This Week In Music…

Leave a comment

I thought I’d written about The Civil Wars, but I liked back quite a ways, and haven’t been able to find that. So if I did, oh well. If not, good. They’ve been on the rise in the Folk Music scene for quite some time now, and it seems as though they are only going to continue to do so. Their music is just chill enough that you could fall asleep to it on a lazy afternoon, but interesting enough to keep you listening, or help as a soundtrack to whatever the task at hand is. With a full-lenghth album, and an EP out, they’ve got quite a few songs to pick from. Tracks of interest:

  1. To Whom It May Concern
  2. Forget Me Not
  3. Poison & Wine

Another group I’ve been listening to lately is Gungor. They’re a worship band, and they are maybe a little different than what most of us are used to. That being said, I’m starting to really like their first CD “Beautiful Things”. I’ve had it for a while but hadn’t given it much playing time until a few friends saw them live at a conference and started talking about how good they were live. The CD has a good mix of heartfelt song that will have you wanting to be one of those “weirdos” who lifts their hands in worship, and songs that will put a smile on your face and have you clapping along. I am looking forward to what we will hear from them in the future. Tracks of interest:

  1. Please Be My Strength
  2. Dry Bones
  3. Beautiful Things
Give these groups a listen. I don’t think you’ll regret it.
Grace & Peace,
Stippick

Healer

Leave a comment

This song has come up several times in my life very randomly in the last month or so. I know it’s a popular song right now, but still. I can’t help but feel like God is trying to show me something through this. I’m making it my prayer this week. For you, and for me.

You hold my every moment
You calm my raging seas
You walk with me through fire
And heal all my disease

I trust in You
I trust in You

I believe You’re my Healer
I believe You are all I need
I believe You’re my Portion
I believe You’re more than enough for me
Jesus You’re all I need

Nothing is impossible for You
Nothing is impossible for You
Nothing is impossible for You
You hold my world in Your hands

(I’m a big fan of Hillsong, and think they have an incredible gift for pumping out some great worship leaders, and worship songs. I’m incredibly thankful for their ministry.)

Grace and Peace,

David Stippick

This Week In Music…

Leave a comment

So, on Thursday’s, I like to try and bring you a review of some sort. Recently, I decided to ask a few friends to review a few things every now and then. First up is my friend Chris Willis; you can read more by him here.

Cloud control is an Australian band that was recommended to me by a friend after discussing the SoCal band Local Natives.  Being a fan of the latter and somebody who doesn’t shy away from the continuous hunt for new artists, I decided to give the group a chance.  Upon first listen, their 2010 debut, Bliss Release, provided me with a rich tapestry of music to pick apart with the mentality of a surgeon.  The harmonizing of lead vocalist Alister Wright with keyboardist Heidi Lenffer doesn’t quite match the quality of other, more established indie rock bands but it is a much appreciated addition to the beautiful tracks laid down by the band.  The songs themselves are played with what seems like a breezy disposition yet pack a gut punch of depth that’s akin to Vampire Weekend and the aforementioned Local Natives.

Categorizing Cloud Control’s genre is a daunting task.  If the lead single, “Gold Canary”, was transposed in the 60’s, it would have fit like a glove, yet not all of the tracks can be labeled as such.  “Just for Now” has such a syrupy, folky feel to it that its close proximity to tracks “Gold Canary” and “This is What I Said” amplifies the effect of those more dance inducing tracks.  Add to that trio the following track, “The Rolling Stone”, and you have a string of four tracks that could be found on four separate albums.  This chameleon like artistry is what makes Bliss Release the kind of album whose strengths change depending on the listener, or that listener’s attitude at that given moment.

Clocking in at a brief 38 minutes, this debut ends with the listener wanting more, but having to hit replay and wait for the next album from the Aussies.  This is evidenced by closing track “Beast of Love”, which plays at a much slower pace and has Heidi Lenffer taking over lead vocals.  Her beautiful crooning proves too gripping to ignore and too wounded to not love.  As far as 2010 first efforts go, Bliss Release quickly shot to the top of my personal favorites list trailing tremendous albums by the now thrice mentioned Local Natives and the eardrum shattering Treats by Sleigh Bells.  Not much you do today will provide more pleasing results than a listen to Cloud Control but that’s just one man’s humble opinion.

Grace and Peace,

David

Link Love…

Leave a comment

I like music. I like it when I can get new music. Unfortunately, I am but a poor college student. So I don’t buy a whole lot of music. A few weeks ago though…my world was changed. By Amazon.com and their MP3 download site. It’s fantastic.

In addition to their daily deal that is $3.99, they have a ton of free and low cost albums. I got the new Taylor Swift album for 3.99, and have discovered a few new favorites from the free downloads. You download the amazon mp3 downloader, and the music downloads directly into your iTunes or whatever it is that you use to listen to music, and it doesn’t have the same digital rights restriction as if you were buying directly from iTunes.

Maybe you’ve known about this for a while. If so, you should have told me. I can’t believe you would have kept this to yourself! If not though…now you know. Enjoy.

-Stippick

This Week in Music…

Leave a comment

I think I’m getting over Taylor Swift.

Now, before you start to hate me. I’m still a fan. I promise. I have all three cd’s. I even paid for the most recent one.

I’ve been listening to it for the last few days though, and I don’t know how much longer I can support her obsessiveness. I mean honestly? She says at one point in a song, that she has said is about that Jonas brother she dated, she sits on the floor in his clothes. Let’s pretend for a second that she’s not being literal there…that’s still creepy to say. And seriously Taylor, this whole writing songs about every person who breaks up with you? I’m waiting for the collaboration album between you and Alanis.

I’m not going to go very deep into the whole “Dear John” issue…but…I don’t know. That just kind of blows my mind. As hard as it is for me to comprehend a girl who puts off such innocence, and seems to maintain that is who she is, dating a man who is an admitted sex and porn addict; it’s harder to believe that she’s SURPRISED, or upset that things didn’t work out. I guess she might mark that under “Things we’ve got to learn for ourselves”. And I’m mostly ok with that.

Outside of my frustrations that she can’t seem to understand that she’s not actually in love with every person she goes on a date with, I enjoy the album. I think Swift is a great songwriter for her age (What is she these says? 20? 21? Old enough for me to go on a few dates with her and get immortalized in a song? No? Cool). She tells a really good story, and in the end that is what music is about for me; putting a story to notes, and making me feel like it could be my story.

Tracks I loved that don’t get enough public play:

Back To December

Never Grow Up

Enchanted

Innocent (I think this one is actually fairly popular, I just really enjoy it and respect what it’s about. I’m looking forward to the Taylor/Kanye duet)

Even though I find myself disenchanted with this girl who was (and supposedly still is) so enchanted by her newfound notoriety, I can’t deny that she is good at what she does.

Happy Listenings,

-Stippick

Note: This is NOT meant to be inflammatory of Taylor Swift. These are my thoughts an opinion based on how I see/understand the product she puts out to us, the consumer. Probably someday someone will dislike something I say here, or in a book (#lordwilling), and they will write an instant blog by thinking all of the things they dislike, and the chip in their brain making an intelligible article out of it and sending it to the interwebs.

This Week In Music…

Leave a comment

I’ve been listening to the new Jars of Clay album a lot over the last few weeks, and I’ve really been enjoying it. I’ve been a big fan for a while, but I’ve got to say, I like their more recent stuff than their older stuff. I’m not exactly sure why, but. I do.

So. I don’t have a ton to say about the CD, but I felt like it has a lot to say about community. The title of the CD is “The Shelter”. The idea being (I think) that we’re a shelter for one another and, God/Jesus is a shelter for us all.

Songs worth noting:

Small Rebellions

We Will Follow

Shelter

Run In The Night (Psalm 27)

Small Rebellions and We Will Follow are definitely songs I would listen to whilst storming the gates of hell with a few friends. Shelter and Run In The Night are tunes that remind me of God’s constant presence in my life even when I don’t necessarily feel it.

That’s really all I’ve got for you on that. What are you listening to this week?

-Stippick

Brokenness Understood?

1 Comment

Over the weekend, I listened to a song by Nate Navarro called “Community Song”. The opening line says:

We’re a community of the broken, your love is changing us…

(To hear the rest, go download it, and the rest of that cd, on iTunes. It’s worth it)

So. I’m sitting and pondering this word: Broken. We use it a lot, “God just broke me this weekend”, “God really used that situation to break me over some things”. I’m not sure when it became commonplace in Christianese (I’ve only been around for 6 years), but we certainly love it. Then, when I was doing some reading for yesterday’s post, I came across this little gem in Luke’s Gospel:

“But Jesus looked at them and said, “What then is this that is written: ‘The stone which the builders rejected, this became the chief corner stone’? Everyone who falls on that stone will be broken to pieces; but on whomever it falls, it will scatter him like dust.” Luke 20:17-18

That’s a pretty serious deal right there. The stone that Jesus is talking about is himself. He is the stone that was rejected by the religious elite of the day. And I had it underlined. That entire deal. And a lot of thoughts came flooding back to me from the last time I’d seen this.

By saying that we’ll be broken to pieces if we fall on the stone, Jesus gives that a positive connotation. It is good to be broken by falling on that stone. By picking Jesus. However, if you choose not to, the stone will fall on you, and you’ll be scattered like dust. All the Kings men (our brothers and sisters in Christ) can put us back together again if we’re in pieces. But. Have you ever tried to pick up a handful of dust and really make it into something? It doesn’t work.

It is beautiful to be broken. Christ tells us that. And it is a terrible thing to be shattered. In the end, that stone will destroy us. We can pick that and be put back together, or we can reject it and it will crush us beyond repair.

It is better to break.

Pick to fall, not to be fallen on.

-Stippick


Jon Foreman

Leave a comment

Last night, like many others probably, I was shocked to read a tweet from Switchfoot (A popular Christian band) frontman Jon Foreman that said he’d been forcefully removed from his after-show in Florida. To be honest, I was kind of offended, and was ready to get righteously upset for the guy.

THEN I saw the tweet that had video of the situation, and I changed my tune a bit.

It’s about a 6 minute long video, and the majority of it shows Foreman playing a song and having some fans sing along. When that song is over though, there is a voice in the distance that says, “Alright, let’s go. That’s the last song, let’s go!”.

At this point, Foreman kind of engages the guy and says something along to the effect of not knowing that had to be the last song, and could they play one more. The voice answers back that, no, they’re done, it’s time to go. Up until here, I was fine with it.

Foreman then begins to engage the officer (based on the previous tweets, at this point you’re just assuming that it’s an officer, as we haven’t actually seen him yet) in a debate, and basically challenges his authority. When the officer doesn’t concede and allow Foreman and fans to sing one more song, Foreman actually just starts playing another song. I was honestly taken aback a little. Apparently so was the officer, because you could hear the change in his tone as he yelled, “Ok, I showed you respect, now I need you to show me respect”, makes his way through the crowd, listens as Foreman makes a feeble attempt at an “introduction” between himself and the officer (which honestly was more reminiscent of a teenaged delinquent than a grown man), grabs Foreman by the arm, and leads him away.

In defense of Jon Foreman:

Honestly, there probably isn’t anything really wrong with having been out in the parking lot doing a little after-show, and I to some degree, I would join him in his questioning of the constitutionality of of the removal. The officer probably over reacted, a little, or at least escalated faster than necessary, for a few reasons: 1) It was late and the guy was tired. He even made the comment that he had a family to get home to. 2) He probably felt he had to save a little face after being so blatantly ignored, and publicly balked at.

In defense of Officer Fisher:

Like I said earlier, I’m honestly wondering what the laws are on their right to have been there, but the fact of the matter is that an officer asked them to disperse. As Christians, we’re given a command to submit to the governing authorities above us, and this includes submitting to police officers, as it’s their duty to carry out and enforce the laws of the governing authorities. Whether we like it or not. I can understand Jon Foreman maybe being a little annoyed, but part of me can’t get past the fact that I feel like on some level he had some kind of responsibility to say, “Alright guys, you heard the man, let’s get out of here”, and then at that point, maybe engage the officer about the legalities of having been there. Not trying to get a laugh or reaction from the crowd because (and this is just my personal thought on the situation) his pride had been wounded a little bit. In my humble opinion, Foreman was wrong. Plain, and scripturally, clear.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m in no way demonizing Foreman, and I won’t be supporting anyone who blows this out of proportion on either side of the debate. Because honestly, I probably would have reacted similarly. I’m just saying that I was a little surprised to see the guy react the way he did. For all I know, he’s already had some of these thoughts himself, and maybe he even apologized to Officer Fisher (which I fully believe he should).

Thanks for reading.

-Stippick

This week in music…

Leave a comment

I’ve been listening to The Avett Brothers, and Mumford & Sons quite a bit.

I found the Avett Brothers when their single “I and Love and You”, was used in an episode of One Tree Hill (don’t judge me…I’ve been with that show from the beginning). I downloaded the single, and after listening to it about 60 times straight through, I went for the whole album. I haven’t regretted it since. To be fair, I am aware that this makes me somewhat of a bandwagon fan, since they have three or four independent albums that were released before that, but I’m ok with that. I do intend to collect all of their works. The thirty second clips I’ve heard on iTunes leave me wanting more. Some track I love off of this album are:

The Perfect Space

Laundry Room

Ill with want

My sister-in-law was the person who told me about Mumford & Sons, and I put of getting the album for quite a while. Finally, one day I was listening to the radio at work and their single came on, and I decided I needed to give the cd a chance. So  I got it about two and a half months ago, and have listened to little else since. A few favorites from this album are:

Timshel

Awake My Soul

Dust Bowl Dance

The two biggest reasons I’m loving these two bands/cd’s right now are:

  1. We’re kind of in the same life stage. When you take out the fact that they’re famous, and I’m writing this from my bed in my room at my mother’s house. What I mean is that we fall into the age range of early to mid twenties. Because of this, I find myself able to identify with a lot of what I think their songs are about. They’re people who are going through the same developmental stages as I am, and are having/have had some of the same types of experiences, and they’re conveying that through song.
  2. I like to play their music when I am driving on an open stretch of road. I roll my window down, blare them in my ears, and stick my arm out the window, and move it up and down and all twisty like. It makes me feel like I’m in a movie, and going through a moving on/life change scene where I’m driving off to experience whatever is next, and they are the sound track to it. Don’t judge me. You know you’ve done it too.

If you get a chance, give these bands a listen.

-Stippick

This week in music…

Leave a comment

I’m becoming increasingly excited for the new Caedmon’s Call album, entitled Raising Up The Dead, that drops on September 14th.

I’ve been a fan of the group ever since I bought Overdressed a few years ago, and a long the way I’ve bought a few single tracks, and last year finally got three of their other full albums. In that time, I’ve found some favorites that I listen to over and over again, but that was it really.

Over the last week though, I’ve just put them on repeat on my iPod and on iTunes when I find myself sitting at the computer, and I’ve been blown away by their music.

First of all, they’re musically solid. I’m someone who listens to a lot of contemporary christian music, but I completely understand that it isn’t always as good as it could be. That seems to be a trend that we have a hard time breaking as christians. We try doing something that the world is doing, but we don’t make the effort to make it not cheesy, or it comes out not as polished as it could be. I think if we’re going to do something, that there is no reason it shouldn’t be every bit as polished as its secular counterpart (Jon Acuff has done a great job of pointing this out, and overcoming it over at Stuff Christians Like).

So, that being said, these guys are just as good musically as any secular band I’ve heard that might fall into this…acousticy/folksy type genre. Their singers can sing, they play their instruments beautifully, and they work with professionals who expertly mix and put together their final products.

In addition to that, they continually strike a chord with my lyrically. I can’t think of one of their songs that I’ve listened to in the last week or so, that doesn’t convey some kind biblical message that is incredibly important for us to be reminded of time and again. And a few of the songs are just piercing in the way that they speak to things I’ve worked through, or am currently walking through.

Here’s a few of the songs I’ve come to love over the past week:

Prepare Ye The Way

Masqurade

Love Along

Ballad of San Francisco

Thankful

Faith My Eyes

40 Acres

(And an old favorite for me) Ten Thousand Angles

If you haven’t heard anything by them give them a listen, they really are fantastic. If you’re an old fan, maybe reunite with them in the next couple of days if it’s been a while.

-Stippick

Older Entries

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.