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"Weeping may
remain for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning." —Psalm
30:5 |
"That's
the hope I want to help people grab with this album," Tomlin says.
See The Morning started to emerge following the far-reaching success of
Tomlin's 2004 sixstepsrecords/ Sparrow Records release Arriving. That
record delivered a call to the Christian church to pursue life-renewing worship,
and it indelibly reinforced Tomlin's distinction as the voice of today's modern
expression of Christian worship. The songs breathed vitality into both corporate
and devotional worship music, creating a ripple effect like nothing Tomlin had
previously experienced.
Arriving gave Tomlin his first RIAA-certified gold record and made radio
history by producing three No. 1 singles and three songs in the R&R
AC Top 30 simultaneously (two of those in the Top 10). Tomlin led all artists
this spring with 10 GMA Music Award nominations, capping off the Christian music
industry's April ceremony with five statuettes, including standout awards for
Artist of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year and Song of the Year. The
recording also caused the church to sing, with "How Great Is Our God"
and "Holy Is The Lord" landing in the top 15 of the most sung CCLI
songs, and bringing his total CCLI charting songs to 17 being sung by tens of
millions of worshipers around the world. This season also successfully
perpetuated Tomlin's celebrated participation in the popular, college-focused
Passion conferences.
Grateful for these opportunities, the accolades also bring Tomlin the added
weight of responsibility and concern for the human condition.
"The more I live, the more I see that life is not fair," the Austin,
Texas-based musician says. "Around the world, I've been exposed to much
poverty and sickness. I hear about what people are going through, and I realize
that some are not as blessed as others. The world is full of discouragement. I
think God wants to give us all great compassion for those … so I want to use
my voice to write songs that serve as a reminder to people that Jesus' life
provides hope for us all. Not just in the good times, but in the bad times, as
well."
"Hebrews says, 'Therefore through Jesus let us continually offer a
sacrifice of praise, the fruit of lips that praise his name and do not
forget to do good and serve others, for which such things God is pleased,'"
Tomlin continues. "I hope this music serves others. With worship music
there is a revival. The spirit of God grows in people's hearts. To worship him
is not only to sing our hearts out to God but also to love and serve people and
to meet people where they are. Hopefully I can give voice to some songs that
help people do just that."
Combining the artist's strong signature hooks and accessible choruses with the
production expertise of the award-winning Ed Cash, who also produced Arriving,
See The Morning is imbued with a community spirit, as evidenced by the
number of contributing songwriters. Tomin is joined by Cash and Matt Redman in
the opening track that anchors the theme of hope, "How Can I Keep From
Singing," a rendition of the 1860 hymn by Robert Lowry:
How can I keep from singing your praise/
How can I ever say enough/ How amazing is your love
How can I keep from shouting your name/ I know I am loved by the King/ And it
makes my heart want to sing
Hope also resonates vigorously on
"Rejoice" (the track from which the album's title is drawn), as well
as on the beautiful first radio single "Made To Worship." Producer
Cash, who encouraged Tomlin to record what became his first No. 1 radio hit,
"Indescribable," brought Tomlin the chorus that he and Stephen Sharp
had written for "Made To Worship." Tomlin finished writing the song
and audiences nationwide are responding, as it has already become a national
radio hit.
The album further features the high-energy "Let God Arise" as a rowdy,
rambunctious track inspired by Psalm 68:1 and affirming that death does not get
the final word over humanity.
"You cannot play something titled 'Let God Arise' as a ballad at 75 beats a
minute," Tomlin laughs. "We, as a band [Jesse Reeves (bass), Daniel
Carson (guitar) and Travis Nunn (drums)] love to play loud and get people going.
This is our rock and roll song." Often testing new songs like that one on
the road and in churches before deciding to record them, "Everlasting
God," written by Brenton Brown and inspired by Isaiah 40, is already a
staple chorus at Austin Stone Community Church, which Tomlin co-founded in 2002.
Closing the album is "Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone)," a new
rendition of the classic hymn. "I wasn't sure I wanted to mess with the
most recognized hymn ever," Tomlin admits. But after researching the song,
he discovered the famous John Newton hymn has withstood previous editors.
Reviving an original verse that had lost popular favor over the years, combined
with a new chorus co-written with Passion founder/director Louie Giglio, Tomlin
rekindles a church standard for a new generation of worshipers.
"My chains are gone/ I've been set
free/My God, my Savior has ransomed me
And like a flood His mercy reigns/ Unending love, Amazing grace!"
As millions of people around the world
are already singing his songs every week at collegiate gatherings, worship
services, concert settings and as they sing along with radio, perhaps like the
famous hymn from Newton, the songs of Chris Tomlin will live on in the hearts
and through the voices of worshipers for generations.
"I want to write songs that last more than a few weeks on the radio,"
Tomlin reflects. "I feel like God's given me a gift to write songs for the
average person that help them communicate their feelings to God. And For See
The Morning, and really all my songs, I hope they will be ones that bring
people closer to God, so much so that they are sung long after I'm gone."
Click here
to read the biography for "Arriving"
Click here
to read the biography for "Not to Us"
Click here to read
the biography for "The Noise We Make"