Showing posts with label Matt Redman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Redman. Show all posts

11.06.2016

Let's Not Think About the Election! Let's Listen to Music!—Songs Telling the Story of God


Let's not think about the election! Let's listen to music! 

It's the week before the 2016 presidential election but let's pretend it's not happening. 
Instead, if you happen to find yourself reading this article, please take a few moments to stop what you're doing, click play on the tracks below, and take in some beauty, truth, and goodness. I have curated a play list worthy of your consideration. May they work their way into your soul, embed themselves into your mind, and stir your strength into edifying action.

Today's list (Part 3 of 3):
Songs Telling the Story of Redemption
There is a story being told in our world that gets heard more than all the others. It is a story that makes you afraid. It tells you that if you don't do all you can you will lose everything. It is the kind of story that makes you want to win at all costs. It is a story of power and dominance and progress and accumulation. In this story we pick sides and if you aren't on my side, well, get ready to face the consequences.

But there is an alternate story being told. It is the way of Christ. It is the laying down of our lives willingly for the sake of others. Christ poured himself out and gave life to all the world. This is the story of new creation, of rebirth, of redemption. This is where justice reigns and truth finally wins. God is sovereign in this story and he has told us how the story ends. "Your mercies are new, new every morning..."

Featuring the songs of Rich Mullins, Fernando Ortega, Sara Groves Keith Green/Annie Herring, Andrew Peterson, Matt Redman, and Audrey Assad

Let's Not Think About the Election! Let's Listen to Music!—Songs of Hope & Peace

Let's not think about the election! Let's listen to music! 

It's the week before the 2016 presidential election but let's pretend it's not happening. 
Instead, if you happen to find yourself reading this article, please take a few moments to stop what you're doing, click play on the tracks below, and take in some beauty, truth, and goodness. I have curated a play list worthy of your consideration. May they work their way into your soul, embed themselves into your mind, and stir your strength into edifying action.

Today's list (Part 2 of 3):
Songs of Hope & Peace
When the whole earth is shifting beneath our feet, when everything around us seems to be crumbling, we desperately need a sure foundation on which to stand and a refuge from the chaos. These are songs that root us in the hope of Christ, of finding peace in him through times of trouble. Allow yourself to rest in these songs, but even more than that, allow yourself to rest in God our Savior in whom all things were made and in whom we live and move and have our being. Featuring the songs of Switchfoot, Rich Mullins, Phil Keaggy, Newsboys, Matt Redman, Delirious?, and Fernando Ortega.

7.14.2015

Record Review: Matt Redman's Unbroken Praise

It must be tough being Matt Redman. Or should I say, it must be tough being an aging worship leader, especially a worship leader who is known for writing and recording your own songs, because the one thought looming in the background every time you write something new certainly must be "Can I replicate what I did before? Can I get the Church to sing again? How do I write another song like that?"

What I am about to say might sound like snark but I assure you it is not. Matt Redman has a serious problem on his hands: he is getting older and on his new album Unbroken Praise it is starting to show.

7.15.2014

The Multiverse of a Worship Song: Matt Redman's "This Beating Heart"

Welcome to the multiverse, where all your worship needs will be fulfilled...
Recently I was listening to the latest Matt Redman record, Your Grace Finds Me (2013), which I pretty much like and am still trying to figure out which songs from it I want to sing at my church (I know, my process of deliberation is slow and tedious). Well, when the song "This Beating Heart" came on it was immediately clear this song, more than others, was the "Mumford-and-Sons-bandwagon-song." You know, because of the kids

5.15.2014

5 Recommendations For Matt Redman


OK, let's not be negative. Instead, let's be constructive.

If, in some bizarro world worship leader and songwriter Matt Redman came to me as a consultant asking my insights into his career and where I believe he should be headed next, this is what I would tell him.



5.08.2014

The 10 Best Matt Redman Songs You're (Probably) Not Singing at Your Church













To some people who read this blog it may seem like I do not like worship leader and church music 

songwriter Matt Redman. Well, I wanted to do something to make it clear exactly where I stand regarding his work.


4.22.2014

Why I've Never Sung Matt Redman's "10,000 Reasons" At My Church


I love Matt Redman's Song "10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord)".  It is one of the strongest songs off of his 2011 album of the same name. Its melody resembles a standard hymn-tune more than any other song he has written before (which I consider to be a good thing, even though the range is a bit too much for the common singer at 10 notes) and the lyrics contain solid Biblically based themes. The verses, when combined with the soaring melody of the refrain, make for a joyous song; a simple and celebratory declaration of faith for all our God has done for us. The song at present has gained near universal claim in American churches, and currently, as of the writing of this blog, holds the #1 spot on the "CCLI" song chart (it is #6 on the "Song Select" chart). Nonetheless, almost three years after the song has been released I have not yet selected it as a song for the people of my congregation to learn and come to love and I have no intentions to do so in the future. Why?

Well...



I love Matt Redman (If you don't believe me check this post out). I love his heart for God and all he has



8.09.2011

Worship Leader Death Match!: Fernando Ortega vs. Matt Redman


Let’s be clear from the start: I am the one who has changed.
I recently purchased two worship music recordings, Fernando Ortega’s Come Down O Love Divine and Matt Redman’s 10,000 Reasons, and I have been listening to them both pretty solidly for the last week. After a week’s worth of reflection I am pretty sure one of the recordings will become part of my life’s soundtrack and the other one has a few decent songs on it that I might have a congregation sing but will most likely be forgotten in a few years.
So before I start talking about the music specifically, let’s go over my criteria for what makes good worship music. It is a pretty short list:
1. The music needs to strike a delicate balance between singability (accessibility) and innovation. In other words, does it have a melody people can sing (relatively) easily, but does the music also sound “fresh” or is it breaking any new ground?
2. The words also need to find a balance between accessibility, theological depth, and poetic creativity. So, when singing the words of a song can a “normal” person get the general ideas of the song but will they also be challenged to think of God at a deeper level hopefully with the aid of striking poetic imagery?
In essence, worship music needs to very delicately land in the paradoxical balance between being accessible and being challenging. Much much more could be said about these criteria, but this the essence of what I am looking for.
Starting with Redman’s album, I must first say that he has been my favorite worship leader for over ten years now. This means that more than any other songwriting worship leader there are more songs of his that I would want to teach a congregation floating around in my head at any given moment, and he is the one who has most consistently led me into actual worship (rather than passive listening) while listening to his music. I think his lyrics have typically had the most theological depth and their subject matter the most breadth. I always eagerly look forward to a new Matt Redman record and this current release was no different. However, his new album falls prey to a disheartening trend that has always been present in his music, but is most prominent on all his releases from 2002's Where Angels Fear to Tread onwards (excepting of course his excellent first live album, 2004's Facedown). One way I can describe this trend is that it is homogenized (or bland) music produced to meet the needs of family friendly Christian radio. Another way I can put it is that it represents the Hillsong-ization of worship music, which essentially uses second rate U2 guitarisms and shallow lyrics as a way of appealing to youth groups.

Now, if this trend is in fact infecting Redman’s music, I still think he, along with Mr. Worship himself Chris Tomlin, is among the best at still actually getting us to sing to God in new and exciting ways, despite the increasingly limited scope that contemporary worship music is allowed to operate within these days. However, in the past five years Redman’s music and lyrics have basically lost the punch that they had during the making of his first few albums, including The Friendship and the Fear, The Heart of Worship, and The Father’s Song. I do not if there is a direct correlation, but all of these early albums were recorded in England and produced by Andy Piercy and the music and lyrics subsequently contain a sonic and thematic diversity that I still believe sound fresh today.

So with this in mind, here is my biggest complaint which deals directly with this new record: almost all of the songs sound like they want to be big stadium anthems and almost all of them contain oversized bridges just asking to be screamed by youth group kids. As a result, everything kind of starts sounding the same. Now again, I think Redman is pretty good at doing these kinds of worship songs, but it is really hard for me to keep my interest up over the course of an 11 song album. On top of this, there is nothing here thematically that Redman has not touched on before and he did it better in the past than he does here. For example, the song “Never Once” from 10,000 Reasons has very similar themes to “Never Let Go” from Beautiful News (and about two songs from 2009's We Shall Not Be Shaken), and the song “Where Would We Be” from 10,000 has similar themes to “Light of the World” from The Father’s Song, but I believe the older songs here are exponentially better. Thus main problem with the new songs is that if I have already taught my congregations the older songs and those songs are superior, why would I teach them the new songs?

All in all the album is not bad, it is just merely Meh. The songs (all of them done with co-writers) contain decent theological depth and are mostly singable. What makes me sad is that it all sounds so bland. There are three songs that (at the moment) I would think of singing with a congregation. “Here For You” would make an excellent call to worship and it even tries to get on my good side by containing elements of the Collect For Purity (an opening prayer that begins “Oh God to you all hearts are open…”). Besides this, “Holy” is a great general praise song that contains an excellent eschatologically themed final verse, and I found my self singing “10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord)” numerous times this past week; a song I think I like so much because its melody resembles a “traditional” hymn more than anything Redman has previously written. But as I say, there is not much that interests me here or that I believe will endure, despite Redman’s obvious sincerity and heart for God.

Moving on, Fernando Ortega’s Come Down O Love Divine is a completely different story. Whereas Redman’s album was taxing my patience coming in at nearly 60 minutes, Ortega’s album barely seemed long enough at 43 minutes. Now, as I mentioned in a previous blog post, some might find this music too slow for their tastes, but I think Ortega is consciously asking us to slow down as we enter into our times of worship. The songs themselves are divided into four categories: 1. General praise songs/hymns (4 of these), 2. Liturgical songs (4 of these), 3. Choral pieces, both general praise and liturgical (3 of these), and 4. Instrumental Songs (3 of these). Now his general praise songs/hymns are pretty good and I would definitely consider using some of them in a worship service, but what has really grasped my attention (i.e., the songs I have been singing to myself this week as well as to my children) are his settings of texts that would be a part of the Sunday liturgy. “Kyrie I” and “Trisagion” are superb and I think I could sing them weekly and not get sick of them. What strikes me most about Ortega is that his music and lyrics really are not that innovative (note the above mentioned criteria) and yet they are so refreshing. The music is very simply presented and easily singable and most of the lyrical content consists of already known texts and images (e.g., “Just As I Am” and “The Good Shepherd”). His orchestration and arranging is done with considered craftsmanship but at the same time it is evident he is not trying too hard to lead us into worship, something that at times it feels like Matt Redman is doing.

But as I said in my opening sentence, I am the one who has changed. I no longer want to be revved up when I sing to God. I simply want to dwell in his presence, sing simply, and as a by-product I get revved up anyway. I am not saying Matt Redman is doing anything wrong in perpetuating his particular style of modern worship music, I am just not sure how much longer I can be a part of that crowd. I think Fernando Ortega is offering us something different with his music--it is still thoroughly modern in its instrumentation and arrangement and yet it does not bow to the narrow conventions of the prevailing U2-style of worship music. Redman seems to be trying really hard to be accessible, while Fernando simply is accessible through his quiet confidence and straightforward presentation. My hope is that as Matt Redman gets older he will drop the youth group act and learn something from a guy like Fernando Ortega.

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Related Posts:
5 Pieces of Advice For Matt Redman
The 10 Best Matt Redman Songs You're (Probably) Not Singing At Your Church
Coming Late to the Party #1: Fernando Ortega
Interview: Fernando Ortega