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Singers for the New Evangelization
More Catholic Artists Deserving of Extra Exposure
BY Amy Smith
March 15-21, 2009 Issue |
Posted 3/6/09 at 7:01 AM
Matt Maher has had quite the year since releasing
his latest CD “Empty & Beautiful” (Essential Records), last April. He
performed at World Youth Day in Australia and the youth rally during Pope
Benedict’s visit to the United States.
His
CD was launched into space on NASA’s Discovery mission last May. A song from the CD, “Your Grace
Is Enough,” reached No. 2 on Billboard’s Adult Christian Contemporary Chart.
Recently, he was nominated as “Best New Artist” for CCM Magazine’s
2009 Reader’s Choice Awards.
Amid
the whirlwind success and travel — last year, he was on the road 300 days — the
United Catholic Music and Video Association Unity Awards winner is ready for a
new CD and remains committed to what his music is about: glorifying God.
His
inspiration: “Prayer and Mass. That’s where it all comes from. Artists and
musicians need to embrace the sacramental life of the Church. Music reflects
what’s going on in your heart.”
Maher’s
advice for aspiring musicians reflects this viewpoint: “Go fall in love with
Jesus. Pursue him radically. What will happen is that eventually songs will
start coming out. Art will come out as you live the faith. The Eucharist is a
mystery that’s discovered, not proclaimed on stage.”
His
stepfather, who is not Catholic, helped him reflect on his musical purpose
recently.
“He
challenged me to write from faith, not about faith,” Maher said. “I want my
devotion to come out in my lyrics, not the other way around. Otherwise, it’s
like an assignment.”
“Write
about life, and the faith will come out of that,” he added. “In that context,
it’s more authentic. Otherwise, it’s almost a business proposition based on
theology rather than art reflecting 2,000 years of Tradition.”
Maher
is one of a burgeoning number of contemporary Catholic singer/songwriters who
write from the gut as well as the Gospel. That list includes Janelle, Curtis
Stephan, Sarah Bauer and Marie Miller.
Taking Off
“I
think Catholic music is in a state of transition, in a state of finding an
identity,” Maher says. “A good thing is that Catholic music is coming into a
full expression of itself musically.”
Adds
Stephanie Wood, coordinator of NextWave Faithful, an online outreach to young
Catholic adults, and host of “NextWave Live” on EWTN radio, “There are quite a
few exciting things going on with Catholic music. Ten years ago, people thought
Catholic music was church music. In the past five or six years, it has taken
off. Catholic musicians are making names for themselves.”
Wood’s
radio show features a variety of Catholic musicians.
“Instead
of public service announcements, we take music breaks,” she says. “We feature
heavier-sounding bands with rock beats. It’s a popular feature. The kids love
it. Ours is the only show on EWTN trying to get young people into music. It’s
the main mechanism to get their name out there, since there are no Catholic
music stations.”
“When
I started doing this show about five years ago, there was hardly anyone to
play,” she adds. “Now there’s stuff that could go up against [mainstream
Christian contemporary artists] Jars of Clay or Third Day. There are
high-quality artists. Lyrically, we have the fullness of the faith that can be
expressed in music.” Wood recently featured The Thirsting. “They’re a great
band,” she says.
NextWaveFaithful.com
features a positive music chart with Catholic and non-Catholic artists. The
music Next Wave features is available at CatholicMusicNetwork.com. Another
online source of Catholic music is SpiritandSong.com.
“We
have a great commitment of artists to their sound,” says Robert Feduccia,
SpiritandSong.com general manager and artist relations and product development
associate director. Spirit and Song is a division of Oregon Catholic Press.
“What
young people want is real, believable sound from a real, authentic place in the
spirit, singer-songwriters sitting down with their guitars creating interesting
art with real attention to artistry,” he says. “Lyrically, I’m hearing a lot
more depth. People are coming to grips with the quest of being human, having a
relationship with the Lord, and our artists express that.”
Up
north in Canada, Catholic music is also making a name for itself.
“Janelle
has broken a lot of mainstream avenues to bring knowledge of Catholic music,
that we can produce good music,” notes Jason Reinhart of Life-Vision
Communications Inc., who is the manager for and husband of Canadian Catholic
artist Janelle. The artist recently reached No. 1 with More Radio magazine’s
Adult Contemporary radio chart. She has written an autism theme song and is
working on a praise and worship CD.
Even
with the progress, Reinhart says, distributing the music to the masses remains
a problem.
“Distribution
channels are not as strong as they could be,” he says. “There aren’t as many
Catholic bookstores. It needs to be easier for people to learn about it.”
Coming From Faith
As
for music contributing to the New Evangelization, Maher notes, “What needs to
come first is the desire for evangelization. The New Evangelization comes
first; the music comes second, as a response.”
The
New Evangelization is at the heart of Spirit and Song. “Our artists have a
heart for evangelization, for bringing the good news, coupled with worship,
which comes from a deep place in the liturgy and outside of the liturgy,” says
Feduccia. “We’re intentional. We know that music outside of the liturgy feeds
it inside the liturgy.”
New
media is a driving influence, Feduccia notes.
“With
Jackie Francois, we gave a five-hour window for song downloads,” he says. “It
was ‘five for five free.’ The response was great. It helped her record to get
out there. Our ‘The Commons’ interviews debut songs. With the song player, we
have 30-second artist introduction followed by the song. We have song-by-song
features with Sarah Hart and Jackie Francois. We want to be cutting-edge, to
use current methods. We have podcasts with Steve Angrisano and Jackie Francois,
who is the host for ‘Perfect Playlist.’
“Listeners
can submit titles, and if theirs is selected, they win a free CD. Ken Canedo
does a liturgy-planning podcast. He takes the readings, does reflections, and
gives music selections.”
Feduccia hopes to test iPhone and BlackBerry concepts this
summer.
Internet
and new technology help, Reinhart agrees: “If something is good, people find
it.”
Regardless
of the avenues used, society needs to hear the message of faith: “We are living
in a post-Christian culture,” Maher says. “We have to find ways to reach out
with messages that they understand.”
What’s Next?
Wood
hopes that the genre will stay true to its roots.
“Now,
a lot of Christian labels are making it more of an industry, not a ministry. I
hope that doesn’t change with Catholic music. Catholic music is ministry oriented.”
Adds Maher, “One of the things I love about Catholic
music, which fundamentally sets Catholic music aside: It’s never been the modus
operandi to create a subculture within a culture. The goal of a Christian is to
be in the middle of the world, not in the
world. We need to be in the culture, in dialogue with it with philosophy,
truth, beauty and art, especially art; art has the ability to reach people no
matter their religious background.”
“I think as Catholics we will always be rooted in the
liturgy, with sacraments and the Incarnation,” Spirit and Song’s Feduccia says.
“The industry has matured. In the past 10 years, we’ve started to see more
diversity in sound. Catholic Christian music has something unique to offer.
Josh Blakesley is from Louisiana. His music isn’t country or blues, but
Southern. It’s who he is infused with sacramental, liturgical and incarnational
theology. I think we’ll continue on that trajectory.
“Artistically, I don’t know where things are headed,” he
adds. “Radio is such a peculiar, elusive thing. But in the part of the industry
that’s not as public — the songwriters — we see Catholics having great
influence. We have songwriting partnerships with EMI. The top song at World
Youth Day, ‘Take Up Our Cross,’ was written by Curtis Stephan, Sarah Hart and
Mark Byrd of EMI [who wrote the Christian radio hit ‘God of Wonders’]. Sarah
Hart has just written for 33 Mile, a mainstream Christian group.”
“There’s hope and a great future for Catholic music,” adds
Reinhart. “What we need is great Catholic music with a great message to
contribute to the New Evangelization. If songs are great, the records are
great. That will take the Catholic market to the next level. It doesn’t fit the
mainstream record mold or the Protestant mold. There’s a purity to Catholic music.
We are seeing more record deals happening. Catholics are more accepted in
Protestant circles.”
And Catholic youth are an important key.
“Young ministry has been teaching youth about the life of
Christ, the history of the Church, and, eventually, that will start to come out
artistically,” Maher predicts. “Great things have happened in the Church
through music. The great composers wrote for the Church and gained respect in
society. I think that could happen again.”
Amy Smith is the
Register’s copy editor.
FOR MORE INFORMATION SpiritandSong.com
MattMaherMusic.com
Janelle.ca
NextWaveFaithful.com
CatholicMusicNetwork.com
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