Return
to the Plus One home page
Return to the
Christian Music Lighthouse home page
Long before Plus One's
143/Atlantic Records debut, "The Promise", was in the can, or before
one note of their music had been heard on a radio station, a veritable
"who's who" of pop music insiders was eager to work with these five
talented young men.
Not that Plus One is looking to
ride on coattails to fame. They've just learned early-on what too many artists
take an entire career to discover-that success, of any kind, is never a simple
function of individual effort, but is first and always a product of
collaboration. Plus One realized that no one succeeds alone-in life, in music,
and certainly not in faith-and therefore the quality of their success would
depend on the kind of people they surrounded themselves with. So, from the
beginning, they've sought nothing but the best, including co-producer of The
Promise, 143 Records CEO and 14-time Grammy Award winning songwriter and
producer David Foster (Celine Dion, Faith Hill, Toni Braxton).
The all-star production team also
includes Buster & Shavoni (Kirk Franklin, Prince of Egypt soundtrack), Dow
and Brad (LFO), Chris Farren (Deana Carter, Kevin Sharp), Rodney Jerkins
(Whitney Houston, Brian McKnight, Brandy and Monica), Robbie Nevil (Jessica
Simpson, Brandy, Monica), Joe P. (Tatyana Ali, Zoe Girl), Phil Sillas (Melrose
Place, Party of Five), Bradley Spalter (kci & jojo, Babyface) and Eric
Foster White (Britney Spears, Backstreet Boys).
If, as the saying goes, we are
known by the company we keep, Plus One already has a brilliant reputation.
"Guys with good voices are a
dime a dozen in LA," says Florida native Nathan Walters, the oldest member
of Plus One at the ripe age of 22. "But chemistry… that's another story.
Plus One works because we are not just five guys singing next to each
other-we've worked our socks off from the beginning to connect, to click."
"Exactly," adds
18-year-old Sacramento native Nate Cole. "We have to become more than just
five good singers. Our job is to become one great group, to find that path
through hard work and lots of time together to those moments when we're
genuinely together when we sing."
To reach that goal, the guys have
committed to nearly a year of non-stop preparation, rehearsing, researching,
recording, serving, praying and even living together. Since then, their life has
become a veritable mobile college dorm-first in San Francisco, then LA, and now
in Nashville-except that no one ever gets to cut class, they don't get weekends
off, and when they jump on a plane to Nashville for the weekend, it's not for
Spring Break. This fall, when everyone will be heading back to school, these
five guys will be heading off to a different kind of classroom-a 60-city tour
with Myrrh Records/Sony Discos artist Jaci Velasquez.
"I knew making this record
would be hard work," says 20-year-old Gabe Combs, Plus One's instrumental
and song writing Renaissance man, "As we got into this, we realized that
what we were doing-what we had been called together to do-would take everything
we have. I guess that's why we know it's worth doing."
In the process, the guys have
learned to play off each other's strengths, and balance each other's weaknesses,
as they worked together to grow as a group and as men.
"In some ways we're very
different," adds 19 year old Jeremy Mhire, of Springfield, MO. "but
it's our differences that make us interesting-as friends and as a group. I'm
learning how we each bring something special to everything we do, and that it's
the ways we differ that allows us to be more than just ordinary."
The connection-and
commitment-between the guys is clear on The Promise. There's a playfulness and
attentiveness in Plus One's vocal interplay that simply can't be manufactured in
a studio. Songs like "My Life," with its funky backbeat, and the first
single, "Written On My Heart," showcase the group's intricate
harmonies and youthful take on life.
"These guys really hear each
other, really listen to each other when they sing," says producer David
Foster, who signed the group to 143 Records/Atlantic Records literally days
after their first auditions. "Individually, they're all incredibly
talented, but they've learned that as vocalists, they're even better together.
There's wisdom there."
There's more to a band than just
camaraderie. There has to be substance to the songs to justify the audience's
time. Plus One knew this too, and set out from their first moment together on a
dual quest to find the perfect songs and to stretch themselves as people.
For this reason the songs on Plus
One's debut, (eventually culled from a roster of a who's who list of songwriters
including Phil Sillas, Stephanie Lewis, Dan Muckala, Ty Lacey, Eric Foster White
and Reed Vertelney), cover the gamut of everything that you might expect from a
bunch of friends at the edge of adulthood. Songs full of fun and romance, hopes,
dreams and the highest yearnings and ambitions find their way on the disc. There
are songs about friendship and faithfulness, like "My Friend," and
mostly, there are songs such as "Run to You" and the melodic title
cut, "The Promise," that get to the heart of the matter for the
guys-their faith in God.
Plus One even adds their own song
writing chops to the mix, with "Be," a cut that reflects the constancy
of friendship and God's love. Written by Nate Cole, Gabe Combs and Nathan
Walters, along with veterans Ty Lacey, Bradley Spalter and Michael Norfleet, the
ballad is the first collective song writing contribution, showing the promise of
things to come.
But for all the care given to the
sound of The Promise, more has been taken with the collaborative project that
was the integrity of the guys themselves. From the first day of rehearsals, they
made a commitment to be marked as much by service as by sound. While in San
Francisco, the guys volunteered a couple of times a week at a center for
homeless families. And last September, they began an ongoing partnership with
Habitat for Humanity, participating in a week-long, 20-house "racial
reconciliation" blitz build in Selma, Ala., where they worked side-by-side
with veterans of that city's civil rights movement.
"That experience put some
things in perspective for us," says Nate. "Seeing the need right here
in America-and experiencing how we could help-that was amazing."
"Working next to people who
worked with Dr. King, people who sacrificed so much for their freedom or the
freedom of others… it was overwhelming," adds Gabe.
The work with Habitat is part of
an intentional strategy on the part of the band to expand their experience and
their vision of ministry.
"Anyone can sing about
God," says Jason Perry, the youngest member of the group at age 17,
"but we knew that until we had something to say with our lives, our songs
would be empty."
"We are so committed to
sharing our faith in our music," offers Jeremy, "but our faith tells
us that it's better to love our neighbor than lecture them. If you listen more
than you speak, you can get a lot done sometimes. The main thing is that you
don't have to preach-just show love, acceptance and tolerance. Our audiences
have heard all about Jesus-what they really need is to see him."
"That's really what Plus One
is about," adds Nate. "The 'One' in our name-the One who more than
just us, more than our songwriters and even our producers-our prayer is that
anyone who pays attention to anything we do, be it our music or our lives, will
know exactly who that is.