Worship Musician July 2020 | Page 26

music gathering at a lake house, just reconnecting, writing some songs, and just being together. In that, every morning and every night we would hear from one person, what place they’re in, how are they in their life, and what are they feeling. And during the morning one of our guys, Cody Rae Lee, was just sharing his journey with anxiety, and just being tormented by it. He’s struggled with that. So we end up praying for him, and there was this picture that someone saw of us lifting up Cody beyond his own strength, so we all lifted his arms up in the air with our strength and not his, and it was this symbolic picture that Cody doesn’t have to use his own strength to overcome anxiety. And right after that, not even five minutes later after we prayed, Cody, Julian Gamboa, and me, walked into a room, and we started immediately playing. We played that chorus and bridge, and it came out within twenty minutes from that place we had just prayed for Cody in, with overcoming that anxiety. So, the song was really birthed out of an authentic place in that time of what we were believing. And it came from a personal place of exactly where we were. [WM] Producing a studio recording presents challenges but producing live projects can present their own set of unique issues. Capturing worship can be fraught with background noises, vocal and instrumental mistakes, sound leakage between players, etc. But still there is a beauty to it all. Tell us about the dynamic of live production and how you approach it? [Matt] Oh man, I could talk about this for hours. That is a huge calling in my life, and what that is for me is I believe that the Lord has been calling worshippers back to the place of authenticity. It doesn’t mean that we weren’t authentic, it doesn’t mean that there was anything wrong with CCM and other studio genres and things like that. Into the Battle earlier. That is a big calling of mine, I am never going to produce or record a record striving for perfection in everything. Obviously, it needs to be professional and up to industry standards, but I’m not afraid of the person yelling in the crowd, the person clapping, the things that a lot of people are looking to turn down and edit and get out. There is a place for that for sure, but for me, I just feel like there is a generation that can sense authenticity beyond many generations. I think that social media and all of these things that young generations are coming up with now, has made people just desire the authentic at a completely new level. People don’t just want something that has been extremely polished or fabricated and looks good on the outside. People want what’s true now more than ever. I think going through this virus, with all of the protests, and everything our nation is going through right now, people have a desire for what is true. That’s the same thing I feel about doing a live worship record, I want it to sound great, I want it to feel great, I want it to be professional, I want musicians to feel honored that they got to put their best foot forward, but I want it to be authentic. A lot of what I’ve done in my career, I want to make sure you can hear the crowd. Even though I look back at some of the stuff that I’ve done and think, “Wow, maybe I should have turned that guy down?” Even on the song “Land of the Living”, there’s a guy who’s screaming so loud on the bridge, but I love it even though maybe it’s a little loud. My point is, doing a live worship record is not just capturing a song, it’s capturing an atmosphere. If you’re there to just capture a song, then you don’t have to do it live, there are a lot of other ways to do it. But if you’re there to capture an atmosphere of something the Lord is doing at a certain place and time, that’s a live record to me! Why hide some of those little imperfections that make something so pure and so authentic? When you listen to these UPPERROOM records, at least the last two of them, To the One and this one, you’re going to hear a lot of our house. You’re going to hear the atmosphere, people singing and people praying. At the end of “Rest on Us” you can even hear our pastor Michael Miller, he declares something in the crowd, he’s not on a mic or anything but you can hear him, and if you know what he sounds like then you know that’s him. And that was just picked up with crowd mics doing a live record. My point is just that I believe there’s a generation out there that is longing for something authentic, and that is a partnership with authenticity and cultivating skill and putting your best foot forward as well. To me it’s a partnership, and its understanding that perfection is not the goal. [WM] The song “On the Cross” is an atmospheric 6/8 anthem, thanking God for the rescuing work of Jesus in our lives. But I wanted to ask you about the song, “History”, that you co-wrote with my friend Jonathan Lewis, as well as Oscar and Julian Gamboa, and Sabastian Suarez. I love the lyric pool that you’ve all drawn from and can’t remember a worship song that chronicles our personal But it feels like there is something the Lord has been doing in worship with authenticity without perfection, like we were talking about On the Cross History 26 July 2020 Subscribe for Free...