Casting Crowns
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- Official Website castingcrowns.com
- Artist / Band: 1999
Present
- Members: Andy Williams
(drummer), Chris Huffman (bass), Hector Cervantes
(guitarist), Juan DeVevo (guitarist), Mark Hall (lead
vocal), Megan Garrett (keyboard and vocals), Melodee
DeVevo (violin and vocals)
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Casting Crowns Bio
Okay, so this is where we're supposed to give you all the marketing
hype, the impressive list of awards and nominations, the radio
stats, record sales and media coverage. All the facts to confirm
just how far up the music career ladder Casting Crowns has traveled
in the two short years since the band's recording debut.
Certainly there is much to tell.
But frankly, that's the least of what you need to know about
Casting Crowns. There's nothing less important to them than
all the marketing details. Instead, if we could all suspend
that tiny (or big, as the case may be) voice of cynicism just
for a momentif we could magically transport ourselves
to any given Sunday morning at Eagle's Landing First Baptist
Church outside of Atlanta, perhaps we'd see just how little
the music business machine matters.
What matters is what's going on in the lives of the 400+
kids that Mark Hall and the other six members of Casting Crowns
minister to each and every week. What matters is whether or
not that teenage guy really 'gets' that God believes in him,
even when he has trouble believing back. What matters is whether
that teenage girl knows she's loved and wanted by the God
of the universe, when there's no one else to love her. What
matters is that they come to see their lives as the only songs
of worship that really count.
"Sixty percent of my students have probably never heard
of the Dove Awards, SoundScan or radio charts," says
lead singer and songwriter Mark Hall. "These are everyday
teenagers living in the real world. Their parents are fighting,
or their boyfriend or girlfriend just broke up with them and
they're failing math. We come home every week to people who
desperately need a relationship with Jesus. This is the ministry
that God has called us to." He adds, "You've got
to earn the right to talk to them about their lives. They
want to know that you struggle too, before you start getting
in their business. So it's not about art or music. The music
is not the point. Music is just a way of sharing the awesome
love of God. So we speak of our weakness and our fears - we
speak of our failures and how God rescued us from the pit
and allows us to be a part of what He is doing in the world.
If we are open and honest about our lives and our walk with
Jesus, then others will see us and think, 'Hey, that's me
too! God can do that in me!'"
That kind of honesty lies at the epicenter of Lifesong, the
sophomore release from Casting Crowns and the band's most
compelling work to date. Ably produced again by Mark Miller
(Sawyer Brown), Lifesong continues in the same vein as the
Casting Crowns debut, bringing focus to topics the band feels
aren't being talked about enough. Hall explains, "We're
not the angry artist out there throwing rocks at the church.
We're in the church every week. We're not talking down to
anyone. If anything, we're talking up to them from hearts
that God is still working on."
In other words, whether success exits as quickly as it entered,
Casting Crowns has no plans to change the subject matter or
their approach to it. Hall states, "I think people are
willing to listen to the hard truth if you're being transparent
about your own life, your own struggles with doubt and fear
and failure. These songs, like all the songs I write, are
simply about where we all live."
Are we happy plastic people / Under shiny plastic
steeples
With walls around our weakness / And smiles to hide our pain
But if the invitation's open / To every heart that has been
broken
Maybe then we close the curtain on our stained glass masquerade
from "Stained Glass Masquerade"
With bold questions set in memorable melodies, songs like
"Does Anybody Hear Her," "While You Were Sleeping"
and "Stained Glass Masquerade" leave no room for
doubt that Casting Crowns continues to challenge the Sunday
morning status quo.
Beautiful, worshipful songs like "Love Them Like Jesus,"
"Praise You In This Storm" and "In Me"
confirm their unwavering determination to be living, breathing
examples of Jesus in the world. After all, that is why they're
here. That's why we're all here.
"Your purpose is to worship Him with your life,"
Hall says. "On that journey to becoming like Jesus, you
may be a doctor, construction worker, salesperson or a youth
pastor, but that's not why you're here. You're here to worship
Him with everything you have. You're here to become like Jesus."
"This is your life song," Hall says. "This
is your act of worship: what you do with the life you've been
given. A life of worship says 'God, I'm waking up today. I'm
going to do a lot of things, I'm going to go a lot of places,
I'm going to talk to a lot of people, but my goal is to point
others to You and to make You smile today.' The more we live
like that, the more we become like him, and the closer we
get to His heart, the more we see that His heart is for people.
So then you start seeing people that are hurting. And ministry
becomes the overflow of a life poured out at Jesus' feet."
Empty hands held high / Such small sacrifice
If not joined with my life / I sing in vain tonight
from "Lifesong"
Two years into a whirlwind music career, Casting Crowns has
no plans to start counting the kudos, polishing the awards
or basking in the glow of audience appreciation. They're too
busy living out a larger calling on their lives.
"When something happens in your life, and you know full
well that there's not a single thing that you did to make
it happen, and you don't feel a need to keep it happening,
you just know that for some reason God just wants it to be
right now," Hall says. "So a big part of this whole
thing is not having too many dreams for the future. I constantly
find myself thinking 'God, if we get ahead of You on this
thing it'll all be gone.' All we know is that we're husbands
and wives and parents first. And we know that we're supposed
to be in the church doing what we're doing there. So we're
going to bloom where God has planted us in this season and
keep doing it until the next season comes." Courtesy
Beach Street/Provident
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