The official blog of LifeWayWorship.com

All Sons and Daughters new EP - Reason to Sing

January 18, 2012 09:25 AM

From Integrity Music

Allsons.jpgWhen the pieces seem too shattered to gather off the floor; and all that seems to matter is that I can't feel you anymore...I need a reason to sing.

If we're honest, it's a lot easier to talk about and fully embrace the seasons when God's goodness feels so real, those proverbial spiritual mountaintops where faith is effortless and life's little circumstances are easily explained.

But when life is hard and heartache and confusion inevitably reign, what do we do with those moments, and how do we actually worship God in the midst of them? This uncomfortable tension is precisely what fuels the latest release from All Sons & Daughters, the duo who penned the congregational favorite "All the Poor & Powerless."

Born out of what's happening with their unique community of believers at The Journey Church in Franklin, Tenn., worship leaders David Leonard and Leslie Jordan have written songs they hope will give people permission to not only ask questions, but to express their pain in the midst of it.

"I think that's one of the biggest problems in the modern church right now. We don't always give people permission to feel these things," David says. "When things are going wrong, we tell them 'It's okay, God's taking care of it.' But if you read the Psalms, David is never afraid to express exactly what he's feeling, so that gave us the freedom to be honest and transparent."

To wit, the album's affecting title track comes from a very personal place. "A lot of it stemmed from a conversation I had with my sister who was struggling to conceive," Leslie shares. "They'd tried for four years, and she was completely broken from wondering why in the world this wasn't happening for her."

Adding another layer of resonance was David and his wife's own struggles with becoming parents. "It had gotten to the point where we simply accepted that it wasn't going to happen," David adds. "And when we were writing this song, emotions were swirling in the room--just the question of 'why?'. Luckily, I can say now that my wife and I have a little girl. But this is the kind of struggle that countless people are going through every day with varying results. And it's the kind of issue that leaves us with questions."

In this spirit of transparency, David and Leslie wanted Reason to Sing to strip away the layers of guilt and shame so that we can begin to accept God's grace. Posing the question of whether God can love us, in spite of us, tracks like "Oh Our Lord," "All Praise to You" and "Spirit Speaks" point listeners to the One who's always drawing us to Himself, even when we have questions and life fails to make sense.

Adding to that reassurance is "Buried in the Grave," a song inspired by an article David and Leslie read in Relevant magazine. "In the Easter story, we focus on the death and the resurrection but not always the waiting period in between and what that means to us as believers about being patient and obedient," Leslie says. "I liked how the writer focused on the Saturday that comes between Friday and Sunday, which is exactly the season we feel like we're walking through."

Grace was in the tension of everything we'd lost,
Standing empty handed, shattered by the cross
All we had, all we had was a promise like a thread
Holding us, keeping us, oh from fraying at the edge

Produced by Paul Mabury (Hillsong, Brooke Fraser, One Sonic Society), whom David refers to as the "third member of All Sons & Daughters," it was equally important to create an accompanying soundtrack that was stripped of pretense.

"Rather than looking at aesthetics or serving the emotion of the moment, Paul was driving us to look at our church, at the lyrics and the movement of the music and how it all relates to our community," says David. And whether they're ministering at their home church or at congregations across the globe, the one thing that keeps them grounded is community.

"For us, it's an intangible," Leslie shares. "In this past year, we've realized just how much we need our community. It's life-giving and makes such a difference. Plus, as worship leaders, you're not going to know the songs your body needs to sing if you don't know your body. So that's why it's so incredibly important to dig into life with your church."

In case you missed our Christmas Card...

January 02, 2012 09:24 AM

Merry Christmas from LifeWay Worship!

Carols and telling the story again and again

December 21, 2011 14:07 PM

Special guest post by author, song and hymn writer Keith Getty

As the holidays approach, I often remember my days as a student in
music class. My high school music teacher lived for Christmas carols.
I spoke with him recently as I was working on our new Christmas album,
"Joy--An Irish Christmas," and his enthusiasm is as strong as ever. He
even wants Christmas carols played at his funeral.

"Why?" I asked him.

"Because these songs tell the story of the faith like no other songs
can," he told me.

I wholeheartedly agree. Carols blend a story form of writing with
simple melodies, and they've resulted in a unique hybrid of English
folk music and church music traditions. In that sense, the carol has
impacted my own songwriting more than any other form.

Our new Christmas album gave me a chance to relish in my love for
carols by writing some of my very own. Yet we also decided to honor
some of our age-old favorites, so profound in the stories they tell,
by pairing them with new compositions. When it comes to celebrating
Christmas, I think people want fresh sounds--but they also want to
sing what they know.

I love the fact that some of the most beloved carols essentially
originated as rebel songs. In England during the 15th century,
Catholics were forbidden to sing in the English language, or to even
sing at all for the most part. Yet carols were the one exception.
Additionally, certain factions of Puritanism during the late 16th
century forbid any outward display of emotion. But again, carols
remained the one type of song that allowed people to celebrate with
their lips, instruments and even dancing. For those forbidden to even
smile or smirk during the remainder of the year, this was much cause
for rejoicing!

Today, carols continue to be one of the few remaining conduits that
allow us to proclaim our faith in the public square. Amazingly,
they're heralded on secular radio, used in advertisements and sung on
television throughout the holiday season. These songs allow us to
celebrate our faith authentically and share it with others.

We would do well as worship leaders to remember that non-churchgoers
are far more inclined to attend a church service during the Christmas
season where songs are easy and enjoyable to sing rather than a church
trying to put on the slickest possible show. The music of carols,
written by some of the finest hymn writers of all time (such as
Wesley, Watts and Rossetti) and arranged by equally outstanding
composers (Handel, Holst and Mendelssohn) speaks for itself. We have
wonderful songs to use! And Christmas gives us a wide open door to use
those songs to impact culture like no other time of the year.

May we set aside time this Christmas season to give of ourselves
joyfully and wholeheartedly to the music we choose and the services we
plan. And in doing so we'll join with the Christians of ages past
who've told the story of our faith through the carols they sing.

Daniel Bashta - HEAVEN

December 06, 2011 15:08 PM

In partnership with Integrity Music, LifeWayWorship.com would like to introduce you to the songs of Daniel Bashta, author of the already popular worship anthem, LIKE A LION (also known as GOD'S NOT DEAD) recently recorded by David Crowder Band and Newsboys.

For the entire month of December, download the free mp3 and chord chart for Daniel's song, "Heaven," right here. Use promo code HEAVEN when you check out for two free downloads! We'll return in January and again in February to introduce you to two more songs!

For more info on Daniel Bashta, please visit www.danielbashta.com.

What's your favorite pairing of a worship song and a hymn?

September 01, 2011 15:30 PM

For instance:
How Great Is Our God with How Great Thou Art

Have you used anything in your church that "just works" that you can share? Post it in the comments below, on Twitter with the hashtag #hymnandsong, or on our Facebook page.

From Twitter:
@RobTWillJr - "Great Is Your Faithfulness" with "Great Is Thy Faithfulness"
@AnthonyCroft - "Here I Am To Worship" with "I Surrender All."
@DennisCCook - "Mighty to Save" with "I Surrender All"
@FSBCWorship - "Stronger" and "It Is Well with My Soul" / "Revelation Song" and "Holy, Holy, Holy"
@jason_carson - "All Creatures of Our God and King" with "Let Everything that Has Breath"
@nathanphifer - "How He Loves" with "Oh, How He Loves You and Me"
@BobTRoberts - "A Mighty Fortress (Nockels)" with "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" or... "A Mighty Fortress (Nockels)" with "Holy, Holy, Holy," keeping the same tempo and rhythm pattern.
@PewPotato - "The Power of the Cross (Oh, to See the Dawn)" with "The Wonderful Cross"

From Facebook:
Linda: "Our God" (Tomlin-Redman) with How Great is Our God and How Great Thou Art.
Rodney: ‎"My Jesus I Love Thee" with "I Love You Lord"
Colby: "Holy, Holy, Holy" with "I See the Lord"
Josh: The creole hymn "Loue" and "Nothing but the Blood"
Kemuel: "In Christ Alone" with "The Solid Rock"
Dennis: "How He Loves" with "Oh How He Loves You and Me"
Leo: "Shout to the Lord" with "To God Be the Glory"
Robert: "Sing to the King" with "O Worship the King"
Alan: "Open the Eyes of My Heart" with "Open Our Eyes, Lord"
Jeremy: "I Know Whom I Have Believed" with "My Redeemer Lives" between verses 1 and 2