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"We don't feel like an overnight
success. It just happened to be God's timing to open up the boundaries of our
ministry. We've been recording and performing for several years, and this was
just the next step. Granted, it was a pretty big one."
--Jeromy Deibler, FFH
For a group that's been around the
block a few times, recorded nine albums, played over two hundred dates a year,
and had some of the highest charting "indie" singles in the history of
Christian radio, FFH is about as close to an overnight success story as you can
get. Their major label debut on Essential Records, I Want To Be Like You,
has shipped over 135,000 units in under five months, making them the
best-selling debut Christian artist of 1999.
The project's first single, the soaring, acoustic
rock track One Of These Days, quickly became a No. 1 multi-format hit.
The intense, melody infused follow-up single, I Want To Be Like You
followed suit and reached #1 in a matter of weeks. In the midst of all that, FFH
wrote and recorded a song used in a Coca-Cola national radio advertising
campaign that aired on over 4000 radio stations, and were selected to perform
live as the special musical guest at the annual press conference announcing the
1999 Gospel Music Association Dove Award nominees. Heavy press attention,
including a Release Magazine August/September '99 cover feature,
introduced them to a whole new audience, while the increasing demand for their
live performances quickly pushed their roadshow into overdrive, sending them
zigzagging around the country to play 250 dates this year. At a recent mall
appearance in Dallas, FFH pulled in over 3000 fans, outdrawing even the group
N'Sync.
"The early success of this
record really took us by surprise," admits Jeromy, the group's co-founder
and principal writer. "I don't think you ever expect to have so much
attention all at once. FFH spent six and a half years playing to small audiences
of fifty, or thirty, or a hundred. All of a sudden, lots of people are coming to
our concerts already having bought our record and knowing our music. It's very
humbling to realize how God has expanded what we're doing."
Seeing the increasing platform for their brand of
vocal-based acoustic pop as both an opportunity and a responsibility, Jeromy and
Jennifer Deibler, Brian Smith and new FFH member Michael Boggs have deliberately
structured their lives and careers in such a way as to further the calling they
believe has been entrusted to them.
"We've always been blatant
about FFH's goal as a group," Jeromy continues. "Our goal is to reach
as many people as we can for Jesus as quickly as possible. But we always have to
be careful that that goal doesn't get lost in the details and pressures of
writing, recording, and touring."
"We used to sit and worry over how our bills
were going to be paid," adds Brian, FFH's bass vocalist and other founding
member, "But over the past few years God has given us faith to know that
he'll provide for those needs. Now we're suddenly trying to learn to deal with
the pressure o having so many people watching us and tugging at us from
different directions. Our main concern now is making sure we all stay grounded,
making sure we're in the work of God, making sure we're spending time in prayer,
making sure that the family integrity we have on the road stays intact."
Describing their touring entourage
in terms of "family" isn't' just a metaphor for FFH. Not only is
Jeromy's wife, Jennifer, an integral part of the group's vocal chemistry, but
her father and mother travel everywhere with the band in the roles of "road
pastor" and merchandising supervisor. Brian's wife Allyson also works for
the group and travels with them, as do three additional friends.
"What's amazing to me is that ten people can go
on the road and be together all the time and still get along," says
Jennifer. "There's no way that can happen unless God puts it together. You
just have to learn to be with each other constantly and to give and take a
lot."
"We all share a common
purpose," adds Jeromy, "though our responsibilities are different.
Everyone's role is important. When I jump on the bus and say "Hey, our song
made it to #5!," everyone on the bus feels like their song made it
to #5, not just the four of us who sang it. And when Jennifer's dad finishes his
counseling ministry after a show and tells us "We won fifty people to the
Lord tonight!" all ten of us share in the joy of that together."
The strong current of family togetherness is
channeled through FFH's music as well. Originally an a cappella group, FFH's
sound gradually evolved into a harmony driven, acoustic pop hybrid that broke
new ground creatively without sacrificing accessibility. Combined with a
worshipful longing expressed through their lyrics, FFH's music reached across
standard demographic lines and began to bridge the tastes of two, sometimes even
three, generations.
"It's nothing that we've done
deliberately," says Jeromy, "we don't have a formula for it. But God
has blessed us with a musical expression that brings people together. We've
gotten responses from people saying things like 'We listened to your CD on our
ten-hour family trip, and it was the only one we could agree on with our kids.'
We've had pastors use the song 'Big Fish' in their sermons, and we've had a
vacation Bible school use it as well. We feel like God's given us our
'cross-generational' sound as a way for us to help draw families together in a
culture that splits so many apart."
The underlying worship aspect of FFH's ministry is
obvious, too, from a passing glance at their lyric sheet. While the musical
styles vary, songs like Little Change, Wholly To You, Take Me As I Am, and
I Want To Be Like You, are all approached as heartfelt expressions
addressed directly to God.
"We want to make music that
people can sing back to the Lord," Jeromy explains. "We want to write
songs that people can hear a couple of times and connect with as a prayer from
their own heart."
"I'm always in prayer for Jeromy when he's
writing," adds Jennifer. "I pray that God will give him words that
people need to hear, and that God will speak through Jeromy to someone who needs
to hear God's voice."
Holding a firm conviction that it is
not only the lost who need to hear God's voice, FFH expends considerable energy
focusing on the needs of the church as well.
"One of my prayers whenever we go into a church
is that we can ignite them," says Brian. "We want to encourage them
and stir up the fire of God inside them so that they can go into their community
and stand up for what they believe and be salt and light."
"We want people to take
ownership of the great commission that Jesus gave to all of us," adds
Michael. "We don't just want them to get fired up for a couple of hours
during a concert."
"We know we're just here to serve them,"
says Jeromy in conclusion. "After all, the hundreds of people who come to
one of our show can reach a lot more individuals in their community than the
four of us ever could traveling on our bus from church to church. If God can use
FFH to fire them up, then they can go out and do the kind of fingernails dirty
ministry that can change a whole town. That's our vision."