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Home: B : Bethany
Dillon : Biography
Biography (courtesy of Sparrow Records)
Popular music is the voice box of culture;
it tells our stories in present tense. And every day, new
voices chime in with perspectives either generic or poignant,
chaff or wheat. As a culture, we're listening for the real
thing: we want the hope, and we want the song to resonate.
Once in awhile, we get what we long for. Once in awhile,
someone like Bethany Dillon comes around.
From the first listen of her self-titled Sparrow Records
debut it is obvious that Bethany Dillon possesses the rare
gift of balance between flowing lyrics and moving melodies.
With a voice equally at home with soaring strings and mandolins
as it is with upbeat electric guitars, Bethany has an accessible
sound all her own: She is the exuberance of Michelle Branch
and the weightiness of Aimee Mann. As she sings in "Move
Forward": My eyes are soft and wise. They tell a story.
Bethany's story is one of Christ and
music. Growing up in Bellefontaine, OH, music was a form
of daily conversation in her family household. She learned
early the value of its power to create community. "I have sung since I learned
to talk," she says. "At family gatherings, everyone
plays music. The musical roots go really deep."
Deeper than musical roots, however,
was the commitment to Christ. "I grew up in a Christian home," Bethany
explains. "God was very near to my heart at a young
age. I wanted to passionately and ardently follow him."
Bethany's passion for God translated
directly into her passion for music. "There's a quote in my room that says: 'Good
music makes you homesick for a place you've never been.'
Sara Groves humming with a piano communicates more to me
than a pulpit. Music unearths things that have yet to be
unearthed," Bethany muses. At age 10, she discovered
the music of Jennifer Knapp, and immediately wanted to learn
how to play guitar. "I was convinced I should be a rocker
chick," she jokes.
Little did Bethany know that God was
about to honor her dream. After recording an independent
CD in her home, her music landed in the hands of EMI CMG’s Vice President
of A&R Brad O'Donnell. Bethany and her family then met
with the label, on "a day that would go down in history," she
remembers. She knew, without a doubt, that God had orchestrated
a perfect partnership. O'Donnell agrees. "I sat down
with her family and listened to her pray," he remembers. "I
could tell that Bethany possessed a rare honesty and genuineness
as an artist. She had no agenda. That day, she was just 'being'.
I knew that hers was a higher calling, and [EMI CMG] wanted
to be a part of that."
In five short years, Bethany Dillon
has developed a unique songwriting style, combining her
committed study of Scripture with the experience of a maturing
young woman. "Every
line, I've poured myself into," she explains. O'Donnell
is amazed by her skill: "Bethany is a deep well of creativity,
which is the hallmark of a great artist," he says. "You
can see in her a holy ambition."
Bethany feels a strong calling to speak
to the heart of women: "I want women to know that God has placed a crown
of beauty on their head," she says. And so she writes
songs of longing and empowerment, struggle and victory. "I
want my music to come from a place of rawness and honesty," she
explains. Songs such as "Beautiful" are both confessional
and resolute, as Bethany sings about "fighting to make
the mirror happy," only to realize that "You say
who I am is quite enough."
It is this same vulnerability that
makes her music so accessible to all ages. Already, Bethany
has developed quite the fan base amongst teens. "The people who come up to me after
shows are girls in college and high school. And every night
I have a good conversation with girls my age. They relate
to the music because I'm not singing about being fifteen
five years ago. I am fifteen." Also, Bethany can relate
to what it means to be a teenager in the context of family.
She is the middle child of five, with an older brother and
sister and two younger brothers who were adopted into the
family after coming to live with them ten years ago.
As she embarks on such a promising
journey, Bethany Dillon is embracing her story with purpose
and vision. “God
is teaching me that it's not about me. I need to be faithful,
and He will speak through me. I'm not going to worry so much
about being successful or relevant." She goes on: "I
want to awaken in my generation something that's been dead.
I want to make the Word flesh and blood for my generation,
to show them that living out the Gospel is something greater
and more mysterious, with more adventures than we've learned." She
strives to unearth what has yet to be unearthed.
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