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Home: B : Brother's Keeper : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Ardent Records)
Modern life values beauty over most everything else.
The images we’re bombarded with
showcase the aesthetically pleasing, often to the detriment
of the true substance within.
But the men of Brother’s Keeper
-- Philip Enzor, John Sanders and Gabe Dunlap -- want to
show you something deeper. They wish to highlight the aspects
-- of friendship, of commitment, of faith -- that make
this life worth much more than the surface struggles to
reveal.
They want you to see -- and hear -- something Beyond Beautiful.
One thing shines through when speaking
with the members of Brother’s Keeper: this is no garden-variety, thrown-together-for-commerce’s-sake
musical machine. Philip, John and Gabe grew up together,
discovered music together, and merged common passions into
a powerful ministry…together.
“This has really been a way of life since we were
all about 15 years old. It’s almost like you can’t
quit this band,” John says. “We weren’t
put together by anything but God, and we know that because
we’ve tried to separate ourselves several times and
it just won’t take.”
The result has been a decade and a
half of putting their hearts and talents out there for
the world to see, not only through captivating live performances
but also through compelling records such as their 1999
self-titled debut, 2002’s
Cover Me and the newest Brother’s Keeper album, Beyond
Beautiful.
The intervening three years since the
last BK record saw a profound change in not only the lives
of Brother’s
Keeper’s members, but also the world and pop culture
alike. But that doesn’t mean the men in the band sat
idle. “God was really working on some different things
in our lives, whether it be business or families or whatever,” Gabe
says. “What we had decided after Cover Me was not just
to fling a record out there. We wanted to take our time with
it and find the songs we want to be on this record. It was
a hard process, but in looking back, I’m glad we did
it the way we did.”
The outcome -- Beyond Beautiful --
is a 10-song set chock full of sophisticated rhythms, instantly
memorable melodies and the intricate harmonies that have
been a signature Brother’s
Keeper element from the band’s very beginnings. At
the same time, the subject matters covered -- ranging from
the desire to be fully open to God’s callings found
on “Noah” to the honoring of sacrifice found
on “Cross of Christ,” from the energizing spirit
of “Passion” to the bonds of brotherhood inhabiting “Walk
With Me” -- present these men’s desire for relevance
and genuineness in the face of the everyday.
“Something we’ve heard all our lives is that
all truth is God’s truth. So all we focus in on is
the truth,” Philip says. “John talks about working
at a bank years ago, and when they’re teaching you
how to spot a counterfeit bill, they give you a real $100
bill and say, ‘Study this,’ so when the counterfeit
comes along, you’ll be able to spot it like that. We
kinda try to do the same thing with our music, and put the
truth out there that will both strengthen the believer and
convict the person who’s living outside the truth.”
Gabe, Philip and John all know from
whence they speak when talking about the power of Christ’s love and message
through music; after all, the music of Brother’s Keeper
affected them first, and in very palpable ways, over the
years.
“Gabe and I really came to know Christ through the
ministry of Brother’s Keeper. We had both sung in the
group for years before coming to a point in our lives when
we thought, ‘We’ve been singing about Christ,
but we haven’t really made a commitment to Him,’” Philip
says. “So what it’s done for us is give us a
passion to tell people about Christ, especially in the church.”
“Sometimes people expect you only to think big, ‘Man,
we’re going to go out there and reach the world for
Christ,’ and then you water down stuff and go after
it thinking you’re the cutting edge,” John says. “Sometimes
you don’t need to reinvent the wheel. I don’t
care if it’s not cool, Brother’s Keeper is always
going to be able to say, ‘I love Jesus. He died for
me, I’m going to live for Him, by God’s grace.’”
And it’s in that spirit, that reaching out to both
those within and those who think they’re outside the
cover of God’s grace, that’s allowed this band
to impact lives for more than 15 years. They’ve shared
their music and testimony in venues large and small, from
performing before crowds at NBA and NHL games to remote churches
on the other side of the world, and that bringing together
of seemingly disparate elements manifests itself on Beyond
Beautiful’s final track, “Walk With Me.”
“Something that’s very dear to our hearts is
the fact that we all met as part of an accountability group
years ago. What that means to me is not so much a checklist,
but really being there as a brother in Christ to encourage
and exhort one another,” John says. “There’s
never really been a song where we go get a bunch of guys
and talk about what being a Godly man really means.”
So, through a song written by Tony
Wood and 4HIM’s
Mark Harris, Brother’s Keeper gathered some of the
finest male vocal talent in Christian music, including Harris,
Bob Carlisle, Todd Agnew, Scott Krippayne, Sonicflood’s
Rick Heil, the Gaither Vocal Band’s David Phelps, Russ
Lee and Newsong’s Michael O’Brien, to pay honor
to that idea of Christian brotherhood and accountability. “To
get all those artists on one song, that was totally a God
thing,” John says.
In the long run, the men of Brother’s
Keeper crafted Beyond Beautiful to the very best of their
collective abilities, to serve as a motivator and a communicator
of a message that has bound them together for more than
half their lives.
“For us putting together the record, it was about
putting together messages and songs that moved our hearts
and lives and spirits where we were, but can also encourage
and motivate people, Christians and non-Christians alike,” John
says. “From a musical standpoint, we want to be able
to compete with anything out there, and people can point
to it and think, ‘Man, that’s solid. They didn’t
cut any corners.’ But also, when you get it, there’s
a positive message.
“We hope it does intrigue some people, but it’s
a lot like sowing seeds. Some people, it will fall on and
allow them to have a deeper relationship with Christ,” John
continues. “Some other people it might fall on and
they might never know Christ. And both of those are those
are OK with us, because we want an overriding principle where
people can connect and think, ‘Wow, this record is
about something deeper than Brother’s Keeper, and that’s
their relationship with Christ.’”
Songs about something deeper, something eternal, something
Beyond Beautiful.
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