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Home: A : Aaron
Benward : Biography
Biography (courtesy of Sparrow Records)
"I love life," Aaron Benward confesses unapologetically. "I
mean, I REALLY love life!" It is a confession that mirrors
his profound appreciation for the important things in life—love
of God, love of family, love of life itself. It is a love
affair that permeates Aaron's eagerly awaited solo debut
Imagine.
Aaron co-wrote ten of Imagine's eleven
songs, resulting in an album that is deeply personal, running
the gambit from bright, pop-inflected praise tunes, to
intensely introspective love songs. Set against a sonic
soundscape that falls somewhere between Matchbox 20, Goo
Goo Dolls and Michael W. Smith; Imagine passes seamlessly
from crunchy, guitar rock, to keyboard-driven anthems.
The title, according to Benward, says it all. The 26 year
old father of two explains, "Philippians 4:13;
it's my life verse. 'I can do all things through Christ who
strengthens me'. God wants to do so much more than we can
fathom or imagine. He wants our dreams to come true. Those
things that we strive for, those things that are deep down
in our hearts—He put them there. He wants those exact
things for us. It is a theme that runs through the album."
Aaron's highly-anticipated solo project
has been a long time coming. Three critically acclaimed
albums as the 'Aaron' half of father/son duo Aaron*Jeoffrey
created a demand for more, more, more. But Aaron waited
until the timing was right before launching out on his
own. "The plan was for me
to eventually be able to do my own thing, to chase my own
dream. That was understood at the outset. It's time for me
to focus on my generation, and the one following; to make
my own decisions; to take my own risks. It's an exciting
time," Aaron understates.
Imagine is an album that almost didn't
get finished. With just over half the songs recorded, Aaron
was involved in a potentially fatal auto accident. Sitting
alone with his wife, trying to process the accident, he
found himself listening to the one song on the album he
did not write, "God's
Here." "All of a sudden life took on new meaning," he
says. "I realized that in an instant my wife, my kids,
all of us could have been taken. And if it had been time
for us to go, Jesus would have been there to usher us into
the presence of God. But God has more that he wants me to
do for Him here. All the little trivial things that mattered
before the accident, material things, they don't matter anymore."
What does matter is a new found focus
on his ministry … his
primary ministry. "I realize now that my primary ministry
is not to the people who come to my concerts, or the people
who buy my records," he explains. "My primary ministry
is to my family. After the truck stopped flipping and came
to rest on the passengers side—when I saw that my wife
was okay, and then when I looked in the back and the kids
were all right, it was like I took the deepest breath you
could ever take. I realized that it's not about the car you
drive, the house you live in or the kind of clothes you wear.
It's about leading my family as a godly man."
Imagine, like the man who sings it,
is a dichotomy of sorts—at
once intense and strong, yet vulnerable, sensitive, unafraid.
It is a delicate balance that Aaron makes look easy on the
anthemic love song, "Captured," where he sings,
'The moment You set me free was the moment You captured me.'
He displays flashes of brilliant, pop sensibilities on the
evangelical "Let It Out," and experiments with
some gentle acoustic flavorings on "God's Here." And
his innate sense of fun bursts forth on "Famous and
Alive."
Lyrically Imagine plumbs the depths
of the Christian experience. The autobiographical, "Renaissance Love," compares
new life in Christ to the historical Renaissance, when the
Dark Ages gave way to rebirth and renewal. "Salt" and "Let
It Out" are straight-ahead songs of encouragement for
believers to spread the good news of Christ. "He Believes" and "Make
Your Mark" celebrate the high calling of God on our
lives. "He created us in his image, but He created us
uniquely," Aaron says. "He wants us to dream our
own dreams. He wants us to succeed. He wants to be the God
of our hearts. He is concerned with us. That is why He died
for us." As Aaron prepares to launch his solo career
he reflects back on things his father taught him; things
that have now become a part of him. "He let me grow
up and experience God in my own way," he says. "I
discovered my Jesus instead of his. He taught me to stay
focused, to stay true, to communicate and to make good decisions.
And he taught me how to love people, because Christ came
and died for people."
"I made a mistake growing up," he muses. "I
had a great opportunity, to use my faith to be salt and light
at my high school. Instead I was really submerged in my youth
group and only hung out with my friends from church. So although
my classmates knew I was a believer I didn't know if I had
any real impact on them. We as Christians have to get outside
the arena of just surrounding ourselves with other Christians.
That is a big conviction of mine."
"The impact that I want to have with Imagine is to
bring joy," Aaron insists. "I want people to walk
away from listening to me with a renewed sense of joy in
their lives. I want them to walk away encouraged. I want
them to walk away having experienced a touch from God."
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