Worship Musician August 2020 | Page 9

things that He makes us feel, and the sensation when the Spirit enters our being, that He allows us to step into. I love that perspective, and just opening that door that God is a romantic, and He romanticizes over us and with us. It’s the most beautiful relationship. I love that. [Scott] As to the song “Cages”, we wrote that at a Young Life camp, and we actually wrote it in the same place we wrote “Dancing on the Waves”. I think what I love about that song is that it talks about how we all are so prone to hide behind masks, and I think there has never been a time in history where that has been more tangible than it is now in the sense that were wearing masks everywhere right now. Masks in the physical world are to keep us from the virus, and I think in the spiritual world we use masks to hide from the fact that the virus of sin is something that we combat, and obviously Jesus conquered it on the cross and brought healing, but we fight the symptoms daily. What I love about “Cages” is it’s saying, “I’m not going to hide behind the masks of insecurity, or the masks of arrogance, or the masks of pride, or whatever has kept me from being vulnerable”. I’m going to rip those off and I’m not going to be afraid of what it might mean or the price I might have to pay to lay my heart bare before God and before people, and even before myself and people that I love. So I really love that song, that it’s a challenge for us to say were going to be real, and we’re going to be honest, and we’re going to be candid. I think that sometimes in the Christian world, we don’t talk about some of the really hard stuff and some of the really dark stuff that we walk through as believers and human beings, So I think that its really vital if we’re ever going to grow in our faith and in our relationships with people and with God, that we have to be candid with who we are and with the things with which we struggle. So that’s one of my favorite songs on the record because I think it’s a declarative anthem, the things that have held me in the past are no longer going to hold me, and that starts with honesty. [WM] I have to ask you about WTK production dynamics in rehearsal and in the studio. My background in the studio allows the “last word” to always be granted to the producer. I’ve been in the studio with dual producers and it got a little “hairy” at times. A lot of artists are rubbed the wrong way by the producer being in full control, and you have not only sibling, but also family dynamics involved in songwriting, performance, production, expectations, and overall sonics. How do you settle artistic differences? [Scott] Man we just bust out swords and Medieval dual, whatever happens! (laughs) [Andrew] That would probably be easier! (laughs) [Ed] To me, it’s almost as if there is this sixth member of our band who is the collective voice of all of us. It’s so interesting because we’re all producers. Franni acts like she’s not, but she’s August 2020 Subscribe for Free... 9