin, Tammy Trent Web Editor Christa Farris Editorial Assistant Kelly O’Neil Editorial Intern Caroline Mitchell Circulation Director Buffy Booker Customer Service Representatives Amy Cassell, Leesa Smith Executive Director of Advertising L. Smitty Wheeler 615/312-4235 Senior Director of Advertising DeDe Tarrant 805/987-5072 Account Executive Gregory Byerline Account Executive Laurice Jackson Account Executive Phil Davis Marketing Coordinator Michael TenBrink Advertising Coordinator Carol Jones Sales/Marketing Associate Craig Felker Main Office 104 Woodmont Blvd., Suite 300, Nashville, TN 37205 615/386-3011 (ph) • 615/386-3380 (business fax) • 615/385-4112 (editorial fax) • 615/312-4266 (advertising fax) Subscriptions/Customer Service CCM, 104 Woodmont, Ste 300, Nashville 37205, 800/333-9643 or [email protected]. Annual subscription rates: United States, $19.95/one year, $35.95/ two years, $53.95/three years; Canada, (U.S. funds) $27.95 per year; all other countries, (U.S. funds) $33.95 (surface) or $67 (airmail). For address changes or other inquiries, please include both old and new addresses and mailing label. Allow four to six weeks for new subscriptions to begin. Cover photo by David Dobson NASDAQ SYMBOL: SALM ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 5 CCM_11.04_Feedback.final 10/6/04 5:46 PM Page 6 feedback GO TEE! I am a new CCM reader, and I just loved your article on tobyMac [“The Life and Times of tobyMac”]. He is by far my favorite male artist, and I was extremely glad to see him on the cover. What I also loved was learning a lot about his family and what he does with his kids. Samuel Grosso, Eagan, MN So I’m sitting around one day, pondering whether it’s possible for Christian media to be any more cheesy and clichéd; and the September issue of CCM shows up in my mailbox with the words “Bringin’ Da Funk!” on the cover. Can “Keeping It Real” be far behind? Nope, it’s on page 15. Thanks for clearing that up for me. —Steven Strunk, Spring Hill, TN Hey, pal, we’re hip to the jive! As a 40-something mom of two teens, I am thankful for your coverage of artists like tobyMac. And as a bonafide child of the ’70s, I listen to his music for my own enjoyment. But there is something much more important at work here—the spiritual edification of my children. I just want Toby and his fellow artists (Skillet, Pillar, Relient K, Jeremy Camp, etc.) to know that, not only are they loved and emulated by the youth, but they are also appreciated by those of us parents who enjoy seeing our children become individuals who are growing in the grace and admonition of the Lord. —Cindy Collier, Mt. Pleasant, TX MUTE MATH: A+! I am writing to thank you for featuring Mute Math in your September issue [“Chapter 1: An Introduction to New Math”]. I think they will go very far because they have a unique sound that is very capturing to the ear, both musically and lyrically. —Jenny, Cypress, CA STARS IN THE MAKING... I would like to thank you for doing a story on Starfield [“Ones to Watch,” September]. I saw them in concert before they were big and really like them. —Jessy Loring, ON, Canada A THANK YOU CARD I enjoyed your “Card’s in the House” editorial this morning as I received the latest CCM Magazine [September]. I had the great privilege JON-MICAH SUMRALL (KUTLESS) TOBYMAC of producing a Michael Card concert at First Baptist Church, Memphis in 1994 or 1995. I had been a lifelong fan of The Second Chapter of Acts and when they disbanded, I found great comfort and meaning in Michael’s music. The concert was beautiful, deeply spiritual and moving. I had always said about Second Chapter that the best contemporary Christian music concerts were no different from the best worship services. Michael’s offering to us and the Lord that night was just that way. I’m so glad to see Michael Card contributing to your fine magazine [“Living the Message”]. —Scot Finley, Roanoke, Virginia ADRENALINE RUSH Thank you so much for your article about Fish Fest [“Standing Room Only,” September]! Paging through the magazine, I started “spazzing out” when I saw it. I was at that show, and it was so awesome! I even got a [guitar] pick from Tyler TYLER BURKUM Burkum [Audio Adrenaline]! As soon as I am finished reading the rest of the magazine, that article is going straight to my wall. —Heidi Sorensen, via e-mail REMEMBERING MARK… Imagine my surprise to see a feature in the back of your magazine on my all-time favorite, Mark Heard [“Hall of 6 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com Fame,” September]. He is sorely missed since the music he created towers far above any other modern Christian songwriter. But you actually got a couple details wrong, I think. I’m pretty sure that his No. 2 single in 1982 was not “One of the Dominoes” but the James-Taylor-esque “To See Your Face.” And, in actuality, he had two CCM covers, I’m pretty sure—the one you mentioned as well as one from 1981 or 1982. The name of that story was “Have You Heard Mark Heard?” Thanks again for the tribute. —Peter, via e-mail Peter, we wish you were right about Mark having his first CCM cover in the early ‘80s. That would’ve been a notable endorsement. Regarding Heard’s radio history, according to the 1999 book Hot Hits, “One of the Dominoes” reached No. 2 on the Christian Hit Radio chart in 1982. (Heard’s “The Pain that Plagues Creation” peaked at No. 26 the following year.) MARK HEARD CCM_11.04_Feedback.final 10/6/04 5:47 PM Page 7 TRUTH BE TOLD What’s your favorite Christian music legend or supposedly tall tale? What about that nagging question concerning your favorite artist that, apparently, no one’s been able to answer? That’s where we come in. Check here each month as CCM Magazine distinguishes truth from fiction and e-mail your questions to [email protected]. Dear CCM, If a song hits No. 1 on Christian radio, how much money does the artist and actual songwriter make from that No. 1? For example, if I wrote a song that Avalon recorded and it hit No. 1, would I get most of the money or would Avalon? Curious in Colorado Dear Curious in Colorado, Money (a.k.a. “royalties”) from the public performance of songs (including radio airplay) is distributed by what are called performing rights organizations. There are three main PROs in the music business: ASCAP, BMI and SESAC. There are many variable factors involved in the hypothetical situation you describe, but here is a basic overview of how it works. Christian radio has four main formats: inspirational, adult contemporary, CHR and rock. Each format has a different total listener reach. An AC No. 1 hit, for example, would pay much more than a rock No. 1 because there are many more AC stations. They reach a much larger listening population, which means that they are able to generate much more advertising revenue. And performance royalties are based by the PROs on a percentage of a station’s total ad revenue, according to Dan Keen, assistant vice president, Membership Group for ASCAP. (Although another major variable here is whether the station is a commercial [“comm”] or non-commercial [“non-comm”] station. A commercial station pays the PROs a standard annual fee in the tens of thousands of dollars for the rights to broadcast music, while a non-commercial station pays a drastically reduced fee of just a few hundred dollars each year, regardless of how much revenue that station is able to generate from listener “Share-A-Thons” and the like. This, of course, means that songwriters and publishers make much less money from their song being played on a non-comm than on a comm.) Contrary to popular belief, an artist does not directly earn even a penny just by virtue of a song they recorded hitting No. 1 on the charts. The only person who makes any money directly from the airplay itself is the songwriter(s). Songwriters are paid performance royalties for the “spins” the song receives on radio stations nationwide. So if you wrote a No. 1 song for Avalon, you would receive all of the performance royalties for that song’s airplay, and Avalon would receive none. (Of course, artists are also able to generate income from concerts, merchandise sales and endorsement deals, which songwriters do not benefit from.) According to Keen, a No. 1 Christian AC hit for an ASCAP writer would pay “over $10,000” as opposed to just hundreds for a No. 1 on Rock radio. Mainstream (or “secular”) radio, of course, would pay much more money; Keen puts the figure for a No. 1 pop or country hit at “over $350,000.” Be sure to catch “Truth Be Told” next month for part 2 of our response when CCM will give you the lowdown on the financial benefits of actual album sales. We welcome your comments. Address your letter to Feedback, CCM Magazine, 104 Woodmont Blvd., Suite 300, Nashville, TN 37205; fax 615/385-4112, Attn: Feedback; or e-mail [email protected]. Always include your full name, address and phone number. Letter may be edited for length and clarity. ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 7 CCM_11.04_Insider.v11 10/6/04 1:47 PM Page 9 C insider African food with Ian Eskelin, AMA nominations and more. by Christa Farris International MAN of Mystery Hoping for another “Smash Hit”? Forget it. You never know what to expect with artist and world traveler Ian Eskelin. Now with a new solo project, he prefers to keep things simple. t’s lunchtime in Nashville, and I meet up with All Star United frontman (and now solo artist) Ian Eskelin at Sam & Zoe’s, a cute little coffeehouse and café he suggested. Then only minutes later, Ian suddenly gets a different food craving altogether. “I know this great little African restaurant. Want to go and get African food instead?” Not really a connoisseur of African cuisine but always up for something new, I leave hope for coffee and carbs behind; and we drive over to Gye-Nyame, a family-run outfit where the chefs are Ghana natives who serve up traditional dishes. Forgoing ordering off the menu, Ian confidently walks right up to the counter and tells the cook to “just make him something.” Perhaps a little surprised by his request but amused with his sense I >>> of adventure, she makes him some savory goat curry that he really enjoys, along with an order of fried plantains. And, coincidentally, it was another ethnic meal— Indian food—that connected Eskelin with Inpop Records, the label that released his recent solo project, Save the Humans. At the Franklin, Tenn., eatery, he ran into an old friend, Wes Campbell, who manages the Newsboys and takes care of the day-today business over at Inpop. “We got to talking over the curry chicken [about how] there are some things I wanted to do musically that I didn’t feel I could do as a guy in a band,” Ian says. “I toyed with some more personal things on the last All Star record, and nobody wanted that from All Star—ya know? So why not go ahead and do a solo thing where I can have the best of both worlds? And with All Star, there’s no reason to break up because it’s basically me and a bunch of friends. We’re all still friends, the name’s still cool, and we still connect really well all over the world. And you never know when I may get the itch to record 10 ridiculous, overthe-top rock songs that will never have a place on Christian radio. I will always have that outlet.” But for now Ian has switched things up from the quirky musical commentary on faith that All Star United provided to something more straightforward, something that he says “gets to the heart of the matter” and something even (gasp!) his mother loves. “I think writing Christian music is one of the most challenging things—and I’ve written it all. I’ve spent three years at BMG Nashville where I wrote country Jaci Velasquez’s Label Signs Idaho Rockers Grand Prize • Word on the Street is the New Relient K record, ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 9 >>> CCM_11.04_Insider.v11 10/6/04 5:05 PM Page 10 C >> insider pop Set Those VCRs! It’s red carpet time again for three Christian music artists as the American Music Awards will be held Nov. 14 in Los Angeles. “ I think writing Christian music is one of the most challenging things—and I’ve written it all. ” songs all day long. I’ve written for ‘Pop Idol’ winners from Belgium. I got four cuts on the new Valley Girls record. I’ve done the 15 to 16-year-old L.A. girl band thing,” Eskelin recalls. “But Christian music is the most challenging because your parameters are so narrow that you have three minutes to discuss your faith and make every other believer who will listen to that song realize that you’re real about your faith. “But the day I turned this record in, I was so happy and proud that my job was absolutely complete. And if nothing else happens with it—great—I’ll have something to give to my kid [his 9-month old son, Aiden, with his wife, Peggy] when he’s old enough to rock out. I’ve already had so much fun just giving it to my friends and family and having them really enjoy it and actually calling me up and saying, ‘Man, we really liked every single song.’ And that means more to me than just about anything.” The Name Game After much contemplation, Ian Eskelin finally decided on Save the Humans for the title of his new solo project, which albeit is much shorter than, say, International Anthems for the Human Race was in his All Star United tenure. But the moniker wasn’t his first choice in what to call his batch of 10 new songs. Now here are 5 options that didn’t make the final cut. Save the Cosmonauts Bringing Home the Cosmonauts When You Wish Upon a Brick 501 Russian Verbs Pink Monkey Blue Monkey >>> It’s award show season again, and nothing much really changes but the nominees themselves. After all, a year ago, no one knew there was another singing “Simpson” besides Jessica; but, inevitably, someone will be on the red carpet asking the artists “Who are you wearing?” as they stroll into the Shrine Auditorium. Now, we don’t know whether they’ll be wearing something Versace, Gucci or Gap, but what we do know is that in this year’s category for “Favorite Contemporary Inspirational Artist,” Steven Curtis Chapman, Third Day and MercyMe are all nominated. As for who will win, that’s anybody’s guess. Steven Curtis Chapman took the trophy home last year, but you can never count out Grammy winners Third Day or mainstream favorites (and also presenters at the festivities) MercyMe. It should be interesting to find out who the winner is in this category. Check local listings for showtimes. Decision 2004: Let Your Vote Count! We shouldn’t really have to say this because it’s a no-brainer. But if you’re 18 or over and aren’t planning to vote in this year’s presidential election on Nov. 2, you need to! It’s your right and civic responsibility. (End of public service announcement) Now back to our regularly scheduled column... Be sure to also let your opinions be known by casting your vote in this year’s CCM Readers’ Awards. Surf over to CCMmagazine.com, where you can vote for your favorite artists, albums, etc., of 2004, which, ultimately, lets you have a say in choosing who’ll be on the cover for our February 2005 issue. Will tobyMac, Rebecca St. James, Newsboys and Third Day repeat as 2004’s big winners? We won’t know until you vote! mmhmm, is More Piano-Driven; Find Out For Yourself When the Disc Hits Stores This Month • She’s Baaaaaack!: 10 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com >>> CCM_11.04_Insider.v11 10/6/04 5:10 PM Page 12 C insider ‘Night of Joy’ 2004: Beware of Hurricanes! In the aftermath of Hurricane Charley, the show did go on as Ivan loomed on the horizon. And this year, Orlando’s annual “Night of Joy” expanded to three nights of diverse Christian music in the most magical of settings at Walt Disney World. From our driver who took us from the airport to the hotel, to the locals who ventured to Disney World to hear the likes of Michael W. Smith, Steven Curtis Chapman, Jars of Clay, Jaci Velasquez, Jump5 and more, everyone had a story about the hurricanes—the one that had just hit and the one they were afraid would hit during the three-day event. As the weather reports kept promising doom and gloom during the festivities, the activities rolled on. From riding the Tower of Terror to strolling past “The Eiffel Tower” in Epcot Center, CCM fills you in on the Florida highlights. Above: downhere, L-R (top-bottom), Dan Haseltine (Jars of Clay), Jennifer Deibler (FFH), Mark Lee (Third Day), Joy Williams, Stryper, 4HIM, Jeremy Camp (holy biceps Batman!), John Cooper (Skillet), Point of Grace, Mickey, Rebecca St. James, Minnie, Kirk Franklin Everybody Have Fun Tonight!. So what’s on your favorite artists “to do” list while they hang out in Disney World? From photo ops with Tigger to a trip on Space Mountain, get the details here. Avalon’s Melissa Greene: “I think we love all the rides. We did our favorites today like Space Mountain, and actually one of my favorite rides as a kid was Mr. Toad’s Wild Adventure because I loved the scary stuff. And that was so scary to me as a kid, so just being able to re-live all those moments is amazing.” Mark Schultz: “Actually, I brought some college fraternity buddies down, and it’s great because they take a vacation from their jobs so they can come and be a part of my job. And so we went golfing today, so it was a lot of fun.” Warren Barfield: “I got my picture taken with Mickey and Tigger. Tigger is so cool, you know; he’s my favorite, by far. He’s got so much personality.” Jump5 enjoying Disney’s attractions, Inset: Warren Barflied and Tigger >>> Jump5’s Lesley Moore: “I think we all really enjoy riding all the rides. We also have to get Dole Whips, which has hot apple juice and ice cream together. Very good!” After A Long Hiatus, Kendall Payne Returns For Long-Awaited Sophomore Album, Grown, That’s Available at >>> > CCM_11.04_Insider.v11 10/6/04 5:06 PM Page 13 >> pop/urban Story Behind the Song: “I Need You Now” by Smokie Norful Smokie’s sophomore project, Nothing Without You, just hit store shelves last month. Now get the inside track on the song that got it all started for the artist who was named Billboard’s No. 1 gospel artist. Talk to Smokie Norful about his music, and he’ll certainly be excited. But talk to him about his family, and you’ll hear an audible change in the tone of his voice. Clearly, it’s all about family for Smokie. “I’ve been married for five years, and I have two miracle children: Tré and Ashton,” Smokie says. “Tré and my wife are actually part of the reason I wrote ‘I Need You Now’. “My wife had gone in for a regular check-up, and they found tumors. This was the second time this happened, and they said it didn’t look good this time. They said it could be cancer, and then they added, ‘We don’t think you’re ever going to be able to have kids because of the location and nature of the surgery.’ So right about then, I literally lost it. My dad had just come out of open-heart surgery a month or so before that, and I was like, ‘Wow, God I can’t do this!” So I sat down at the piano and said, ‘OK, I need you now!’ And that’s where the words to the song came from. It was literally the cry of my heart, seeking God’s presence, His touch, his rescue. “Needless to say my dad’s doing fine, and my wife is healthy. It wasn’t cancer, the doctors had to admit to themselves they’re just practicing medicine. But the Master Physician has spoken. He said, ‘I just needed to get this song out of this man.’ And then one day my wife sent my miracle child No. 1 into the room as I was typing my sermon. He came into the room with some paper in his hands and said, “Daddy, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy, what is this?’ And when he got close enough for me to realize what it was, it was the result of the pregnancy test that said—not only do you have miracle child No. 1, but here’s another one that ya’ll weren’t even looking for!” Sharing the Wealth: Your Chance to Win ‘Night of Joy’ Goodies It’s time to give props where props are due: Walt Disney’s New Media Publicist Charles Stovall is the man! Not only did he work night and day to make sure everything went smoothly for the festival, but he also provided some pretty cool prizes for us to give away to you, the CCM Magazine readers. So, just in time for the holiday season, here’s a little gift from Walt Disney World and CCM Magazine to you. Be one of the first 10 people to send us a postcard from your hometown with the information below, and you’ll win a 10-CD prize pack with all kinds of extras. The contest ends Nov. 15, when the winners’ names will be posted on CCMmagazine.com. Here’s what we need from you, printed legibly (yes, so we can read it!) on the postcard: Name, Address, Working e-mail address where you can be reached for notification if you win, Favorite Disney character, Favorite Christian artist. Now that you’ve got that down, send your postcard to CCM Magazine contest * Attention: Christa Farris * 104 Woodmont Blvd. Suite 300 * Nashville, TN 37205 >> >>> kendallpayne.com. • It Just Wouldn’t Be Christmas without... Amy Grant and Hubby, Vince Gill, Set to Hit ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 13 CCM_11.04_GetReal.v9 10/6/04 1:44 PM Page 14 getreal Matt McGee’s trip to India and 5 Questions with Sarah Kelly by Stephanie Ottosen Mission to India C 5 Questions with SARAH KELLY With her long, red hair, energetic personality, husky pipes and status as Gotee Records’ highest-selling debut week artist, Sarah Kelly is not one to be ignored. This new artist, who released Take Me Away this past February, can be found on the road this fall with Jars of Clay on the “Where We Are” tour. 1. If you could trade responsibilities with someone for a day, who would that person be, what would the job be, and why would you choose to do it? I would be a receptionist for a hair salon for one day. That was my very first job, and the stress factor is zero. And partly so that I could have the discount for a day—have you seen how much hair I have? Most musicians would jump at the opportunity to be an artist representative for a ministry, considering the benefits, such as a chance to serve, tour support and free trips to visit ministry locations. That’s most musicans, however, just not Shelter Records artist Matt McGee. He was actually a hard sell to get involved with Mission of Mercy, an organization that seeks to equip children physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually in poverty-stricken areas of the world. But it wasn’t because he didn’t want to. Matt told CCM he first turned down the opportunity because he didn’t feel he could offer anything to the ministry at that point. (He was still an independent artist when he was approached, thanks to being spotlighted in CCM’s April 2003 indie artist section.) But after being pursued numerous times by Mission of Mercy’s Director of Media Mark Pluimer, Matt agreed to come onboard and go on a trip. And it was certainly the right decision. Matt says he was in church a couple days later when God specifically told him, “Matt, you’re supposed to go to India. You really need to be a part of Mission of Mercy.” Matt left for India last August where he visited schools that work with sponsored children, performed at churches and played with the sick children in the Mission of Mercy hospital. And one time, Matt and the others on the trip got to serve food in a feeding line sponsored by Mission of Mercy. “One lady had five kids,” he says of the experience. “I was giving her big scoops [of food]; and when I got to the fourth scoop, she stopped me. She knew if she had taken more, others wouldn’t get any, so she stopped me.” Matt continued, “I just lost it. I had never seen anything like that before—someone who was so impoverished and so incredibly grateful and gracious.” Those were the kinds of experiences that made the biggest impressions on Matt. “It’s one of the dirtiest places I’ve ever seen—it’s beautiful in parts but so dirty. But I fell in love with it. I’d seen everything; and instead of being ready to come home, I was ready to get started with ministry there.” Although it hadn’t been confirmed at press time, Matt may be going back to India this December for a month or two to work again with Mission of Mercy. For more information on how to get involved with the child sponsorship program, please visit missionofmercy.org. 2. When was the first moment you realized you wanted to pursue music for a living? In the back of my mind the dream was always there. After taking the mic at my church for the first time only five years ago, the way became extremely clear. 3. Describe your most unforgettable date. My most unforgettable date was about 2 years ago. I got in the car for hours and ended up in Minneapolis, where we went shopping at Mall of America and to one of my first concerts that wasn't my own. 4. What are you obsessive compulsive about? I have been known to be a bit obsessive compulsive about having to have fan noise when I sleep. That can be tricky because most of my sleeping is in a GMC Yukon these days, so the fan is on full blast at all times. Needless to say, we all bring sweatshirts. 5. What characteristic of God has surprised you the most these days? His faithfulness. I gave up 220 piano students to walk into this unknown, and He has taken care of every single need—emotional and physical. >>> the Road For Another Holiday Tour • Bet You’ve Sung This One: Tim Hughes’ “Here I Am to Worship” 14 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com >>> CCM_11.04_FanFare.v8 10/6/04 2:26 PM Page 16 Newborns, birthdays and more. fanfare by Stephanie Ottosen Point of Grace’s Newest Member The latest addition to the family is—gasp!—a boy! Yes, that would be the second child of Heather Payne and her husband, Brian. Nathaniel Graham Payne was born Sept. 12 at 10:37 p.m. He weighed 7lbs and 9oz and measured 19-and-a-half inches long. 10 Years in the Making 09 16 17 Daily Planet frontman and solo artist Jesse Butterworth and his wife, Marisa, welcomed the arrival of their firstborn, William (“Liam”) Jesse Butterworth IV (above), on Sept. 9 at 7:31 p.m. 21 25 30 11.04 By PFR bassist/vocalist and solo artist Patrick Andrew Birthdays He’s one-third of PFR, but Patrick Andrew is now a worship leader at a church in Arizona. He’s also recently released an independent album, There and Then It’s Gone. Helen and I will celebrate 10 years on Dec. 10 this year. Now, I’m not the type to plan ahead, so it’s a stretch for me to even be thinking about what we’ll do on this, our golden anniversary. But it gets me thinking: 10 years. That’s a decade—a really significant amount of time. Then again, it’s not nearly enough to hold the amount of disappointments and tragedies we’ve faced together. It seems we’ve dealt with a lifetime of pain in even the last five years. Major financial trouble. Record company disasters. Intense marital strain. This past Sept. 11 marked the two-year anniversary of losing our peaceful angel, Chesna Angelina (Chesna means “peaceful” in Serbian.), to a rare syndrome. One year ago, our 3-and-a-half-year-old son, Everett, was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. So often this past year I have found myself walking out my front door, slamming the car door shut and screaming at the top of my lungs, “What next?” Writing songs is incredibly therapeutic but not nearly enough to expunge the pain and loss of a child and of dreams. I cannot even imagine going through life’s valleys without God’s comforting hands cradling me as tears have multiplied through these years. He always seems to be saying to me, “It’s going to be OK,” which, in turn, is the only thing I have to offer Helen. I am on my way to trusting those words once again. Olivia Jean celebrated five years on Aug. 5, and her imagination is amazing. Her expressions are fascinating. Her prayers are precious. She is joy encapsulated in a miniature me. My joy. A gift from the Lord to make me laugh and forget about everything but pouring into her so that she becomes the woman God made her to be. Everett James is in his own world. I love that world and love this little mind that is just now grasping language. His latest words are “I La You, Daddy.” I look at these kids and wonder what I did to deserve such beautiful and unique children. I look at Helen, and I am so thankful for such a faithful, Christian woman [during the] ups and downs. The downs stretch our character and capacity to love, and the ups are pure blessing. Our God is always good. This Dec. 10, I believe I will hold my beautiful wife wherever we are and reassure her that “It’s going to be OK.” Donnie McClurkin Angel Taylor (Trin-i-tee 5:7) Christy Nockels (Watermark) Karl Reid (Commissioned) Steven Curtis Chapman Amy Grant Darwin Hobbs Tell CCM In April 2003 I went to a concert at a church in my area. I didn’t really know much about the Christian artists who were going to perform that night, but I had nothing else to do! The opening acts were really great, and I was glad I decided to come. Rebecca St. James was now getting onstage; she was the main act on her “Wait For Me Tour.” I didn’t know much about this Aussie gal; but the minute she got onstage, I could feel her love for God. Before she even picked up the microphone, I could tell she was passionate. I had tears in my eyes when she sang the songs “Go and Sin No More” and “God.” She gave her testimony and shared her views on purity. She was so confident in her stand. You could hear a pin drop in the audience when she sang “Wait for Me.” I had made the commitment to wait, but she made me proud of my promise. She also made me want a deeper relationship with God. I was no longer satisfied with just being a “Christian”; I wanted to shine with His love—like her. I wanted to encourage people and to live God’s will in my life. It’s been more than a year since that date, and I can’t tell you how changed I am because of that night. I’m 16 years old, and God is already opening so many doors. Rebecca St. James set the bar for me—it wasn’t until that concert that I ever longed to know God in an intimate way. Now I am speaking at youth groups, and I am the deejay at my Christian radio station. This past year God has been using me in ways I could never have even dreamed of—all because I have a willing heart and because my eyes are on Him. I have had the blessing of meeting and praying with Rebecca. I can’t thank her enough for her selflessness, her realness and for shining her light. —Brianna How have CCM Magazine, the artists and their stories changed your life? We'd love to know! Please e-mail us at [email protected] or write to 104 Woodmont Blvd, Suite 300, Nashville, TN 37205. >>> For more information, visit eharmony.com. Distinguished as “#1 Most-Sung Church Song” According to CCLI • In the Studio: Todd Agnew Teams Up With 16 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com >>> CCM_11.04_IndBeat.v9 10/6/04 1:46 PM Page 18 K industrybeat A conversation with photographer David Dobson by Jay Swartzendruber How did you get into photography? When I was in junior high school, there was a really pretty girl in seventh grade. But she was so pretty I couldn’t talk to her. So I would just take pictures of her—it was very much a James Bond kind of thing. My friend and I would follow her around. Then we learned how to process the film in photo class. We were doing way, way more than you’re supposed to—taking the chemicals home after school and building our own dark room so we could keep going. When did you start doing photo shoots with recording artists? While I was in college (late ’80s), I got hooked up with Frontline Records and started photographing some of their artists and others—Altar Boys, Charlie Peacock, 77s—all these guys I had already had on a wish list to photograph. When I met Charlie Peacock, I was so excited. But it was in the bathroom at this place where he was performing. I was just waiting for him and when he turned around, I was all, “I’m David Dobson, and I’m so excited to meet you.” And I could tell he was thinking, “Dude, let me wash my hands, man!” I wound up shooting with him at his house in Sacramento—he used one of those photos for the original cover of his West Coast Diaries II album. Later I worked with the 77s, and they used a shot for the cover of their The Seventy Sevens CD. When you work outside of the Christian community, do you often have natural opportunities to discuss your faith with the people you’re photographing? Photo by Lee Steffen I have a deal with God that if I’m shooting fashion or commercial stuff, I always pray with whomever I shoot with. And so I say, “Dear Jesus, thank you for the opportunity to shoot, and please help us get some great pictures and not fight.” Everyone in my fashion book I prayed with. It kind of like sets a standard of, you know, you’ve got to be responsible for what you just prayed about. You have a very impressive and diverse portfolio, yet you seem to have a long-term emphasis on Christian music photography. Why is that? If the band is presenting the gospel in their music, then I’m presenting the gospel in their packaging. My whole reason for shooting is to invest the skills that God blessed me with and help make Christian albums and projects more visually exciting—promote the message. Focus on Dobson How in the world does a long-time Christian music enthusiast land a career doing photo shoots with not only Michael W. Smith, tobyMac, Kirk Franklin, Stryper, Stacie Orrico and Steven Curtis Chapman but also international figures and fashion icons as diverse as Mother Teresa, Evel Knievel, Moby, Niki Taylor and Rachel Hunter? Just ask world traveler/photographer David Dobson. You’ve seen a lot of his work in the album packaging for dc talk’s Intermission, Newsboys’ Thrive and Third Day’s Come Together as well as throughout CCM’s special Readers’ Choice Awards issue this past January. (And need we mention CCM’s M.W.S. cover this month?) The child of missionaries, Dobson was born in Manitoba, Canada but spent most of his childhood in India and Egypt. As an adult he has continued to travel internationally as a photographer at large, supporting the missions efforts of World Vision, Mission of Mercy and the Assemblies of God. Having now visited 115 countries, Dobson has been to every continent except Antarctica. He relocated to Nashville in 2003 after having made Southern California his hub for more than a decade. (View his portfolio: DavidDobsonPhoto.com.) >>> You’ve been successful at both still photography and directing music videos (Michelle Tumes, The Echoing Green). Are there other related areas you’d like to venture into? I would like to come up with branding. Like Anton Corbijn (U2, Lance Armstrong)— in addition to being a photographer, he’s kind of like an art director. With Depeche Mode, he shot with them, helps them do their packaging for the CD, does a tour book for them, tour posters, designs the stage set for their live show and does most of their music videos. And the beat goes on... Integrity Music Group recently announced that beginning Jan. 1, 2005, its products (which include The Passion of The Christ soundtrack and releases by MercyMe and CeCe Winans) will no longer be distributed by Word Distribution. Instead, Integrity is entering into a partnership with Provident Music Group, a BMG-owned competitor. As a result of the new agreement, Provident’s distribution arm will be renamed Provident-Integrity Distribution. Meanwhile, Word Label Group’s president and chief operating officer, Malcolm Mimms, resigned from his position. (Barry Landis, president of Word Label Group, now reports solely to the chairman/CEO of Warner Bros. Records, Tom Whalley.) John Hampton (Gin Blossoms, Stevie Ray Vaughan) to Produce Upcoming Sophomore Project • 4th Avenue Jones 18 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com >>> CCM_11.04_TheReel.v8 H 10/6/04 1:52 PM Page 20 reel Two new movies and artists talking about their favorite DVDs by Joan Brasher Here’s a flick for those who secretly dread the season’s over-consumption, blaring carols, illconceived gifts and maxed-out credit cards. Christmas With the Kranks, which is based on John Grisham’s novel Skipping Christmas, features “Home Improvement’s” Tim Allen as Luther Krank, a guy who decides to forego the season entirely when his daughter, Blair (Julie Gonzalo, A Cinderella Story), announces she’s not coming home for the holidays. He plans a tropical vacation with his wife, Nora (Jamie Lee Curtis, Freaky Friday, True Lies), and gleefully disposes the usual Christmas formalities, causing great concern in his suburban neighborhood. No elaborate twinkling lights, no Christmas Eve party, no giant fake snowman on the roof. But just when he’s torched the tree and booked the plane tickets, Blair decides she’s coming home after all; and they have 12 hours to pull off a Christmas miracle. This comedy hits theaters Nov. 24. Favorite DVDs From Your Favorite Artists: November is my favorite month. Not only is it my birthday month, but the leaves are turning, the air is crisp, and the movie selections quietly improve as the days wear on. Thanks to end-of-year Oscar balloting, the best movies seem to release this time of year. Granted, there are exceptions, of course; but this fall’s selections seem to be living up to the season’s reputation. With the cooler weather comes an even cooler animated adventure: The Incredibles, created by Disney/Pixar, the inventive company that brought us the mega-hits Toy Story, A Bug’s Life and Finding Nemo. Featuring the voices of Craig T. Nelson (“The District,” “Coach”), Holly Hunter (Thirteen, Little Black Book), Samuel L. Jackson (Unbreakable, Shaft) and more, The Incredibles is primarily focused on Bob Parr, a retired superhero who lives in the suburbs with his wife (also a retired superhero) and their three kids. When mysterious forces summon him to assist in a top-secret assignment, Bob leaves his job as an insurance claims adjuster and gets to work saving the world from some super-villains. His first challenge is fitting into the body-hugging spandex suit and long-since outgrown utility belt. The quipping cast of characters, which range in age from pre-teen to middle-aged, offers something for just about everyone. (My personal favorite is Edna Mode, a pintsized, spectacle-wearing superhero fashion designer.) While I haven’t seen the movie all the way through, the trailers look exceedingly promising, dishing up lots of humor and eye-popping visuals. And even though I’ll soon celebrate one of those birthdays that ends in the dreaded zero, I feel no need to apologize for my unbridled enthusiasm for The Incredibles. It’s just good, old-fashioned fun (no matter how old you are), and it opens in theaters Nov. 5. >>> Jesse Ribordy, Falling Up: Gattaca is a movie that has been out for a while; and I know it’s kind of geeky of me, but it’s my favorite DVD right now. It is a very clean movie. Ethan Hawke (Training Day, Dead Poets Society) is my favorite actor, and I love genetics. Please don’t make fun of me. Fernando Ortega: The film Amandla is a deeply moving story of the role music played in South Africa’s struggle against Apartheid. I loved hearing the music of some of the great African protest singers that comforted, united and sustained so many people in the face of such terrible oppression. Absolutely worthwhile to see. (Visit: amandla.com/home/index.php) Teams Up With Gotee and lookalive records For Third Offering, Stereo (The Evolution of Hiprocksoul) • stop 20 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com CCM_11.04_O2W.v8 10/6/04 1:50 PM Page 22 onestowatch >> B Y K E L LY O ’ N E I L * Planetshakers Global worship The “land down under” has helped introduce some major players in the world of Christian music (think Newsboys, Rebecca St. James and Darlene Zschech). Now another accomplished praise & worship act is poised to make an impact on American soil. Planetshakers started as the worship team for the Planetshakers conference—now a 20,000-person event. Russell Evans, the visionary and director of Planetshakers, but his wife, Sam, along with Henry Seely and Mike Guglielmucci, who grew up together as teenagers in the Evans’ youth ministry, are the principle songwriters for Planetshakers. The group moved to Melbourne last year to start a Planetshakers church and have recorded two CDs. The latest, (My King) Live Praise and Worship, hit stores in August. CCM: What’s a Planetshakers conference like? SEELY: It’s a four-day event that we run in five different states of Australia * Monk Neagle AND Happy Texans Trent Monk and Michael Neagle, the latest to sign with Flicker Records, have a lot in common. Monk and Neagle both hail from Amarillo, Texas, play guitar and have been happily married for five years to women they met at their home church. Plus, they’re horrible mechanics when it comes to fixing their RV. However, this duo makes up for its automotive shortcomings with superb songwriting and harmonizing as evident in its self-titled debut, which released in August. CCM: How long have you been playing guitar? NEAGLE: We’ve been playing eight or nine years each. Trent and I actually met in our home church’s college group. We became college leaders and picked up the guitar and started singing about the same time, so it hasn’t been forever. CCM: Had you both recorded independently prior to this? MONK: I did my first [indie project] probably six years ago now, and then I started traveling as an independent artist, playing wherever I could. In 2000 I recorded another one, and then it was after we had been on the road with Shane & Shane on the first leg of the tour that Michael [Neagle] recorded his to come out on the road and sell. So his hadn’t been done very long when we decided to become a duo. CCM: Does your duo debut project include songs from any of your solo albums? MONK: We kind of rewrote some of the lyrics on a few, but there’s a lot of new stuff. That wasn’t planned really. When we got into the studio with Ed Cash (producer), we all started creating and writing; and the process was beyond anything we’ve ever experienced as far as songwriting goes. We hope that people enjoy the music, and we feel that it’s a little bit outside the box. We want people to have good music but also hear the message behind it, and that’s love for God and love for our family. 22 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com (and soon in the United States!). We have two sessions of praise/worship/speaking during the day and a huge concert-style night rally with the band and a guest speaker. We also run specialized workshops in the afternoons on various types of ministry (high school ministry, worship etc). One of our mandates is to “empower a generation to win a generation,” so we don’t just have an entertainment-based program—we run the whole event to change students/young adults’ lives, which, in turn, will change our cities and, ultimately, our nation. CCM: Do you target the same audience as Hillsong (church and label home for Zschech)? SEELY: We love the Hillsong team—they are great friends of ours and have done great things for Australian praise & worship. While I think there may be some overlap in the target audience, I would say Planetshakers targets a younger audience overall than Hillsong. CCM: Is there any difference between an Australian audience and an American audience? SEELY: We’ve had some great audiences in America—people who really worship and give it their all. But I think Australian young people have this kind of “rawness” to them. They’re not afraid of what their friends think or how they look but just explode with passion for God. That’s what we’re really wanting to see happen in American young people—no fears, no limitations, no intimidation—just flat-out passion for God. CCM_11.04_Bible.final 10/6/04 2:33 PM Page 24 livingthemessage by Michael Card Jesus said, “Breakfast is ready.” (JOHN 21:12 AS PARAPHRASED IN THE MESSAGE) The Servant-Lordship of Jesus Christ (Part 2) There are two miraculous catches of fish in the Bible: one early in Christ’s ministry when Peter falls down and says, “Oh, get away from me. I’m a sinful man” (Lk. 5:1-11). The second one is in John 21 after the resurrection. The story begins when Peter says, “I’m going fishing. Who’s going with me?” Seven of the disciples go out and fish all night but don’t catch anything. As they’re coming back in, they see Someone (Jesus, who they don’t recognize) standing on the shore. Jesus, who specialized in asking irritating questions, asked the disciples the most irritating question someone can ask a fisherman. “You haven’t caught any fish, have you?” They shout back, “No!” Then He says, “Throw your nets on the starboard side. You’ll find some,” and they did. John, who’s writing the story, looks down at the net full of fish. He doesn’t recognize Jesus; he recognizes the miracle. He remembers the first miraculous catch of fish, and he looks at the net full of fish and gasps, “It’s the Lord!” When Peter hears that, he jumps into the cold water and swims the 100yard dash to shore. Before, Peter had walked on the water just to be with Jesus (Matt. 14:22-32). Now it is enough for Peter to simply swim to Jesus. They pull the boat up to the shore. Someone takes time to count the fish, which is a very “fishermanly” thing to do. In verse 13 we read the strange sentence, “And none of the disciples dared ask, ‘Who are you?’ They knew it was the Lord.” But, apparently, they still wanted to ask, though no one could find the courage to do so. All of these details are interesting, but they are not the central point of the story. The real issue is: Why is Jesus there? 24 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com Remember, this is after the resurrection. This is the Risen Lord, the Lord of Glory. He has endured the cross for them. He has gone through the resurrection for their sakes and for ours. He stands there with scars in His body from what He had endured, marks of love that God would never erase. If you or I had written the story, we might have pictured Jesus standing there with a thousand luminous angels, inviting the disciples to fall down on the sand and worship Him. That would have been appropriate! Why is He there? He is there to make breakfast! They look, and beside Him there’s a fire. It’s already burned low, so it’s been there a long time. He’s been there awhile, waiting for them. There are fish and bread cooking on the fire. The risen Lord, the Lord of Glory, is there to make breakfast for them. There’s something about the fact that He’s not there with angels in glory that makes me want to fall down and worship Him all the more. There’s something about the fact that He’s come to make breakfast that makes “The real issue is: Why is me want to give my life to Jesus there?” Him more than if He had been there in glory. Does that connect with you? We don’t know much about angels or heavenly CCM_11.04_Bible.final2 10/6/04 5:52 PM Page 25 glory, but we do know something about servanthood. We’ve tasted it. We know what it’s like when we’re tired and someone brings us a cup of cold water. That the Lord of Glory would have shaped His life in the form of a servant is awesome to me. It’s one of the best reasons for worshiping Him I know. Introductory Questions 1. Is Jesus’ making breakfast for the disciples simply an object lesson, or is there more involved? Why is He really there? 2. In this passage are we seeing Jesus in the same role as Servant-Lord that we saw in John 13 and the washing of the disciples feet? Study As you read, keep an eye out for eyewitness details. This story is full of them. They serve to make us feel as if we are there. Ask yourself, “Why would John tell me they are 100 yards from shore? Why does he think it is important that I know there were exactly 153 fish?” John 21 Later Jesus appeared again to the disciples beside the Sea of Galilee. This is how it happened. 2 Several of the disciples were there—Simon Peter, Thomas (nicknamed the Twin), Nathanael from Cana in Galilee, the sons of Zebedee, and two other disciples. 3 Simon Peter said, “I’m going fishing.” “We’ll come, too,” they all said. So they went out in the boat, but they caught nothing all night. 4 At dawn the disciples saw Jesus standing on the beach, but they couldn’t see who he was. 5 He called out, “Friends, have you caught any fish?” “No,” they replied. 6 Then he said, “Throw out your net on the right-hand side of the boat, and you’ll get plenty of fish!” So they did, and they couldn’t draw in the net because there were so many fish in it. 7 Then the disciple whom Jesus loved said to Peter, “It is the Lord!” When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he put on his tunic (for he had stripped for work), jumped into the water, and swam ashore. 8 The others stayed with the boat and pulled the loaded net to the shore, for they were only out about three hundred feet. 9 When they got there, they saw that a charcoal fire was burning and fish were frying over it, and there was bread. 10 “Bring some of the fish you’ve just caught,” Jesus said. 11 So Simon Peter went aboard and dragged the net to the shore. There were 153 large fish, and yet the net hadn’t torn. 12 “Now come and have some breakfast!” Jesus said. And no one dared ask him if he really was the Lord because they were sure of it. 13 Then Jesus served them the bread and the fish. 14 This was the third time Jesus had appeared to his disciples since he had been raised from the dead. 1. Doesn’t it seem that Simon Peter is exercising a leadership role in this story? Have the others forgotten that Peter denied Jesus just a few days before? 2. John clearly recognizes Jesus because of the miracle and not because he is able to discern Jesus’ face. Could it be that you and I recognize Jesus the same way today—through the things that He accomplishes in us every day? 3. Remembering that Peter had denied Jesus and wept bitterly about it, now it seems that he will not let anything come between himself and Jesus. What could have happened that changed Peter’s frame of mind? 4. Does this story confirm what we saw earlier in John 13—that Jesus is our Servant-Savior? Commit In the story of the second miraculous catch of fish, the true miracle is not the 153 fish flopping in the net. The real miracle is the humble servanthood of Jesus, the risen Lord of Glory. Even as He had washed the disciples feet, now He appears as a lowly servant, fixing a morning meal for them. In Matthew 20:28, Jesus said, “I have come to serve, not to be served.” Those words spell out His desire to truly be the “Man for Others.” That is the greatest miracle of all. Commit yourself to understanding what a lifestyle of servanthood will look like for you. Remember, servanthood is learned only by seeing it “fleshed out.” Jesus incarnated servanthood for you and me. Also, all around us are living examples of servanthood. Look and learn from the lives of those you know who are genuine servants of Jesus. When you pray, thank Jesus for His unexpected coming in the form of a servant. Ask Him, by the working of His Spirit in your life, to transform you into a true servant. Michael Card is an award-winning author, musician and radio broadcaster who resides in Franklin, Tennessee. His latest effort, A Fragile Stone, deals with the emotional life of the apostle Simon Peter. Visit MichaelCard.com for more information. CCM_11.04_MWS.v17 10/6/04 1:24 PM Page 26 CCM_11.04_MWS.v18 10/6/04 4:31 PM Page 27 Ready for His Close-up You’d think after 20-plus years as an artist that Michael W. Smith might take it easy. Not so. Instead, he’s signing on for even more than he ever did in his early career. Roberta Croteau catches up with this busy man on his only day off for the next six weeks. Photo by David Dobson ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 27 CCM_11.04_MWS.v18 10/6/04 6:05 PM Page 28 E SHARES A MIDDLE INITIAL WITH THE LEADER of the free world—and, in fact, has been dubbed “Dubya” by the original Dubya himself—via a friendship that began more than 15 years ago when the first President Bush occupied the White House. That initial “surreal” meeting happened in 1989 when Michael was invited to play for “Christmas in Washington.” Soon after the concert, a Secret Service agent approached Michael with the request to come to the White House by invitation of President Bush. He says he still cringes at the memory of asking the President if the piano was in tune when invited to the East Room to play Christmas carols for the first family. (“I thought, ‘You idiot, what are you doing?’ I was trying to be funny.”) But Michael’s friendships with presidents didn’t end there. He says he was introduced to George W. before he was even the governor of Texas. In fact, the two met when they played a tennis match against each other—Michael and a relative against Bush senior and junior. “We killed them. And I was like, ‘This is it. This is the end of the Bush-Smith relationship.’” Not hardly. Michael says he and the current president remain friends and stay in touch on a regular basis. So, if you’re thinking his relationships hit the top of the figurative food chain (which they do), then just imagine his career doing the same thing over the past 20 years, soaring steadily skyward even amidst the myriad of twists and turns he welcomed on his path. In between winning countless awards and accolades as a musician and, in fact, helping to create the success of what is known as the Christian music genre, Michael has also taken on everything from the expected (marriage and fatherhood) to the challenging (building and pastoring a new church community, starting his own record label) to the surprising (starring in a film). H 28 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com This year alone he has performed for millions with his patriotic “There She Stands” before the President’s speech at the Republican National Convention, jammed with U2 during a studio visit in Ireland and is currently developing his acting chops by accepting the lead role in the Steve Taylor-directed and produced indie film, The Second Chance (set to hit th theaters next fall). And somewhere in between all that, he finished the 18 album of his career, Healing Rain, which released Oct. 26. This latest effort is an album that follows up two immensely popular forays into worship music with 2001’s Worship and the 2002 follow-up, Worship Again. The five-year “break” from making a pop album (after 1999’s This Is Your Time) wasn’t so much a break as it was a chance for Michael to explore his other musical dreams. Freedom, the instrumental album and the two worship projects allowed Michael to stray from formula—but all along the way he was continuing to write songs for the eventual, “next” pop album. And along the way, he picked up another Smith, Martin Smith, that is, of the U.K. band Delirious, as a writing partner. He says of the pairing, “I’m a big fan of Delirious and a really big fan of his writing [which includes the modern worship classic “I Could Sing of Your Love Forever”]. I thought of Martin because I thought I would love to be able to do something that has a sort of vertical thing, but it’s progressive and not corporate—and that’s what Delirious does.” That duo did end up producing magic. The first lightning strike? The song, written in Martin’s English homeland, that became the new album’s title, “Healing Rain”—a cut that, before its release, had already birthed a same-titled book, DVD, seminar and a whole lot of buzz. But that meeting wasn’t the only significant one of that trip overseas. A side jaunt to Ireland produced an impromptu invitation from U2’s Bono to drop by for dinner “with the boys.” The dinner extended into an excursion over to the “secret” studio where the band was recording with famed CCM_11.04_MWS.v18 10/6/04 6:06 PM Page 29 producer Steve Lillywhite, who helmed U2’s first three albums and had coproduction credits on Achtung Baby and All That You Can’t Leave Behind. Michael found himself in yet another surreal musical heaven and was one of the first people privy to the title of the long-awaited new U2 album, set to release Nov. 23. Sitting in the Dublin studio with the larger-than-life rock stars, Bono played some snippets of music and then turned to his American friend and said he thought the title of the new album might be How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb. “Do you know how we do that?” the Irishman asked knowingly. “No,” Michael offered. “Love, love, love,” Michael mimics Bono’s poetic answer, with his own attempt at an Irish brogue. That exchange became the inspiration for Michael’s song “I Am Loved” (together with a viewing of The Passion of the Christ) on his new album, which Smitty penned with his Rocketown label-find artist and songwriter Taylor Sorenson. The two wrote the song in 15 minutes. (“My favorite songs are always the ones that happen that fast,” Smith says.) But back in the Dublin studio, the surprises kept on coming as Michael was invited to sit in on a tracking session with U2 and lend his considerable talents on the B3 organ. While he’s not sure his part will actually make it onto the final album, at this point he doesn’t really care. Needless to say, it would be pretty hard to beat that kind of a memory. The song he jammed on, fittingly, honors another Nashvillian—Johnny Cash. Entitled “North Star,” the song celebrates The Man in Black’s unwavering, immovable faith. (“Just like the North Star,” Michael beams.) Johnny Cash is just one in a slew of Michael’s legendary acquaintances and friends—presidents, governors, rock stars, movie stars—during his 20 years of music-making. But when asked who he’d still most love to meet face-to-face, Michael very decidedly says, “Nelson Mandela.” To be sure, it is likely his friendship with the crusading rock star (not to mention the President) that planted that seed—Bono’s ties with Africa and his desire to enlist the world in fighting the many plights that have beset the continent span two decades. But Michael’s no slouch when it comes to his own desire to save the world. Through the work of the Bono-founded DATA, Christian music’s grassroots movement AWAKE and Michael’s role as a Compassion International representative, he has been eager and faithful to lend his hand, voice and influence to help make a difference. “I want to go to Africa so bad,” he laments. “We have to do something.” For his part, Michael included a plea for Africa on Healing Rain with the song “We Can’t Wait Any Longer” but is quick to point out it’s not even close to enough. “I’m speaking and trying to wake America up, but it’s still not enough for me. I need to go to Africa. I don’t need to just pour my money into it. It’s easy to give money. Just write a check all day and feel good. That’s what a lot of people do. But we’ve got to get our hands dirty.” Considering the influence of his other friends in high places, one wonders if Mr. Smith really might want to go to Washington himself to make some of those kinds of changes. He has considered his own political aspirations. “I just honestly don’t know if I could do it,” he admits. “There is a part of me that would really want to do it because I think I could probably make a pretty good politician. I just don’t know if I could play that game; and to be in politics, to a certain degree, you’ve got to play the game.” But true to form, Michael’s not ruling anything out. “It would have to be a very loud call from God saying, ‘I want you to run for senator or governor,’” he laughs. “You know I don’t have any experience.” He then adds with a grin, “but neither did Arnold.” That Arnold, of course, is the actor-turned-governor, whom Michael still notes was one of his most notable “meetings.” And that photo op gettogether happened long before the Terminator turned to politics and long before Michael ever realized he’d be joining the Actor’s Guild. Today, Michael is just days away from beginning shooting on an honest-togoodness motion picture. And he’s the lead actor! He put in his own requisite and regrettable wild days in his youth and now gets to somewhat revisit that experience with his role as a newly reformed and reclaimed inner-city pastor. Through the direction of alternative Christian music icon-turned-movie director Steve Taylor and the guidance of a widely respected acting coach, Michael’s reveling in this “whole new world.” He says he’s amazed that acting can actually give you the ability to make someone cry, oddly forgetting while making this admission that his music has been doing that Michael by the Numbers 47 years old 18 albums 28 No. 1 songs 40 dove awards 11 Grammy nominations 03 Grammy awards 01 People’s 50 Most 23 years of marriage 05 children 12 White House/Camp David visits 07 CCM covers 4,527ish times he’s been asked what the “W” stands for (Answer: Whitaker) Beautiful List appearance Photos by Pamela Springsteen ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 29 CCM_11.04_MWS.v18 10/6/04 6:06 PM Page 30 Friends are Friends for years. He’s discovering the “mind-boggling” transformation that lets an actor pull off being someone else and says he’s blown away by the script he gets to play from—”It’s real life, the real deal,” he says, “It’s not a church film. But it is such a redemptive, spiritual story.” And while he plays a man of God on his way to redemption on film, in real life, Smitty’s already in a pastoral role in the lives of his church family. He’s not a pastor in the traditional sense of the word; but in his own faith community, he believes his role is to help others find out what their gift is. He’s surprised, however, at the number of people who still struggle. “So many people are so depressed,” he says with amazement. “For some people life is so hard that they think they can barely just get through one day. Then they mope through the next day. They had a dad who left… they were abused… they can’t forget. It’s so hard for me sometimes because I’ve never had that.” The blessing of “never having that,” however, is not lost on him. When Michael’s mother was young, she and two sisters and a brother were abandoned by their mother, who left them, movie script-like, on a doorstep. According to Michael, she could have “moaned and groaned and been bitter about it.” Instead, she vowed that would never happen to her children. And that legacy has carried to the next generation. Today Michael continues the passion for family with his own wife and five children, growing happily, lovingly in the heart of his Tennessee home. His lifelong goal of making sure family is always “number one” (“Loving your wife and kids well—that’s the key,” he says.) seems genuinely met, but Michael is, by no means, ready to “call it a day.” Ironically, he’s embarrassed to discover that the one thing he can’t do is name the one thing he can’t do. This man knows exactly what he wants and exactly what he has to do to go get it. For instance, for years he’s wanted to cover Simon and Garfunkel’s classic “Bridge Over Troubled Water” and finally got the chance on this latest album. Musically, Smitty’s version pays homage to the original while adding a soaring orchestration befitting its message. Lyrically, it isn’t hard to see why Michael has loved the song for so long. It’s a virtual mission statement for his life. (“I will dry your tears,” “I will comfort you,” “I will lay me down,” “I will ease your mind.”) He has been and continues to be all these things to all the people who bump into and run through his life. He shares a dream he had two nights ago, puzzled by its meaning and a bit overwhelmed with its vividness. “In the dream,” he confesses in a hushed tone, “a very prominent politician died.” (Not the one you’re thinking!) “I was invited to sing to and comfort the grieving family. The things I said to the family, it was so God-breathed,” he marvels, “I just kept thinking, ‘I can’t do this; I’m not qualified.’ And it was wild—it was like I was the man for the hour, for the time; and it made a huge impact. And I ended up becoming a very prominent person in the political realm, someone who was a comforter, encourager, pastor.” He seems a little shaken by what this could possibly mean, but any outsider looking in can see that he’s already been what the dream seems to foretell. (The scene is eerily reminiscent of Michael’s role throughout the aftermath of the tragic Columbine shootings when he was invited to perform at the memorial service and then met with and offered comfort to the grieving families.) Still, as his dream seems to say and as Michael continues to follow “whatever the calling is that God has for him,” this father, friend, artist, writer, pastor, actor, crusader, philanthropist and seeker is open to whatever other role life might bring his way. He says that, in the end all that really counts is this: “Like in the song ‘All I Want’—the Martin Smith lyric, ‘To only be a friend of God is all that I desire.’ And I just want to be faithful. That’s all I want. To me, that’s the beginning and end of story. Period. No more discussion. That just says it all.” ccm 30 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com From top: Singing with Bush Sr., Sharing a Laugh with Bono, Striking a pose with the “Governator” of Kah-li-forn-ia CCM_11.04_MWS.v18 10/6/04 4:33 PM Page 32 Inside the Actor’s Mind What is your favorite word? Wow…love. We thought it might be fun to give Michael W. Smith a sit-down in the “Actor’s Studio” chair and hit him with the famous James Lipton questionnaire that has been given to everyone from Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts to Robert DeNiro and Barbra Streisand. (And just to liven things up a bit, we threw in a few of our own questions, too, at the end!) What profession, other than your own, would you like to attempt? What was your favorite TV show while you were growing up? Probably the acting. “Lost In Space.” And can I have two? I love “Get Smart.” What is your least favorite word? Pus. What profession would you not like to do? What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally? Being outside. Actually for all three, I’d say being outside. What turns you off? A janitor. Now that you’re an actor, is there any TV show you dream of being on? What would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the “pearly gates?” I would love to attempt “Whose Line Is It Anyway”—it’s my favorite show on TV. They are great. I laugh at that more than any other show. Well done, my good and faithful servant. And now for the CCM add-ons!… Too much TV. And grumbling. Do you have a hidden talent? What is your favorite “place in this world?” (On the official “Inside The Actor’s Studio” list, the next question is ”What is your favorite curse word?“ We decided there were some things you just didn’t want to know and let Mr. Smith graciously decline answering.) What sound or noise do you love? I love the ocean. And what sound or noise do you hate? Traffic! Ireland. What do you consider the best song you’ve written? “All Is Well” And how about the worst song you’ve written? “I Am Up.” It’s embarrassing. My manager still gives me a hard time about it. He’ll holler it out as a request during acoustic performances. What’s the song you wish you’d written? “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” 32 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com I’m a good horseshoe player. I’ve got a pit in my backyard. What’s the worst job you ever had? Putting up chain link fences. I just got out of school, and I wanted to be at the piano writing songs; but I was out in the hot sun, slaving away! If you were opening your own store, what would you sell? Men’s clothing. I’d want a store where everything was amazing…all the way from high fashion down to buying shoes for twenty bucks. R . C . CCM_11.04_Worship.v9 10/6/04 1:26 PM Page 34 Here to H Stay Despite the changes and many faces that have come and gone, thankfully, the modern worship movement isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. CCM takes a look at three of its unique participants. By Robert Mineo 34 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com No one can disagree at this point that worship music, as a genre, is still a veritable force in the Christian music industry. After all, when the industry’s top-selling artist stops to make not one but two worship records, which garner platinum success, all arguments are off (Michael W. Smith’s Worship and Worship Again, anyone?). But Michael isn’t the only one who’s crossed genres. Alist artists such as Newsboys, Third Day, Rebecca St. James, Caedmon’s Call and many, many others have recorded vertically minded recordings that have gone on to register as some of the top-selling albums in the past few years. Even CCM’s own Reader’s Choice ballot has included a “Favorite Worship Artist” category both last year and this year (See CCMmagazine.com to vote!). So why has this genre gained so much popularity? There are many theories out there: Other genres were in a slump, every Christian music fan can identify with worship music, or the surge of the modern worship movement in churches has sparked its prevalence and on and on. Charlie Peacock (“Everything That’s On My Mind”) penned a column for CCM back in August about this very thing. “The real worship business is 24/7, all directions, all the time, gladness of heart and praise for everything,” he wrote. “It is not something that experiences popularity then wanes. It is not a market share. Instead, it governs and is the reason for all good markets.” Whatever the reason and whatever the definition, worship is here; and it’s here to stay. For that we can all be grateful, as the worship movement has opened doors for mass exposure to talented artists, such as the ones written about here, and worship songs currently being sung in our sanctuaries. CCM_11.04_Worship.v9 10/6/04 1:27 PM Page 35 Worship E Chris Tomlin: Almost Famous Chris Tomlin may not not be a household name, but there is a good chance you sang one of his songs at your worship service this past week. Tomlin’s tunes, including “Forever,” “We Fall Down” and “Famous One,” are among the most widely used by contemporary churches across the globe. In fact, Tomlin has registered five songs in the Top 500 on the Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI) Charts (a record of songs played in churches across the country), with two in the Top 20. And his newest release, Arriving, had just released with an extremely impressive 22,000-plus sold at press time during its first week out. While these numbers would be good news to any artist, when you look at debut week sales for Tomlin’s first release, Not To Us (Arriving more than quadrupled sales), it proves all the more just how popular this young worship artist is becoming. With that kind of clout, you wouldn’t think he’d have had trouble getting the producer he wanted onboard to helm. But that wasn’t the case when Tomlin asked Ed Cash (Bebo Norman, Caedmon’s Call, Bethany Dillon) to take on the project. According to Tomlin, Cash didn’t think modern worship songwriting was up to par with “regular” songwriting; so he was hesitant to sign on. But Tomlin eventually convinced him, and the result is what Tomlin describes as his personal “best, without a doubt.” “I just wanted someone who really had a passion for the songs, not someone who just can make it sound good and has great bells and whistles,” he explains. “Ed Cash was that guy for me. He’s a great songwriter himself with great ideas, and he really brought out the best from the band as they played. He really caused me to grow because he challenged me to write the very best songs I could that would stand up to any song out there. There were amazing times in this recording where we would just get lost in worship to God and moments with God that were really beyond the songs.” For Tomlin, moments like those have come fairly often. The worship leader, who got his start in 1997 performing at Louie Giglio’s “Passion” college events, has founded his career on such large group gatherings. He is also signed to sixstepsrecords, the record label Giglio founded four years ago. And in early 2003, he became a founding member and worship leader of the Austin Stone Community Church in Austin, Texas. But his path to becoming a worship leader was a long time coming. “Since I was in high school, my heart has been to write songs for the church,” he says. “It has been to write songs for people to sing and to play and to respond to God.” And, according to Tomlin, not just any worship song will do. “There are lots of songs out there in the name of worship songs that are really badly written,” he notes. “They are uninspiring, and they just do the same thing over and over and over again. Some of the new songs are written, and they are not going to last. My thing is that worship music is Christian music in its purest form.” And Tomlin seems to have found that perfect balance as evidenced by the radio success he’s already seeing with “Indescribable,” the first single off Arriving that’s already hit the top 5 on Radio & Records and Christian Radio Weekly’s charts. “The beautiful thing about worship music is that God is at the center,” he continues. “It comes out of all artists who are really living out their faith and their relationship with Jesus because they can’t help but worship Him in their songs. We stand in a long line of people who have gone before us. The style and the way it’s done, whether it’s from the tradition of the old or the new, changes. But the spirit of it is never changing. What’s important to me is putting out songs that the church can sing. It’s fresh and profound, and the church can really grab onto it. That’s my heart in making music.” ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 35 CCM_11.04_Worship.v9 10/6/04 2:28 PM Page 36 Worship E Shane & Shane: Surprised to Be Here L-R: Shane Everett and Barnard If Chris Tomlin is on one end of the spectrum with having a clear sense of purpose since high school, Shane Barnard and Shane Everett of Shane & Shane would land on the opposite end. “We just fell into this deal,” says Everett. “We never thought we would do this as a living. I got saved in 1997 and after about three months, I was doing this full time. People would call, and we would go. First, it was playing a couple days a week; and in the last couple years, it’s almost 300 dates. It’s just been insane.” The two met while attending Texas A&M University. Barnard, who had not considered being a musician until becoming a Christian in high school, made his stage debut as part of a musical festival at the college. Everett, also a fairly new Christian and musical late bloomer, was there as well; and the Shanes became fast friends. Within a few months they also became collaborators, performing and writing together with Barnard on lead vocals and acoustic guitar and Everett on backing vocals and electric guitar. Like Tomlin, the core audience for Shane & Shane remains a strong following of collegiate listeners. But instead of playing big worship rallies, Shane & Shane built support through smaller, mostly acoustic concerts that were usually held on college campuses or in churches. But smaller concerts have certainly not translated into a smaller following for these two. Three independent projects were released before the national release of Psalms (Inpop) in 2002. The next year’s follow-up, Carry Away, was the record that put Shane & Shane on the map and earned a Top 10 debut on Christian album sales charts and a coveted impression upon the overall Top 200 album listing in Billboard magazine. Christian radio supported the tracks “Be Near” and “Mercy Reigns,” Dove nominations rolled in, and the duo headlined a major national tour this year that featured Ginny Owens and Shaun Groves. This summer the quickie, acoustic “thank you” disc for fans, Upstairs, was released to satiate demand until the release of Clean this fall. And though their music career has been successful and seemingly wellplanned, both admit their surprise at the course their lives have taken. 36 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com “Music has such a small part to do with both of our backgrounds,” reveals Barnard. “Music has never been my hobby or my passion, and I never thought music would be my ‘thing.’ It has been very supernatural; it has been kind of weird and at the same time very sovereign and cool.” Everett concurs, “We are not even writers by nature. A song will pop out basically just from what the Lord is teaching us through His Word or [from] something our pastor says that kind of strikes us.” But while their musical backgrounds may not be extensive, Barnard and Everett are determined to make a point of improving on their natural talents of performing and songwriting. “Over the years of doing this, you gain an appreciation for the art of music and musicality,” states Everett. “When we first started I didn’t even know what the note was. It was just, ’OK, that sounds good.’” He laughs, “If you go back seven years to the first record, it now sounds like it should have never been recorded.” “I have never really been able to pursue or enjoy the way I’ve been gifted,” adds Barnard. “I have no idea how to play music at this point; it’s just kind of on the ‘fly’ and here and there. I have wanted to study for a long time, and that desire is huge for us.” Building a studio upstairs from their home office provided a first step toward beefing up the creative process. For this most recent release, Clean, they gained an ability to perfect it at a pace rarely possible when studio time is booked at an outside location. “We didn’t have all the restrictions and deadlines that we usually have with recording,” Barnard happily recalls. “We took one song at a time and just worked it from start to finish and track to track. Musically speaking, I think it is our most creative and interesting and, maybe, fun record.” Thematically there is a tighter cohesion to Clean as well, with a slant toward the unfailing and unmerited grace of God. According to Barnard, a good cleansing from God’s Word makes it possible to regain sight of the nature of that grace. “I think a lot of these songs were just going back to those backbone Scriptures of God and the backbone Scriptures in my life, where I look and go, ‘This is what is really going on,’” says [con’t on pg. 38] CCM_11.04_Worship.v9 10/6/04 2:29 PM Page 38 Worship E Phillips, Craig and Dean: A Welcome Homecoming L-R: Randy Phillips, Dan Dean, Shawn Craig [con’t from pg. 36] Barnard. “It was the Scriptural themes of brokenness and dependency on God who delights in saving us, His salvation, His sanctification and His purifying us.” So does Shane & Shane classify its music as “worship”? Says Everett, “I think we kind of live in irony because that term is so broad. I think what the Lord has given us the opportunity to do is to help facilitate and encourage. We tour around and do concerts and sell tickets. Hopefully, it is a worship experience for everyone.” He adds, “I hope that the Lord does transcend through the music because mostly what we sing is straight Scripture; and that, in itself, is wonderfully powerful and wonderfully alive. I think people come not just expecting an experience but an encounter with God. Hopefully an individual comes to salivate for God a lot more than to salivate for a guitar strum.” Phillips, Craig and Dean For many artists these days, doing a worship record is a “side” project from their normal musical fare. But for veteran group Phillips, Craig and Dean— featuring Randy Phillips, Shawn Craig and Dan Dean—making a praise & worship record (Let The Worshippers Arise) was like coming into their own for, what felt like, the first time in a long time. “Praise & worship is something we have always done,” says Phillips. “We have always incorporated worship because we are worship pastors at our churches. When we would go on the road, we treated the audience like a congregation; and we would try and lead them into worship. A lot of our songs could be considered worship by today’s standards.” Yet Phillips does admit these projects did provide an exit from image consciousness and an artistic rut. Hard as the group tried—and, according to Phillips, the efforts were quite intense—Phillips, Craig and Dean, which in years past garnered 18 No. 1 radio hits, was never quite trendy enough for the industry in later years or for itself. This led to tension within the group and, eventually, a creative roadblock. In time, the men accepted their standing and decided to simply relax and do what they do best—lead others into worship. Ironically, by shifting the 38 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com focus to worship, they gained the relevance that had previously been elusive. “We were stuck in a sound we just couldn’t get loose from,” recalls Phillips. “Yet praise & worship music crosses so many barriers, and there was a whole new audience listening to our music. A lot of that is a credit to our producer Nathan Nockels (of Watermark). That guy is good, and he is fresh; and he put a fresh spin on us.” Younger listeners did tune in for the first time, but the biggest “score” was with core, “mature” listeners who could appreciate worship music but not the newer, edgy music. On being a conduit for bridging a gap to older listeners, Phillips laughs and says, “Well, we are not Bill Gaither! If our audience is mature, what is Bill’s?” He adds, “It doesn’t bother us at all. If we were instrumental in bringing more cutting-edge praise & worship to a more traditional setting, that’s great. If that was our mission, then it was worth it.” Scanning the credits of Let The Worshippers Arise makes it clear that the group is set on that musical mission. The trio remains at the forefront and has a few songwriting credits, but notable names from the modern worship world stand out. Nockels contributed in musical ways as well, and his wife and Watermark co-member, Christy, is a duet partner on “Mighty Is the Power of the Cross.” That song was co-written with Chris Tomlin and is also featured on his latest, Arriving. “Making Melody” was crafted by Matt Redman, and the title track was penned by Michael Ferrin, who also wrote the Michael W. Smith recorded “Let It Reign.” For Phillips, Craig & Dean, strictly worship recordings will probably wrap up with this album (which follows Let My Words Be Few and Let Your Glory Fall). However, praise songs will remain a prominent part of the trio’s future output, just as they always have. “Truthfully, we do bring something to the table that other artists do not,” says Phillips. “Not only that we are pastors, but we have lived long enough to see a good life and then some tragic things. We know people are there suffering, so they become like our congregation in the fact that we have a responsibility to take them to the throne room for an hour and a half or two hours.” ccm CCM_11.04_Grits.v11 10/6/04 1:39 PM Page 40 GRITS MAY MAY BE BE THE THE CHRISTIAN CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY’S COMMUNITY’S MOST MOST PROMINENT PROMINENT HIPHIPGRITS HOP GROUP, GROUP, BUT BUT WITH WITH THE THE DUO’S DUO’S NEW NEW BACK-TO-BACK BACK-TO-BACK RELEASES, RELEASES, HOP DICHOTOMY A A AND AND DICHOTOMY DICHOTOMY B, B, ALL ALL BETS BETS ARE ARE OFF. OFF. AS AS THEY THEY DICHOTOMY PONDER FURTHER FURTHER STEPS STEPS INTO INTO THE THE MAINSTREAM MAINSTREAM MUSIC MUSIC WORLD, WORLD, PONDER GRITS’ STACY STACY “COFFEE” “COFFEE” JONES JONES TALKS TALKS CANDIDLY CANDIDLY ABOUT ABOUT THE THE GRITS’ UNCERTAINTIES OF OF THE THE ROAD ROAD AHEAD. AHEAD. UNCERTAINTIES BY LOUIS LOUIS R. R. CARLOZO CARLOZO BY L-R: L-R: Stacy Stacy “Coffee” “Coffee” Jones Jones and and Teron Teron “Bonafide” “Bonafide” Carter Carter 40 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com CCM_11.04_Grits.v11 10/6/04 1:40 PM Page 41 Ask Stacy “Coffee” Jones, one half of the dynamic hip-hop duo GRITS, what inspired him and partner Teron “Bonafide” Carter to make the ambitious two-album set Dichotomy A and Dichotomy B, and he gives a somewhat shocking answer: “Gotee approached us midway through the recording with the idea,” he says. “It was our last record with Gotee, and we wanted to go out with a bang.” Wait a sec: Last record with Gotee, the label at which the group’s seen increasing success for more than 10 years? “Our contract is up, and we’re trying to work out the details to come back,” Coffee reveals. “But for right now, we’re free agents.” While the future depends on many variables—a few of which Coffee addresses in a free-ranging interview—for now, the present is equally promising and precarious. There’s no denying that the Dichotomy records represent artistic daring and have yielded some mighty fine hip-hop in the process. The twin albums mark a bracing step forward for a duo that is, without a doubt, Christian music’s most successful mainstream rap group. With each of its two previous releases (The Art of Translation, 2002, and Grammatical Revolution, 1999), GRITS has managed to make increasingly significant inroads into the general market. These triumphs have spanned from the music charts (Translation peaked at No. 11 on CMJ’s hip-hop listing.) to the silver screen and television. (“Here We Go” was featured in the Jack Nicholson/Diane Keaton film Something’s Gotta Give and became a music bed staple for MTV, while the video landed spins on BET.) Still, GRITS has dealt with the pressure any act with a previously successful album knows: to deliver a sequel that lives up to, if not surpasses, its predecessor. As much as some folks might’ve wanted or expected something similar to Translation—a “Part B,” if you will—Coffee says GRITS was determined to stick to its guns and try something new. “I felt like a lot more stress was on us with Dichotomy A,” Coffee says, “And with people caught up with The Art of Translation, a lot were expecting us to make another Art of Translation, and we went in with the vibe that we’re not going to repeat that. GRITS is constantly changing and constantly evolving, just like our faith in Christ—every day is different. It’s about us, what we’re going through, what we’ve been through and what we’ve got to overcome. Plus, we’ve always been pushing the envelope, going against the grain.” At press time, GRITS was still putting the finishing touches on the new disc—recorded, as was A, with the production help of dc talk band alum Otto Price. “People ask, ‘Why Dichotomy A and B?’ Technically, it’s all the same—the recording, the photos, the packaging. Style-wise it’s connected, though it’s two parts—26 songs, including interludes,” Coffee says. Yet, there are differences with the new disc he wants to highlight. “Sonically, it’s more ‘up’ than A. Lyrically, the approach is more aggressive. It’s weird; I think there are more hooks on B and more aggressive songs that the kids are really going to be excited about when we perform them live.” Do expectations to follow up A or even Translation, which sold more than 130,000 copies, ever weigh on GRITS? “We’ve got nothing to prove to nobody,” Coffee says. “At the end of the day, if [Bonafide] and I are standing there with our thumbs up, then we’re fine with it. And we know that our fans—the people who have been rolling with us from the beginning—they’re going to be fine with it.” This brings up whether GRITS would want to take the bigger risk of stepping completely outside the Christian music scene for an all-out push in the mainstream. “It’s funny you even mention that,” Coffee says. “It’s been a big discussion for us in the last couple days. There are artists on that side—Kanye West and Mase—who are doing it on a much bigger level, with money and ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 41 CCM_11.04_Grits.v11 10/6/04 1:40 PM “ Page 42 ARE LIVES REALLY BEING AFFECTED, OR IS IT JUST THE SAME OLD PEOPLE LISTENING TO THE THE RADIO AND GOING TO CONCERTS? exposure.” (West, for example, has had a huge mainstream hit with his song “Jesus Walks.”) The way Coffee sees it, growing segments of the Christian music industry are stepping up and supporting artists making an impact outside the church. Meanwhile, he has questions for those who prefer a more insular approach. “Are lives really being affected, or is it just the same old people listening to the radio and going to the concerts?” he wonders. He then contrasts this to the incredible response by mainstream artists in late 2001: “When the world can come together— 9/11, for example—what happens? The mainstream artists come together, and all the proceeds go to the families of the [World Trade Center] victims, the firemen. And what do we do? The world is really showing us how to minister, and that’s crazy to me. We talked [in Nashville] about rallying it up, but we didn’t have the power behind us to do it—it’s just the politics behind it.” All of this brings Coffee back to the Gotee situation, about which he’s cautiously optimistic. “We’re basically realizing that if we’re going to keep rolling with Gotee, it’s going to take a mainstream partner to take us where we want to go,” he says. “They’ve got the heart to do it, but it’s an investment—and you’ve got to be willing to make that investment.” That said, it’s worth noting that Gotee invested significant cash, muscle and sweat into making Translation a record that would have an impact well beyond the Christian market. Coffee also goes out of his way to affirm that the relationship between GRITS and the label remains amicable. Still, he makes no apologies for his ambitions. “Let’s do business on a level where it’s an honor to God,” he says. “You read about people like Abraham and Solomon in the Bible, and they were ‘loaded’; they knew how to survive, live off the land and do it well. And I feel like on the 42 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com ” Christian side, we’re told, ‘It’s OK to be broke because you’re doing it for God’—when the reality is that you’re broke, and you and your family are just getting by.” Asked what it will take to kick the act’s career into the next gear, he frames his answer in terms of the fans: “Keeping them in mind and heart needs to be at the center of everything GRITS does.” This, he notes, includes knowing how to leave the people wanting more. “For us, our fans are our fans,” he says. “We just wanted to do [the Dichotomy records] for the fans, to let them know they’re appreciated. We ended up with so much material, we put it into two albums. Dichotomy is just the name; if you listen to them they are two very different albums. Plus, a lot of artists are putting 17, 18 songs on a record these days. I don’t know about you, but when I hear that many songs, I’m overwhelmed.” Coffee also stresses that no matter what changes in the world of GRITS, honest faith will always remain constant. “Our heart is that we know how powerful music is, that a song can change a person’s life,” he says. “We want to sow seeds, not just in the mainstream, but with believers. Because at the end of the day, problems—pride, arrogance, whatever it is—stem from something deeper than just committing the sin or whether you’re saved or not. I talk to castaway believers, and they see that we as Christians are all talk. And that gives them ammo: ‘If that’s the way they are, I want nothing to do with it.’ “So when I start talking to people, I start by telling them how I’ve messed up. We talk about divorces, how we’re products of divorce. A lot of people won’t do that, and we were told at the beginning, ‘Be on guard; watch yourself.’ But God has protected us and sustained us over a decade. And if we can’t see God in that, then we’re crazy.” As if to sum up what these lessons have taught him, Coffee says, “I believe we’ve been faithful. We’ve slipped up a bunch of times. But God is faithful. We know why we’re here, and we’re not stopping.” ccm CCM_11.04_Smalltown.v14 10/6/04 1:42 PM Page 44 Smalltown Poets: Better Late Than Never f you’ve been wondering where this alternative pop fave has been, well… they’ve been getting married, having kids and, most recently, recording an album, It’s Later Than It’s Ever Been, for the past two years. The latest project marks the end of a four-year hiatus for the band. And, according to lead singer, Michael Johnston, it was worth the wait. “This most recent experience has been great. It’s been challenging because we did it all ourselves—from the recording of it and writing all the songs to the production.” This “home-grown” approach is a departure from the band’s previous albums; yet, according to Michael, it was a natural progression. “It happened very organically. My desire has always been to make music and be involved in the songwriting process. Matt Goldman, the drummer, actually played on the last three Smalltown Poets records. There were a couple other musicians he had been playing with in some other local bands, and some natural friendships and collaborations grew out of that. That’s how Alex [Peterson] and Troy [Stains] got incorporated into the mix.” The new band members aren’t the only things distinguishing this album from the others. After signing with BEC (a division of Tooth & Nail), the band was suddenly given license to explore its own musicality and creativity. “We were able to go in, saying, ‘We have this idea, and we have this ability to be able to do this ourselves.’ And they said, ‘Go for it.’ That’s an incredible vote of confidence, so it really prompted us to set the bar even higher. You know, we wanted to deliver.” And so, the band hit the studio. For two years, the new foursome wrote, performed and recorded all new songs for the album. “We wanted this to be the kind of record we would want to listen to, and being able to keep our hands on this whole process has allowed us to learn from things we’ve done in the past. We were able to spend a lot more time working on melodies and counter melodies so that there’s some depth there musically. And I think the songwriting has definitely grown a bit and evolved and changed.” 44 ccm november 04 by Caroline Mitchell Coming from a group with two Grammy nominations and seven Dove nods to its credit, the promise of musical growth bodes well. And, despite a changed sound and group composition, Smalltown Poets vows to deliver the goods for its old fans as well as new. “We want to totally bring along people who have stuck with us. We’re grateful that there are still people who want to hear what we’re doing; but, at the same time, we’ve grown musically, so we expect that other people are open to new things.” According to Michael, Smalltown Poets, then and now, has kept one primary goal in the forefront of its mission and ministry. “Communicating the truth in love has always been a goal of this band and with me, in particular, as a songwriter. If you have ever been in a small town, and especially if you are a visitor, you are communicated to with a bit more care because people do not expect you to know everything about their little town that they have known and lived in all of their lives. And poets are known for communicating the truth about things as they see them.” This commitment to truth, coupled with several years of diligent pursuit of God’s own revelation in their lives, has led these particular poets to create an album that resonates with the spiritual lessons they have learned. “On songs such as ‘The Truth Is Out,’ ‘Lay It Down,’ ‘Here,’ ‘We Will Continue’ and ‘New to Me,’” says Michael, “a common thread is that God is proactive and present—in our lives individually, in the lives of those with whom we are the closest, in the church community, in our community, in general, in the mess of politics, in the midst of the crisis and uncertainty of war, AIDS and poverty— and He desires us to be present and proactive in relating to Him with honesty and truth. So out of that relationship with the divine, we can better relate and engage in those other relationships.” With new families and shifting priorities, the band has committed, as it always has, to the pursuit of God’s intention for its ministry. “You never know what’s going to happen, but our families are behind what we’re doing; and so wherever God leads, we hope to be willing to follow.” ccm ccmmagazine.com L--R: Troy Stains, Michael Johnston, Alex Peterson, Matt Goldman CCM_11.04_List.v10 10/6/04 2:30 PM Page 46 125 6 4 7 12 9 8 17 1 1 15 * arched” musings. A compendium of arguably useless and “rese 18 19 11 16 20 ama -R -O st Li M C C D E B R A -C O B R TU Chris Well’s 0 4 13 3 READ THIS FIRST: You’re sitting around a roaring fire, roasting desert varmints and singing, “Kum Ba Yah” for, like, the 80th time. You’d love a good cowboy song, but the only ones you can think of seem to be about mistreating cattle. Well, here are some Christian artists to the rescue, all offering “cowboy”themed songs that aren’t about roping dogs. Or something. Saddle Up: 5 Songs That Make Me Think of Cowboys 5 REASONS TO BE THANKFUL 1. “THE RIFLEMAN,” The Choir This moody, dreamy gem, which came from the 1987 album, Chase the Kangaroo (Myrrh), pokes fun at the dichotomy anytime one might “pray for peace and revel in war.” The title comes from a Western TV show that aired from 1958-1963 on ABC (and forever after in reruns). 2. “COSMIC COWBOY,” Barry McGuire 1. Max Lucado finally has a new book coming out. 2. Sitting through Star Wars sequels is not required by law. 4. “COWBOY,” Ghoti Hook In the ’90s, Ghoti Hook rocked with youthful, punk energy and tight harmonies matched to clever lyrics. The ode “Cowboy” (with the easy-to-singalong chorus, “cause he’s a Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy! Cowboy!”) comes from its 1997 album, Banana Man (Tooth & Nail). 3. Even with only four members, the group is still called Jump5. 4. The “reality” craze has finally come to Christian TV. 5. “CCM List-O-Rama” is confined to a single page. 5. Barry McGuire is, perhaps, best remembered in the general market for his apocalyptic 1965 hit, “Eve of Destruction.” Turning his life to Jesus in the ’70s, he recorded a string of Christian albums, including the 1978 classic, Cosmic Cowboy (Sparrow). The title track is built on an unusual metaphor to describe Jesus. 3. “THE GREATEST COWBOY OF THEM ALL,” Johnny Cash Another song that paints our Lord Jesus as a cowboy figure, this up-tempo number can be found on the 1991 Johnny Cash album, Mystery of Life (Mercury). It can also be found on the Cash gospel compilation, God, released in 2000 on Columbia. “THE GREAT ADVENTURE,” Steven Curtis Chapman This 1992 Christian cowboy classic serves as a happier, peppier counterpart to Chapman’s darkly brilliant “For the Sake of the Call,” reimagining the Great Commission as a scene from a cowboy movie. (Well, kinda.) Originally found on the Sparrow album The Great Adventure (naturally), you can also find this song on his 1997 Greatest Hits. READ THIS PART, TOO: Other notable entries for said list would include “Posse in the Sky” (Daniel Amos, Shotgun Angel), “Satan, Bite the Dust” (Carman, Addicted to Jesus) and “The Outlaw” (Larry Norman, Only Visiting This Planet). Plus, of course, all of the many, many, many other songs that could also be included. Do not send letters (unless they include money or baked goods). THE MEMBERS OF DENISON MARRS’ 5 FAVORITE FICTIONAL OR REAL PLANETS (HONEST!) 1. Perelandra 2. Endor 3. Middle-Earth 4. Venus 5. Mar(r)s The latest album from Denison Marrs is Denison Marrs (Floodgate Records). 46 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:20 PM Page 47 SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION Sure, the malls are crammed, there’s never enough time to get those sugar cookies baked, and, if that wasn’t enough, there’s always that one difficult aunt on your list who you can never find the right present for. But, there is hope in sight. Let CCM bring a little joy to your Christmas shopping this year with our handy gift guide filled with great ideas that’ll rock the socks off the people you’re buying for. CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:20 PM What’s the best Christmas present you ever received? Fusebox’s lead singer, Billy Buchanan “Last year I got the first season of ‘Smallville’ on DVD. I was pretty excited. I’m a huge fan of the show.” Page 48 JASON MORANT Abandon Art + culture + worship = Abandon With influences such as Keith Green, U2, Rita Springer and David Ruis, Jason brings an eclectic, edgy mix of styles and textures to his sound. It is the uniqueness of that sound combined with the maturity of his lyrics that is captured on Abandon. VARIOUS Stormie Omartian Presents—The Prayer That Changes Everything FFH’s Jennifer Deibler “My husband, Jeromy, got me a truck—a Montero—for Christmas once.” Created as a companion to her newest book, Stormie Omartian and her multi-Grammy Award-winning husband, Michael, have hand-selected this collection of 11 powerful praise & worship songs to usher each listener to “live each day making praise your first reaction and not a last resort.” This all new recording includes favorite worship songs plus songs penned by Stormie and her husband. VARIOUS The Passion of The Christ—Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Rebecca St. James Relive the awe with the stirring gold-certified original motion picture soundtrack from the most powerful biblical movie of our time, Mel Gibson’s The Passion of The Christ. Produced in Europe, this instrumental recording captures the same powerful emotions of the movie in a beautiful and moving orchestral score. “The most vivid one I remember was a pogo stick I got for Christmas as a child back in Australia.” Russ Lee “My family (wife and kids) bought me a farm last year. OK, not really for me but for a World Vision family that we support. A cow, two goats and some chickens were sent in my name to this family, and I got a card that said, ‘Merry Christmas, Dad, We bought you the farm!’ It was the most unique and the most awesome gift I’ve ever received!” VARIOUS Integrity’s iWorship NEXT Dive into the best worship songs from the biggest artists in Christian music. This two-disc set with 30 songs (plus three bonus tracks) and a free bonus DVD is just what you’ve been looking for—an incredible nonstop worship experience. Songs Include: “Agnus Dei,” “Blessed Be Your Name,” “Here I Am to Worship,” “Hungry,” “I Can Only Imagine” and “Shout To The Lord” from top artists, including Michael W. Smith, Darlene Zschech, Phillips, Craig & Dean, SONICFLOOd, Israel & New Breed and Don Moen. HILLSONG For All You’ve Done Avalon’s Melissa Greene “Mine was probably my engagement ring, I was shocked. I had only dated my husband for two months, and he actually proposed right after Christmas. It was a total shock, and I had no idea it was happening, so that was a major Christmas memory.” Cries of gratitude to God resounded throughout the city of Sydney, Australia as Darlene Zschech and the Hillsong Team, together with a choir of more than 500 voices, led thousands of people in an aweinspiring night of all-new live worship captured on this double-disc set. SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:23 PM Page 50 SPECIAL ADVERT What are some of your Christmas traditions? CAROLYN ARENDS The Irrational Season For each of the past 10 years, acclaimed singer/songwriter Carolyn Arends (“Seize the Day,” “Reaching,” “New Year’s Day”) has written a song for her church’s Christmas Eve service. The Irrational Season is a new recording featuring the best of those songs (plus four Christmas classics)—a stirring collection guaranteed to help you celebrate, contemplate and enter into the miracle of the Incarnation. Available at carolynarends.com or 866/953-1833. JIM MURPHY It Was You FFH’s Jeromy Deibler “My mom and my grandmother get together every year just after Thanksgiving and make homemade chocolate—I love it! Chocolatecovered pretzels, chocolate-covered graham crackers, chocolate-covered animal crackers—everything you can think of they cover in chocolate! We feast on the stuff straight through New Year’s.” It Was You, the debut project from Jim Murphy, runs the gamut of musical tastes—from inspirational to adult contemporary—while never losing the deep message that lies within each song. His premier solo endeavor showcases Jim’s vocal diversity and is a must-have. Be sure to listen to your favorite radio station for “Taken Back,” his early 2005 AC/Inspo single release. Available at Christian Bookstores, jimmurphyonline.com or amazon.com. POINT OF GRACE I Choose You Point of Grace returns with I Choose You, its most stunning and progressive album to date. With new member Leigh Cappillino and an updated mix of writers and producers, these multi-Dove Award winning women have reshaped their sound while maintaining the signature pop element that their fans know and love. Features the hit title track “I Choose You”. Bethany Dillon “Every Christmas Eve we go to my grandparents’ house and read the story of Jesus’ birth with them. Once we’re home, we all open one present and are rushed to bed. The funny thing is, the three youngest kids (including me) would love to sleep in on Christmas morning. I mean, it will all still be there, right? However, the two oldest, Kate and Aaron, feel compelled to run into everyone’s rooms at 4 in the morning and jump on our beds, belting out Christmas carols.” Denver Bierman of Denver & Mile High Orchestra “Every Christmas my family would buy a small Christmas tree made out of cinnamon rolls. It would be decorated with gummie bears as the lights and covered with icing. We would stick candles in it, and sing “Happy Birthday” to Jesus before we (Cont’d on pg. 52) RELIENT K Deck the Halls, Bruise Your Hand Back by popular demand! Relient K is re-releasing its special limitededition 10-song Christmas rock masterpiece, Deck the Halls, Bruise Your Hand. Look for it in stores on Nov. 2, 2004 and throughout the Christmas season! Just like last year, every copy will come with a free copy of its last album Two Lefts Don’t Make a Right... But Three Do. Check out mmhmm.com for musical samples and other downloads. CROSS MOVEMENT & FRIENDS Gift Rap Cross Movement Records continues to break new ground as The Cross Movement & Friends present the Christmas story like you’ve never heard it before—through hip-hop. On this new album Gift Rap, The Cross Movement invites a host of friends including DaTRUTH, Flame, J.R. and J-Silas (Rock Soul) to share in the celebration of the Savior’s birth. Sure to become a hip-hop holiday classic! In Stores Now! CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:24 PM Page 51 RTISING SECTION SELAH Hiding Place The new album from the Dove Award-winning group Selah features the huge No. 1 hit, “You Raise Me Up.” It’s the perfect gift this holiday season! Also, be sure to check out the solo releases from Selah members Todd Smith, Nicol Sponberg and Allan Hall. For more info, log onto selahonline.com or buy now at familychristian.com. AMY GRANT Greatest Hits 1986-2004 Amy Grant’s 19th project is a collection of her greatest hits since the award-winning, multi-platinum Unguarded album. Greatest Hits 1986-2004 spans Amy’s career since that seminal release marking almost two decades of unmatched artistry. The project features the massive hits “Baby Baby” and “Every Heartbeat” and includes two previously unreleased songs including “The Water,” Amy’s latest Christian radio offering. VARIOUS Gloria Gloria is the soundtrack for the 2004 holiday season. Including standout performances from Amy Grant (“God Is with Us”), Christy Nockels of Watermark (“O Come, O Come Emmanuel”), Shaun Groves (“O Come All Ye Faithful”) and Cindy Morgan (“Follow That Star”), Gloria is a soon-to-be Christmas classic of fresh and traditional songs. Visit gloriachristmas.com for more information. SUPERCHICK Beauty From Pain Through movie soundtracks, commercials and television shows, Superchic[k] has flaunted a passionate, energetic, pop-punk spirit, overflowing with positive messages that are serious and witty. Beauty From Pain continues Superchic[k]’s genre-busting journey, inspiring people with new-wave-pop-punk-funk-rock, a positive spirit and upbeat vibe. Available Dec. 14 wherever you buy music! FOCUS ON YOUR CHILD MEMBERSHIP The “Focus on Your Child” membership program is a complimentary Focus on the Family program designed for parents who have children at home. The Focus on Your Child Web site and age-specific print newsletters and audio journals provide timely encouragement, advice and information for today’s busy parents. To learn more and get a complimentary membership, visit focusonyourchild.com or call (800) A-FAMILY. CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:24 PM Page 52 SPECIAL ADVERT opened presents. Our family would always go to our midnight church service, then we’d come home and go to bed. My younger brother and I were not allowed to come downstairs to look at the presents until my parents were already there because they wanted to see the look on our faces when we entered the room.” Sam Katina of the Katinas “Our dad was a pastor, so our Christmas traditions always revolved around church. We didn’t have a whole lot of gifts, but Christmas in the islands [American Samoa] consisted of us doing a lot of singing in church and eating! Each Sunday School class in the church would do a Christmas play, and all the kids always looked forward to that. In the islands, we had an aluminum Christmas tree. We used it for about 10 years, and by the last year, it had about six branches left on it! Today, every now and then we’ll pop into a Goodwill or a secondhand store and see if there are any aluminum Christmas trees for sale. Now, every Christmas morning my wife and daughters and I bake a birthday cake and sing “Happy Birthday” to Jesus, and we read the Christmas story together. Afterward, our girls can hardly wait to go upstairs to the bonus room to open their gifts!” Mark Schultz “On Christmas morning my dad makes Belgian waffles for everybody. It’s awesome!” AUDIO-TECHNICA AE3300 CARDIOID CONDENSER MSRP: $439.00 With pristine audio quality, ultra-low handling noise and high-frequency clarity, Audio-Technica’s AE3300 cardioid condenser gives voice to the subtleties of artistic performance. At the heart of the AE3300 is the legendary AT4033 condenser element proven in the world’s finest recording studios. For exacting detail, brilliant clarity, exceptional sound: the AE3300 is the new standard in live audio. audio-technica.com YANCY Beautiful Sound Yancy is no stranger to the music business; she’s worked with some of Christian music’s finest (including Mac Powell of Third Day) and wrote Avalon’s hit song “I Don’t Want to Go.” Yancy leads worship for more than 2,500 students each week at Oneighty® in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Beautiful Sound features original and familiar worship songs for this generation. Check it out at yancynotnancy.com! RYAN DOBSON 2 Die 4 The end of life as you know it is the beginning of life as you need it. The fact is, if you have nothing worth dying for, you have nothing really worth living for. In To Die For, Ryan Dobson passionately demonstrates what it means to die to self. Go to: multnomahbooks.com or ryandobson.com for more information. CLINT BROWN Nothin’ But Church With 14 albums to his credit, Clint Brown has had a long and intriguing career in ministry as he’s written and published more than 250 praise and worship songs—including some that have been recorded and performed in five different languages. Check out clintbrown.com for more information. Joy Williams “We open one present the day before late on Christmas Eve, and then we go skiing on Sunday morning after we read the Christmas story—normally it’s up in Tahoe. It’s a rough Christmas really. (laughs) And then we’ll go home, and we all make dinner together. Then at night over cider we’ll open all the presents. We also like to make handmade pottery and paint it. Sorry we’re so ‘granola!’ It’s really funny. It sounds cool in California but probably only there.” JEREMY CAMP Restored His breakout success may not have happened all at once, but Jeremy Camp has certainly made his presence known during the past couple of years with a powerful testimony, two Dove Awards in 2004 and plenty of new experiences to draw from on Restored, the next chapter in his musical and personal journey. CCM_11.04_GiftGuide.final 10/6/04 6:25 PM Page 53 RTISING SECTION THE MESSAGE Ever wish the Bible read a little more like your favorite novel without losing any of the meaning in the process? Well The Message does just that—it’s a conversational, easy-to-understand interpretation compiled by top scholars who use today’s vernacular to bring new perspective to Scripture reading. CCM TOP 100 GREATEST SONGS IN CHRISTIAN MUSIC Whether it’s the lyrics or the music itself, everyone has that song he/she really connects with. And in CCM’s Top 100 Greatest Songs book, we chronicle 100 of those kinds of songs. From Rich Mullins, to Twila Paris, Steven Curtis Chapman and everyone in between, they’re all here. And there’s only one way to find out who made it to the top of the list—you must pick up a copy. Go to ccmtop100.com to listen and buy. HEATHER LYNNE Light as a Feather Heather Lynne’s 100 percent original album includes such lyrically award-winning songs as “Holy” and “Words On My Heart.” Every listen provides a glimpse into her soul. From pop (“Over Again”) to rock (“Hold Me Close”), Light as a Feather doesn’t disappoint! Purchase at cdstreet.com or visit heatherlynne.com for more information. For booking call 215/491-4027. IBANEZ JAM PACK JOLT The perfect plugged-in or unplugged gift for players who want to get out the message, the Ibaniz Jam Pack Jolt features an Ibanez acoustic electric guitar, acoustic amp and all the accessories and instruction materials! The suggested retail price is only $449.99. GIVE A CCM GIFT SUBSCRIPTION! Looking for that perfect gift that keeps on giving? Then you’ll want to get the music fan on your list a subscription to CCM Magazine, your monthly source for everything Christian music-related. From pop to rock to hip-hop, we’ve got stories that inform and inspire. Go to ccmmagazine.com for more details. CCM_11.04_Music.final 10/6/04 2:36 PM Page 55 inreview music Walk By Faith Jeremy Camp picks up right where his debut, Stay, left off with songs that come from his new chapter in life on Restored. JEREMY CAMP Restored BEC Camp’s found his formula for continued success. Like most breakout artist stories, it didn’t all happen immediately. But after the release of Stay in 2002, it wasn’t too long before a young Indiana native named Jeremy Camp quietly became the darling of the Christian File under: Grade: B+ Rock music industry. For fans of...faith-affirming anthems that communicate our constant need for God With a myriad of multi-format radio hits to and a desire for spiritual refinement. his credit (Six No.1 songs resulted from Stay.), impressive sales of more than 525,000 albums and two Dove Awards this past spring for “New Artist of the Year” and “Male Vocalist of the Year,” expectations for what serves as Camp’s true sophomore follow-up (Carried Me: The Worship Album was recorded for his fans at the same time as Stay as an homage to his praise roots.) are bound to be high—both industry-wide and with fans, given all his recent accolades. So now that we’ve got that pesky subject of expectations out in the open, here’s exactly what you really want to know: How does Restored stack up? In terms of production, the overall sound of Restored feels more like a bigbudget blockbuster than the indie rock feel of Stay. There are richer musical textures, several strategically placed string arrangements that add to the songs without being musically manipulative and extra emphasis devoted to what proves to be the most effective instrument of all in the mix: Camp’s voice. Shedding most of the gritty bravado that drew almost instant comparisons to former Creed frontman Scott Stapp, Camp’s vocal performance solidifies why he was voted as the industry’s top male vocalist. He sounds amazing, whether he’s singing a pretty ballad like “Even When” or a more aggressive, muscle-packed anthem like “Breath.” As far as the songs themselves go, Camp has remained pretty close to prototype with something for everyone—from college students to soccer moms. Mostly alternating between mid-tempo, radio-friendly tunes with power choruses like “Take Me Back” and “Be the One,” Camp also serves up more adultcontemporary fare in the realm of chart-topper “I Still Believe” and a couple of full-on rockers such as “Lay Down My Pride” to keep his hard music-loving brethren entertained. While the music remains relatively consistent (occasionally even indistinguishable from one song to the next) and cohesive throughout the album’s duration, one gets the feeling that these songs’ message far outweighs the sonic palette in priority. Like Stay, Camp translates a chapter from his own life into song with Restored: a faith-affirming, clear-cut message for Christians that addresses the tension of serving God in a sinful world, looking to God for strength and constantly acknowledging the priceless gift of grace He gave us through the sacrifice of Jesus. CHRISTA FARRIS ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 55 CCM_11.04_Music.final2 10/6/04 3:44 PM Page 56 back, but it’s a nice reminder that something special happens when these three get together. ANTHONY DEBARROS File under: Grade: A-Pop/Adult contemporary For fans of... the “new” and improved version of Point of Grace. POINT OF GRACE I Choose You Word A new, “edgier” Point of Grace has emerged. TOBYMAC File under: Grade: A-Hip-hop/funk For fans of... rhymes with an old-school funk flair. TOBYMAC Welcome to Diverse City ForeFront A more than satisfying sequel Let’s get the most newsworthy tidbit out of the way first: Yes, dc talk does reunite, at least momentarily, on a song on tobyMac’s second solo album, Welcome to Diverse City. And, yes, the track—a remix of “Atmosphere,” which appears with different vocalists earlier in the album—sounds just like something left off of Supernatural, the last album dc talk did before entering extended hiatus around the turn of the 56 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com millennium. In other words: It’s classic dc talk. With that out of the way, here’s the other bit of news: Diverse City is really, really good. Unlike his dc talk compatriots, Kevin Max and Michael Tait, Toby has remained musically close to the group’s urban roots. His live shows, particularly his recent opening slot on Third Day’s tour, have been vibrant, we-are-family festivals that veer from delightful rap to hard rockin’ slugfests. Diverse City catches that same allinclusive vibe and extends it over 16 cuts that range from ballads to in-your-face jams. In tone, it’s less like the rockrap of his first effort, Momentum, and more like the beat-heavy remixes of those songs he released last year as Re:Mix Momentum. “It’s been a long time coming, but I’m serving up the sequel,” he announces on opener “Hey, Now,” which sets the album’s pace with funk guitar and horns. The song segues quickly into the tooth-rattling bass beats of “Catchafire (Whoopsi Daisy),” where Toby and guests Papa San and MOC rap about turning up the heat on the spiritually lukewarm. The festival feel continues on the title track, “Diverse City,” which evokes Parliament and Sly and the Family Stone in an ode to embracing racial and ethnic diversity—a favorite theme of Toby’s. Thankfully missing from the album is the tendency Momentum had to build songs around melodies from classic hits. Instead, tobyMac opts to bring in a greater assortment of guests, including T-Bone, Coffee (GRITS) and Superchic[k], who help turn “Stories (Down to the Bottom)” into encouragement for those who are struggling under life’s burdens. And there’s the return of Toby’s son Truett, a.k.a. TruDog, who sounds positively overjoyed that he’s getting a Happy Meal for his efforts. Once the disc winds down, we’re graced with that dc talk reunion. Its version of the Top 40-ish “Atmosphere” won’t stop people from clamoring for a dc talk come With more than five million albums sold and 24 consecutive No. 1 singles, Point of Grace could easily have become essentially a parody of themselves: peppy, poppy and always positive. Instead, after three years, the foursome is back with an adventurous new studio project. New member Leigh Cappillino is along for the ride, having replaced founding member Terry Jones, who left the group a year ago to spend more time with her family. Though POG fans will always have a special appreciation in their hearts for Jones, Cappillino is, thankfully, more than up to the task of filling her shoes. Simply put, I Choose You is the best album Point of Grace has ever done, with apologies to its delightful (and now, near-classic) A Christmas Story. Though consistently underestimated by critics, the group has, nonetheless, amassed and nurtured a massive fan base that will, doubtless, be thrilled with the changes in the group’s sound. There is a new edge, a new life and a new energy in the girls’ music that deftly manages the difficult task of freshening up their sound to engage new listeners without going so far as to alienate the existing fan base. The project’s producers—Brent Bourgeois (Jaci Velasquez, Sixpence None the Richer), Mark Hammond (Cindy Morgan, Al Denson), Wayne Kirkpatrick (Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith) and David Zaffiro (Kim Hill, Whitecross)—do a fantastic job of stretching the group vocally and musically without making them into something they are not. One of the biggest highlights is the title cut (featuring Denise Jones on a gutsy lead vocal), which reminds us that our ultimate allegiance belongs only to God. “Down” takes a tagteam vocal approach that is surprisingly aggressive, while “Who Am I” features gorgeous harmonies as it rhetorically asks, “Who am I to understand Your ways, who am I to give You anything but praise?” Moments like these make it clear how far the Point of Grace members have come: They’re unafraid to ask questions yet continue to embrace their faith in the midst of those ambiguities. The album wraps up with three more contemplative numbers: “Waiting in the Wings,” which reminds us “Though God is out of sight, He’s working in the middle of all things”; the contemporary yet hymn-like “For All You’ve Done”; and the uplifting “This Is Your Land,” which is preceded by a narrated reading from the spiritual classic Pilgrim’s Progress. If I Choose You is any indication, after 10 years, Point of Grace has only just begun. LI LIU CCM_11.04_Music.final2 10/6/04 File under: Grade: B+ Pop For fans of... social commentary set to irresistible pop beats. NICOLE C. MULLEN Everyday People Word A cure for the “everyday” music blues Admit it. Someone just happens to say the words “everyday people,” and the tune immediately comes to mind. Yes, the classic by Sly & The Family Stone has been around for ages, and it may seem too tired to work as an album title. But the meaning 5:27 PM Page 57 behind the words goes far beyond one song as it encapsulates what Nicole C. Mullen wants to express on her latest studio album. Whether upbeat, calm or a full-on soaring ballad, each song communicates the hope found in Christ and deals with “everyday” concerns—from insecurity to depression to love and even death. Mullen’s signature, crystal-clear tone graces the soft notes as well as the more exuberant, often within the same song. “I Am” is a gorgeous, worshipful selection which begins smooth and laidback, building to a powerful finish and accented with lyrics such as “I am the Rose they crucified and buried.” “Bye Bye Brianna,” written in memory of a little girl who passed away, carries a somber tone and yet concludes with sounds of celebration and the uplifting message: “I see you in the daylight.” But the focus on other people doesn’t stop here. Also known for being socially conscious, Mullen addresses the issue of Troski slavery in Ghana in the song “Gon’ be Free.” The tribal drums and vocals that open the track with an African vibe are the perfect background for a song about a people’s cry for freedom. “Who the Son sets free is absolutely free indeed,” sings Mullen, with a chorus that begs the listener to stomp and clap. “Deity” features spoken vocals as well as a tune worthy of humming along. Of course, every album needs a strong finish, and “Valorie” is all that and more. Culminating with layers of orchestration, choir vocals and the reading of Psalm 23:4, its message is turning to God for comfort NICOLE C. MULLEN during the tough times. The production on Everyday People is impressive throughout all 14 tracks—even on those that try a little too hard to be pop radio hits (“Message for Ya” and “This This”). Sharing the production responsibilities with Mullen and her husband, David (Veggie Tales, Carman), are Tommy Sims (CeCe Winans, Taylor Dayne), James “Big Jim” Wright (Usher, Mariah Carey), Andrew Ramsey (India.Arie, Kimberly Locke) and Shannon Sanders (Shark Tale soundtrack, The Temptations), who each bring varied experience and a fresh perspective to the project. While it’s true that Mullen would sound amazing CCM_11.04_Music.final2 10/6/04 5:28 PM Page 58 singing just about anything, she brings soul and feeling to this collection of encouraging, real-life songs. JESSICA ROBIN File under: Grade: B+ Pop/Adult contemporary For fans of... the continued musical maturation of FFH with its trademark, straightforward sentiments. FFH Still the Cross Essential FFH is still doing what it does best. With the group’s success over the past decade, the members of FFH could’ve “called it a day” as the quartet spent the last year and a half pursuing other interests outside the power pop group. Jeromy and Jennifer Deibler welcomed their first child into the world, while Brian Smith and his wife expanded their family with the arrival of a second child. In addition to being a new parent, Jeromy also continued to delve into the production side of music, working with Big Daddy Weave and Palisade on its recent albums, while Michael Boggs concentrated on his songwriting craft. But as the old adage goes, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder”; and the evidence of the time away is continued artistic growth. And for FFH’s fifth studio project, the group decided to strip the message down to the basics. The lyrics are simple and uplifting, and FFH differentiates this album musically with new instrumentation that is atypical from the group’s previous efforts. Part of this ambitious musical shift is 58 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com credited to producer Mark Miller (Casting Crowns) along with longtime FFH producer Scott Williamson, plus Jeromy’s co-production on seven tracks. The title track, which also serves as the disc’s first single, is an adept power ballad that Christian radio should easily latch onto. “Without You” touts an infectious hook, tight harmonies and crunchy guitars. On “In This Moment,” effects are used in abundance as the track opens with what sounds like a cell phone ringing as the instrumentation sneaks in and crescendos to the opening of the song where Jennifer’s sweet voice enters and finally builds to the breakout chorus. Mixing things up, “Cover Me” is easily the edgiest song on the album and was written in response to the unexpected passing of the 5year-old son of a friend (Trent Dilfer, Seattle Seahawks’ quarterback). FFH turns feelings of anger and confusion from the loss into a redemptive song of reassurance and features an excellent string arrangement. Also on a personal note, “You and Only You” was written about the Deibler’s son. This piano-driven ditty is upbeat and has tasteful interaction between the keys and the JUMP5 electric guitar. When viewed as a whole, Still the Cross shows FFH at its best, with a polished pop album that is sure to please fans and may potentially attract new ones with its vast instrumentation. KELLY O’NEIL File under: Grade: AEmo/Alternative rock For fans of... passionate vocals, scalding guitars and swirling drum beats. FURTHER SEEMS FOREVER Hide Nothing Tooth & Nail The third singer’s the charm here. Given yet another line-up switch, Further Seems Forever can now be chalked up in the sparsely populated category of bands like Van Halen and Genesis who’ve had three different leaders serve time over the years. Though in those two classic rock scenarios, the evolution became weaker than its original states, this incarnation of FSF is its FURTHER SEEMS FOREVER CCM_11.04_Music.final2 10/6/04 heartiest yet, thanks to new frontman find Jon Bunch. The match is only fitting, considering that the emo rocker was a founder of Sense Field, one of the genre’s earliest and most lauded acts, which, after experiencing its own internal shake-ups, has since been caught up with its commercial smash hit “Save Yourself.” Ironically, that act was always a personal favorite for Further Seems Forever players, including the first fearless principal Chris Carrabba (who’s since credited Sense Field as a major influence for his own Dashboard Confessional). Regardless of how the situation’s come full circle, the output level on Hide Nothing is point-blank this band’s most powerful to date, entrancing listeners with 13 tracks steeped in the tension release tradition. The disc leads with the band’s pent-up frustration throughout the redemptive “Light Up Ahead,” which growls with authority and hearkens back to Sense Field’s early indie works. Such pressure-points continue to mount on the gut-wrenching “Like Someone You Know” and the ray gun blasts of “Bleed,” magnifying Bunch’s quivering range. That instrumental recklessness is funneled into more melodic presentations on “Already Gone” and “All Rise,” pitting tender reflections against passionate playing. It’s a system that ensures the FSF camp yet another breath of life after a series of events that would’ve left lesser bands down and knocked out for the three count. ANDY ARGYRAKIS 5:28 PM Page 59 Artist’s Choice Tammy Trent reviews the debut album from indie artist Stephen Marshall. Canadian singer/songwriter Stephen Marshall has released his debut project, The Door Is Open; and, boy, am I glad he invited us in! Penning all 12 tracks on this pop/countryinfluenced worship project, Stephen has found a way to help me escape into the presence of God through his music. My favorite song would have to be “You Make My Day,” which combines a great pop vibe and a very likeable melody, with lyrics that remind us of all the wonderful things God gives us every day. Meanwhile, “Glory Glory” is an amazing song of worship to the One who holds our lives in His hands, even unto death. And “Holy Are You Lord” brings me to tears every time by reminding me that, in spite of my own brokenness, God is faithful to help me put my life back together again. Trust me, you’ll want to make room on your CD rack for this one. The Door Is Open is packed with life, love and adventure that will lead you closer to “home” through each and every song. Visit his Web site, stephenmarshall.net, to order The Door Is Open. newreleases NOV. 2 GRITS Russ Lee Newsboys Relient K Switchfoot Dichotomy B Hear Those Bells Devotion mmhmm The Early Years 1997-2000 NOV. 9 Andy Chrisman (of 4HIM) Salvador Randy Travis One So Natural Passing Through NOV. 16 The Showdown A Chorus of Obliteration NOV. 23 PFR Various The Bookcase Recordings Exodus (extended version) (Gotee) (Vertical Vibe) (Sparrow) (Gotee) (re:think) (Upside/Shelter) (Word) (Word) (MONOvsSTEREO) (Fuseic) (Rocketown) CCM_11.04_Books.final 10/6/04 3:17 PM inreview by Janet Chismar Page 60 books 2 1 I have to admit I love first-person accounts, and “real-life” stories monopolize a substantial portion of my bookshelf. Seeing how God works in other people’s lives, hearing about their struggles and triumphs reminds me that I am not alone on this journey of faith. So, needless to say, it was easy and enjoyable for me to dig into our November book picks. 1 Topping the list is SHE: The Woman You’re Made to Be (Tyndale), by Rebecca St. James and Lynda Hunter Bjorklund, a sisterly advice manual on how to live a “Safe, Healthy and Empowered” life. Both ladies vulnerably share situations and struggles they have tackled on their respective faith walks. Bjorklund, a 40-something mother of three and St. James, Christian music’s reigning 20something spokeswoman for purity, nicely balance the varied stages and concerns of a woman’s life. From body image, temptation and sexuality to mentoring, finding purpose and establishing boundaries, SHE explores life from a uniquely feminine perspective. Interspersing Scripture with personal insights, the authors lay a solid foundation for Christ-centered living. This book gets down and dirty— be prepared to face jealousy, cattiness, laxative abuse, cosmetic surgery, lying, sexual violation and neediness—yet it concludes with a message full of hope. 3 (Zondervan/Youth Specialties). The compilation of vignettes is designed to demonstrate God’s unfailing love in both the everyday and painful moments of life. Candid stories from a handful of Christian artists are also sprinkled between the gripping testimonies of teenagers, each showcasing an attribute of God. Josh Auer of PAX217, for example, demonstrates that God is in control and protects us from danger by sharing the story of the night his house caught fire. Rapper T-Bone acknowledges that the Lord shielded him from guns and gang violence. Phillip LaRue led two men to Christ in Daytona Beach—on a night when he was wrestling his own demons of doubt. Nikki Leonti found God merciful during her teen pregnancy. And the members of Audio Adrenaline produced a compelling video in the midst of confusion, chaos and discomfort in South America. 3 You may not recognize the name Patton Dodd, but his book My Faith manages to unearth meaning—yes, even on the funny pages. Brewer dissects the “lives” of Superman, Batman, The Hulk, Spiderman, Thor and Wonder Woman and finds truth, grace, discernment, perseverance and nobility. Even these heroes sport their share of foibles, struggles and defeats; but in the end, their failures are meant to point us to the ultimate Hero, Champion and Warrior. H. Michael Brewer So Far: A Story of Conversion and Confusion (Jossey-Bass) is a mustread for anyone who finds himself or herself puzzled by the seeming contradictions of Christianity (not the foundational truths of Jesus but by all the odd traditions and assorted quirks of various church branches). Dodd paints an unflinching, sometimes hilarious portrait of some churches. His stories about his year at Oral Roberts University are priceless. But the thing I like so much about this book is that Dodd earnestly and passionately wants to know Christ through it all. And, last but certainly not least, the role Christian music played in Dodd’s conversion will be of interest to any CCM reader. 2 4 Irene Dunlap is one woman who knows how to soothe the troubled soul. The co-author of three “Chicken Soup” volumes, Dunlap turns her attention to teens and young adults in True: Real Stories About God Well, everyone needs to escape reality every now and then—right? Showing Up in the Lives of Teens 60 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com Who Needs a Superhero? Finding Virtue, Vice and What’s Holy in the Comics (Baker) by H. Michael Brewer Rebecca St. James 4 looks at one “great escape” but Whenever he takes a break from songwriting or touring, Minneapolisbased Joe Rogness likes to pull out his worn copy of Donald Miller’s Blue Like Jazz. Rogness admits, “I found myself highlighting a lot of this book as I verbally repeated the word ‘exactly.’ Mr. Miller approaches topics such as romance, grace, loneliness, worship and multiple others tied to the church and community with the type of honesty reminiscent of Brennan Manning, Larry Crabb or, as others have cited, Anne Lamott. You can’t help but ask yourself some pretty honest questions as you read this book. It is crafted with transparency, and it is a beautiful, poetic read. This book is a means to step back and evaluate your personal perspective on living in our culture with a Christian worldview.” CCM_11.04_Gear.final 10/6/04 2:40 PM Page 62 inreview by Kent Morris gear DRUMKITS Learn more about the latest tools to keep the beat paced to musical perfection. GRETSCH CATALINA With a name that’s a blast from the past, this is sure to be a retro rocket. It delivers the tonality expected of a legend but with a thoroughly modern mounting system designed to keep each drum isolated from its counterparts. Named GTS, the innovative suspension yields unanticipated clarity for this price range. Coupled with its birch shells, the kit’s precision is stunning when heard in a full band environment. Gretsch has finished the Catalina in a series of warm walnut and cool Caribbean blue hues that characterize a kit that is as easy to play as it is to hear. $1299 gretschdrums.com ROLAND TD3S V-COMPACT YAMAHA SKRM-100 Electronic drums don’t have to be expensive to be useable. One look at the new V-Compact kit, and you know it’s all there: good sounds, reasonably accurate playing pads, a quick but not premature kick trigger and a flexible hi-hat mechanism. From the built-in 32 kits, you can preview the assembled tones before committing to one for the evening. If the venue doesn’t sound like Carnegie Hall, you can still dial in any of 15 simulated rooms while conjuring up classic and not-so-classic dynamic effects to “wow” your audience (or just keep the sonic peace with the vocalists). Last but not least, Roland has imbued the V-Compact with an integrated timing coach. $1495 rolandus.com If you’ve seen Delirious live, you’ve heard the SKRM-100. Based on an old recording studio trick, it adds low frequencies to any kick drum. Here’s the drill: Fit a raw speaker inside an old drum shell and place it in front of the bass drum head, and then wire it to the console. Yamaha has used studio legend Russ Miller to create a versatile stand capable of aiming itself at almost any low frequency device, such as a floor tom or tympani. By adding extra low end, the SKRM-100 becomes an effects unit, designed to be used in the same manner as a reverb or delay. As with all transducers (energy conversion devices), placement is the key to achieving a good sound. The owner’s manual suggests a parallel position four inches in front of the drumhead. The result is pleasing low end with the “feel” as strong as the “hear,” assuming the sound system can reproduce the extended low frequencies the SKRM-100 produces. If you’re looking for something special in the air, the SKRM-100 is it. $499 yamaha.com VERSI-PANEL ZILDJIAN ZXT CYMBAL PACK Is your Plexiglas drum shield solving your drum bleed issue? Do you want to color coordinate the drum area to the room? Well, the Versi-panel can end your worries on both fronts with its fantastic acoustic absorption ability and a pleasing color palette. Originally designed for room dividing chores in multi-purpose halls, the Versi-panel has found new life as an effective drum noise reducer. Typical results are eight to 10 decibel cuts in overall level on the stage, making the vocalists’ job easier while providing a clearer tone for the audience. When the gig is over, the Versi-panel folds up into a compact cylinder and is ready for the road. $599 mity-lite.com Pros don’t buy pre-packaged kits, do they? Now, there is a reason to let the manufacturer do the picking with the quality found in the ZXTP4P. A 20inch medium ride, a 14-inch China, along with a pair of solid hi-hats and a medium thin crash make up this kit. Pre-packs usually include a storage bag, and the ZXT’s is one of the more sturdy and usable of the bunch. Now, even professionals can hold their heads high as they walk out of the music store with a cymbal kit in hand—as long as it is the ZXTP4P. $525 zildjian.com 62 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com CCM_11.04_tour.v6 10/6/04 1:51 PM Page 64 t standingroomonly your guide to concerts by Andy Argyrakis FAST FACTS ON AIDS IN AFRICA “IN THE NAME OF LOVE TOUR” L-R: Jason Roy (Building 429), Tim Neufield (Starfield), Alyssa Barlow (BarlowGirl) FOX CITIES PERFORMING ARTS CENTER APPLETON, WI—SEPT. 22, 2004 “I Love You, Lord,” which, once again, inspired fans toward increased action in their faith. Eclectic rocker Todd Agnew followed with additional attention toward reverence and worship, serving up a mixture of familiar favorites and originals off his acclaimed Grace Like Rain CD in tribute to the down trodden. “Open the Eyes of My Heart” urged listeners to see Christ in the least of our earthly brethren, and “This Fragile Breath (The Thunder Song)” provoked thoughts of not taking daily blessings for granted. On a sheer artistic front, Agnew’s time was packed with the most diversity, carrying on like a Dave Matthews Band improv session on “Reached Down” and a jumpin’ juke joint throughout “When Love Comes to Town” (originally cut by U2 and B.B. King and featured by Agnew on the In the Name of Love compilation CD). Earlier in the evening, BarlowGirl used its platform to push purity with self-esteem-assuring cuts “On My Own,” “Average Girl” and “Never Alone.” The trio of young women musicians sounded between an updated version of The Go Go’s on the brisker material and Vanessa Carlton when pared down on piano. Canada’s Starfield also shifted the dynamic between the resolute and subdued, encouraging all to lift up the Lord during “Filled With Your Glory” and further embracing the tour’s theme during “Alive In This Moment.” The foursome’s gallant cries encouraged youth to step up to the plate and truly invest in the World Vision mission, which, when reinforced by compelling video images after their performance portion, made yet another profound case for compassion. All photos by Andy Argyrakis When U2’s Bono first raised his fist up high and belted out the words to “Pride (In the Name of Love),” the charismatic leader was referring, specifically, to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the racial equality he fought so diligently to secure. Now, 20 years later, that song continues to resonate, and its message has transcended well beyond relating to civil rights. In the eyes of Todd Agnew, Building 429, BarlowGirl and Starfield (who adopted the slogan as their tour’s title), it’s become a motivational way of life in which we’re called to seek the abolishment of AIDS, oppression and poverty in Africa through relief efforts. Partnering with the renowned faith-based organization World Vision, the undertaking was more than a mere rock concert. Instead, it was meant to spread awareness, stir up reactionary results and help curb an epidemic that’s crushed countless families stricken with this sickness. “We’re here to reach out our hands to those who need our help tonight,” Building 429 frontman/guitarist Jason Roy said to the crowd. “Christ calls us to be proactive, and it’s with our prayers and support that we’ll be fulfilling that commandment.” Besides those prompting words, the group delivered a motivational set geared around the concept of extending aid to the less fortunate. Tracks like “Above It All” and “The Space In Between Us” leaned on the Great Commission while they howled with weathered insistence. Although not necessarily relating to the cause at hand, Building 429’s key smash “Glory Defined” supplied a time for reflection and selfexamination that revolved around believers’ future hope in heaven. It was proceeded by an acapella segment of In addition to an entertaining and spiritually elevating excursion, the “In the Name of Love Tour” also served as an educational experience. Several alarming statistics, such as these below, were shared through the night, and various pleas were made for personal involvement. • Nearly 30 million Africans are living with HIV/AIDS, which, in some of the hardest-hit countries, translates to more than a quarter of the population possessing the virus. (Sixty-five hundred Africans die from AIDS each day.) • In Africa, 8.6 percent of adults are infected with HIV/AIDS compared to the world’s 1.1 percent average. (Seventy percent of the world’s HIV/AIDS victims live in Africa.) • More than one million African children below 15 are afflicted with HIV/AIDS. This constitutes over 90 percent of the worldwide population of pediatric AIDS patients. For more information and supplementary resource links, log onto inthenameoflovetour.com. HERE AND THERE: Project 86 Are you within a day’s drive? Here are a couple concert dates you won’t want to miss! 11/4 Sandi Patty and Chonda Pierce “The Girls Are Back in Town” tour, Shoreline Christian Center in Austin, TX 11/4 Pillar with Project 86 “Where Do We Go From Here” tour, Newport Music Hall in Columbus, OH For the latest concert listings, check out CCMmagazine.com’s searchable tour database to find out when your favorite artists will play in a city near you. L-R: Jon Neufeld (Starfield), Todd Agnew, Paul Bowden (Building 429), Rebecca Barlow (BarlowGirl) 64 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com CCM_11.04_20things.v7 10/6/04 1:23 PM Page 66 20 THINGS YOU PROBABLY DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT: JARS OF CLAY BY MICHAEL NOLAN 14. ULTIMATE CONFLICT RESOLUTION After more than a decade together, the guys in Jars rarely get into conflict. “We have reached a near-perfect homeostasis amongst the band and crew,” Dan professes. 13. APPLAUSE FOR AARON SANDS “(Bass player) Aaron has been the spiritual glue for the band for nearly nine years,” praises Dan. “His heart and passion for truth, social justice and authenticity of faith have been vital to everything Jars has put its hand to.” 12. BANGING THE DRUM FOR JOE PORTER “Joe Porter can build or fix about anything,” marvels Dan. “He is as skilled a carpenter and mechanic as he is a drummer. I’m fascinated by people like that.” And he adds, “I call him when I need to change a light bulb.” 11. 1000 WELLS Compelled to make a difference in third-world countries, Jars founded Blood: Water Mission. The first effort of this non-profit organization is the 1000 Wells Project, which officially launches in Spring 2005, with the goal of raising funds to build, rebuild and repair 1000 wells in urban and rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa. (Visit bloodwatermission.com) 10. AMERICA REVISITED Some find it surprising that Jars covered America’s hit “Lonely People” on its current album, Who We Are Instead. The guys say they would have recorded it years ago if they had known the cheer that rises from the audience when they sing, “This is for all the lonely people.” 9. CASH CONNECTION Dan wrote the foreword to Dave Urbanski’s book The Man Comes Around: The Spiritual Journey of Johnny Cash. You’ll have to pick up a copy to discover Dan’s personal connection to The Man in Black. 8. THANKS, BONO It’s been 11 years since four Greenville College students put their heads together on their first loop-laden song “Fade to Grey.” But instead of fading away, Jars of Clay’s future remains bright as the band puts the finishing touches on its seventh as-yet-untitled hymns album for a Spring 2005 release on Essential Records. With all the attention Dan Haseltine, Matt Odmark, Stephen Mason and Charlie Lowell have received over the years, is there anything you haven’t been told about these perennially popular guys? After conferring with Dan and Matt, the answer is, “Yes.” 20. “FLOOD”-ED WITH OPTIONS There have been many arrangements of Jars’ 1995 hit “Flood,” including one short-lived incarnation with a “lounge-jazz” bridge. “The looks of sheer puzzlement on the faces of our audience were priceless,” laughs Matt. 19. HAPPY TO BE THERE Among their favorite places to play, Matt votes for the Paramount Theatre in Seattle. Dan lists Irving Plaza in New York City and Stubbs’ BBQ in Austin, Texas, as well as pretty much anywhere in Grand Rapids, Mich., and Boston. 18. DAN TURNS “EVIL” As his 3-year-old son, Noah, swoops into his superhero phase of life, Dan often finds himself playing the evil nemesis. Translation: “I get hit with swords, sprayed with squirt guns and beaten down a lot.” The proud dad adds, “I would not have it any other way.” 17. THE REEL WORLD “I do a little fishing when I can,” confides Matt, who claims to be guilty of having one too many hobbies. “And if I’m really honest, it is mostly an excuse to spend an afternoon with Charlie, as we rarely catch any fish.” 16. NOVEL IDEA Inspired by author Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird, Traveling Mercies), Dan is slowly writing a novel. 15. THEY JUST SAID, “NO.” When Jars was looking for a producer for its first album, the band was turned down by Tommy Sims (CeCe Winans, Rachael Lampa) and Wayne Kirkpatrick (Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith) before things clicked with Adrian Belew (King Crimson, Talking Heads). Now friends with both “snubbers,” the Jars guys like to occasionally remind the producers of their decisions. 66 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com At this year’s Dove Awards, Bono—via video from Dublin, Ireland—introduced Jars’ performance by mentioning the impact of one of the band’s songs (“Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet”) that he’s been listening to for the past year. “Surreal,” describes Matt. “It was humbling,” says Dan. “We look up to Bono as a man who has carried a vision for the gospel in music for a long time. I stood at a recent U2 concert and wept because I was seeing what it looks like when Christians move away from safety and take risks, risks that show a much more relevant and wide side of God’s character.” 7. SURREALITY CHECK Looking back through the years, the guys think their most surreal moment was playing a show with Duran Duran or getting cookies from Lisa Loeb’s mother. 6. NO, WAIT… It was probably watching Sting, clad only in a loincloth, practicing yoga in the courtyard of a Texas amphitheater hours before they were playing a concert together. 5. NO, THIS, NOW THIS IS IT… Dan talked with Barry Manilow at the Apple Store in Soho (New York City). 4. SURREAL (FINAL SUBMISSION) In Connecticut, they were in a conversation that simultaneously included Miss America, Donny Most (Ralph the Mouth from “Happy Days”), Gary Wright (1976 No. 1 hit “Dreamweaver”) and Dave Mason (1977 hit “We Just Disagree”). Dan surmises, “That doesn’t happen but maybe once every 75 years!” 3. MAPPING THE FUTURE While on the road, Dan found an old schoolhouse map from 1920 that shows all the train routes and plane routes in America. “I use it to show my son where I will be going and how close to home or far away I will be.” 2. THE ULTIMATE RETRO WORSHIP ALBUM It’s not surprising that Jars of Clay would consider making a worship project, but what is unexpected is the path the band’s taking. They’re doing a major time warp—and we’re not talking dropping drum loops on “Nothing But the Blood.” We’re talking hymns that are more than 200 years old. 1. ANCIENT AND TIMELESS “This has been one of the most inspiring and faith-deepening projects we have ever done together,” muses Dan. “We have taken hymn text from the 18th century, stuff from Europe that had no melodies, and we have constructed songs. The text is so rich. I hope people will love this record as much as we have loved the process and the education behind the creative process.” CCM_11.04_peacock.v6 10/6/04 2:33 PM Page 68 charliepeacock Vol.14 Everything That’s On My Mind My Florida morning has a rhythm—cars on the road outside, a radio playing. I laugh at myself. It’s impossible for me to write the word rhythm without spelling it out in the noisy space of my head: R-H-Y-T-H-M. Since childhood I’ve believed that rhythm is a word every musician should spell without error. The act of spelling this word has its own internal rhythm— two groups of three letters each, two eighth-note triplets to be exact, each occupying the real estate of one quarter-note in a single measure of 2/4 time. Because my brain delights in rhythmic memory, I haven’t misspelled this word in 40 years. When I’m laid to rest some stoic soul will remind the tearful gathering: “Who can forget how this dear man spelled the word rhythm with such stunning and consistent accuracy?” These are my first brimming thoughts here in Seaside, Fla., at the end of August as I rise to a new and hopeful morning. There is still the aching head and the ringing in my left ear, though. The ringing is a constant solo soprano voice to the ATB of the rest of life. ATB is what follows the S in SATB. Like the letters in rhythm, I’ve known the sequence of these four letters most of my life. They came with my musician father, like a toy with batteries included. Soprano, alto, tenor, bass. SATB. Musical families, particularly those that read music, come with their own peculiar language: adagio, neapolitan sixth, double-tongue, double-reed and double-dog. Actually, the last is not a musical term, though I use it often and would like to know its origin and how it came into my vocabulary. How do we know what we know? That’s an ongoing question. For some of us it’s a question having to do with epistemology; for others, a curiosity. For still 68 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com arthouse Illustration by Jimmy A. A New and Hopeful Morning others, it’s a necessity like water and air—a question of health, wholeness and well-being. Knowing, and the question of how we know, is a deep and complex human weave—a crocheted afghan, inherited and passed down. Getting at the intricacy of the weave involves time, patience, steady hands, good light and eyes to see. The weekend before coming to Seaside, I spoke at an event to promote my latest book. This was one of those outdoor music festivals where people of like Spirit and Tribe gather. I didn’t want to gather in that way under those circumstances again. So I was there but not there. I came to love and loved less. I knew too much from too much knowing of the same thing again and again. I need a break from the institutions and mass media of the Spirit and Tribe I belong to. I’ve spent a whole life wanting to know things; now I want to not know things for a while—let mystery be. Years ago I had the opportunity to spend about 20 minutes alone in conversation with the great writer Frederick Buechner (Godric, The Book of Bebb). I learned a lesson that day. Perhaps now is the time to appropriate it. Buechner has spent a lifetime living out and writing about his faith journey in the Spirit and Tribe of Jesus. Buechner asked about my music and what I was up to. “Well,” I told him, “I co-wrote the No. 2 pop song in America right now, a song sung by Amy Grant.” “Amy Grant?” he asked. “I’ve never heard of her.” In 1992, what rock did one have to live under to be a professing follower of Jesus in America and not hear of Amy Grant? Thirteen years ago I found this to be an amusing story about a great man out of touch with pop culture. Now it’s serious. I need to know where that rock is and quick. Later, down at the beach I want to kneel with my wife, Andi, and call on the empathetic God. Instead we swim again. With our backs to the ocean, we look up to see not one but two rainbows stacked to heaven. The rainbow was and is a sign and symbol from God to people in this crazy place of light, darkness and shadows. With the rainbow He’s painting a story that says He will sustain and not destroy. He will overcome the darkness with the color of life. Double rainbow. Double-dog. This month marks the end of my residency as a regular columnist for CCM. I have so appreciated the feedback that you readers have given. Thank you. I would also like to thank the magazine, in general, and Editor Jay Swartzendruber, specifically, for the opportunity to share my thoughts each month. I wish all of you good health and good work in the power of God who so richly lavishes His grace on us all. Remember to imagine well for your neighbors, to be generous and willing to share. Trust God with the unknown and practice the tolerance of mystery. Breathe deep, and love like there’s no tomorrow. Peace. For more than a year, Charlie Peacock has graced our readers with his pastoral spirit and compelling ideas. We’re grateful. Charlie, as you sang to us all those years ago, “Stay young in heart with eyes of faith...” CCM_11.04_Classifieds.v3 10/6/04 5:50 PM Page 69 CLASSIFIEDS RECORDS/TAPES/CDs Statement of Ownership, Management and Circulation RUGGED CROSS MUSIC P.O. Box 42146, Charleston, SC 29423-2146, www.RuggedCrossMusic.com, [email protected], CDs, LPs, Cassettes, Videos and more 1. Publication Title: CCM Magazine. 2. Publication No. 1049-3378. 3. Filing Date: 9-30-04. 4. Issue Frequency: Monthly. 5. Number of Issues Published Annually: 12. 6. Annual Subscription Price: $19.95. 7. Office of Publication: Salem Publishing, 104 Woodmont Blvd, Suite 300, Nashville, Davidson, TN, 37205 8. General Business Office of Publisher: Salem Publishing, 104 Woodmont Blvd, Suite 300, Nashville, Davidson, TN 37205. 9. 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I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on the form or who omits materials or information requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (including multiple damages and civil penalties.) MUSIC VIDEO EXPERTS! TV/radio production, training, editing, TV/radio station placement and Public Relations. Call 214/316-1040 or visit our Web site at www.themediawisegroup.com Free Media assessments. CHRISTIAN MUSIC MAKERS, an informative and entertaining book by Mark Weber about 70 CCM/gospel artists. Check it out at www.geocities.com/zeebozine or www.lulu.com/christian music MUSICIANS WE’RE LISTENING! SING LOUD! Are you a singer wanting to be heard by music industry executives! Send in your CD for a complete evaluation and receive a FREE t-shirt! Details at SINGLOUD.com ATTENTION ARTISTS! Interested in the International Music Markets? 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Box 2501, Calumet City, IL 60409-2501. E-mail: [email protected] ccmmagazine.com november 04 ccm 69 CCM_11.04_halloffame.v7 10/6/04 1:45 PM Page 70 halloffame Randy Stonehill 70 ccm november 04 ccmmagazine.com andy Stonehill may be a Christian music legend now, but back in the mid-’70s, he was simply paving the way for and inspiring many of today’s most prominent artists. Consider this encounter, which Michael W. Smith told CCM about during this month’s cover story interview: “I’ll never forget the first time I met Randy Stonehill in 1976. My (high school) graduation present from my mom and dad was to go to the second annual Christian artist seminar in Estes Park, Colorado. And I went up and introduced myself to Randy. He said, ‘Hey, why don’t you come on up to the cabin?’ I walked up with him, and then there was me, Randy Stonehill and Larry Norman; and we were feeding squirrels from their porch. I was a kid—I had Paradise—I still think that’s my favorite Stonehill record, and then In Another Land had just come out by Larry Norman. I was a huge fan of both of them. For a kid who had just graduated from high school—I was floating. These guys had brought me into their camp, and I was hanging out with them. I’ll never forget it. That’s how Randy and I met, and then I sang his songs. I used to sing ‘I’ve got News For You’ in little Christian night clubs in West Virginia.” Stonehill has been making Christian music for nearly 35 years, with his 19 albums having been favorably compared to the work of artists as significant as Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney and James Taylor. “Uncle Rand,” as he is known by many of his fans, became a Christian in 1970 while sitting in the kitchen of fellow CCM Hall of Famer and one-time personal mentor Larry Norman. Soon after, he recorded an independent project called Born Twice, financed by the legendary Pat Boone. Stonehill followed up Born Twice six years later with Welcome to Paradise, released on Norman’s Solid Rock Records. Paradise is still considered to be one of the finest Christian albums ever released; and in 2001, the project was lauded as “one of the first pop/rock albums by a Christian that sounded authentic to its generation” and ranked No. 13 of all time by CCM presents The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music. Signed to Myrrh Records throughout the 1980s and into the early-1990s, Stonehill experimented musically with pop and electric guitar jam rock before returning to his acoustic roots, all the while continuing to develop both an incisive, sardonic wit and a cut-to-the-heart intimacy in his work. After leaving Myrrh, Stonehill formed Street Level Records, which released a few projects in the mid-1990s, including his acclaimed The Lazarus Heart. Today, Stonehill, 52, resides in his native California with wife Sandi and daughter Heather. His latest studio album, Edge of the World, was released in 2002; and he performs across the country nearly every weekend and continues in his longtime role as an advocate for Compassion International. He and Terry Taylor (Daniel Amos) have also put together a delightfully creative children’s project called Uncle Stonehill’s Hat, which includes both a CD and a fullstage production musical. (At press time, distribution negotiations were ongoing.) When notified by CCM of his Hall of Fame induction, Stonehill said gratefully, “During 33 years, the road has become a kind of surreal endurance test, but the privilege of what I do and Who I serve keeps coming into ever sharper focus. And that makes it all worthwhile!” M I C H A E L C I A N I R CCM COVERS October 1981 November 1985 August 1990 REQUIRED RANDY Welcome to Paradise (Solid Rock, 1976) Equator (Myrrh, 1983) The Wild Frontier (Myrrh, 1986) Return to Paradise (Myrrh, 1989) Wonderama (Myrrh, 1992) SOME OF RANDY STONEHILL’S BEST-KNOWN SONGS “American Fast Food” “Christmas at Denny’s” “Coming Back Soon” “Good News” “Great Big Stupid World” “I Could Never Say Goodbye” “I Love You” “I Turn to You” “I’ve Got News for You” “King of Hearts” “Lung Cancer” “Shut De Do” “The Gods of Men” “The Hope of Glory” “Turning 30” “Who Will Save the Children?” “Your Love Broke Through” “Can Hell Burn Hot Enough?” For a complete list of past Hall of Fame inductees, visit CCMmagazine.com.