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Home: J : John Waller :
Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Beach Street/Reunion Records)
All things happen inGod's perfect timing.
Broken dreams are restored. Relationships are renewed. Dormant
gifts are awakened. Just ask John Waller, the newest artist
on the Beach Street Records roster. Waller has seen God move
in a powerful way as he's entered a new season in his life.
A talented singer, songwriter, and worship leader considered
by many to be one of the best-kept secrets in the Christian
music community, Waller gained national attention fronting
the group According to John. But as often happens in the
music industry, the group's record label went out of business,
and John and his cohorts found themselves without a deal.
"When the journey came to an end with According to
John, I left it behind and I really closed that chapter in
my life," says Waller. "I never had any intentions
of being a recording artist again. I went about a year without
writing any songs."
He and his wife, Josee, moved to Colorado
and helped launch SouthLink Church, where he became worship
pastor. It became an extraordinary season in Waller's life
and ministry. And at a time when he had given up "the music business," he
suddenly felt more inspired and began writing songs that
were immediately embraced by his congregation. The people
at SouthLink began clamoring for John to make a CD of his
new material.
"I was teaching my songs to our worship team and we
were playing them in church. They were declaration kind of
songs," he says of the new songs God was laying on his
heart. "People wanted to go sit in their car and listen
to them. They didn't want to wait a whole week before they
could hear these songs again. I saw that happening and I
said, 'If this could happen with these people then perhaps
they are meant for a bigger flock.'"
The congregation at SouthLink loved
John's new music and believed in it so strongly, they raised
the money to finance a new CD. He traveled to Georgia to
record with Brian Scoggin, a friend from his According
to John days. Brian knew Casting Crowns' lead vocalist
Mark Hall from a brief tenure filling in on drums with
the group. He left a message asking Hall to sing on a song
called "The Blessing."
John was getting ready to board a plane
heading back to Colorado when he got the call that Mark
Hall would do it. "I
just couldn't' believe it," he says. "I was so
thrilled."
Hall remembered Waller from an event
that happened the week after the September 11 terrorist
attacks. According to John was performing and Hall was
impressed with Waller's ability to reach kids. "The songs immediately grabbed my attention," he
recalls. "Then John started talking between the songs
and something stood out about him. As a youth pastor when
you teach a lesson, you aren't teaching a lesson, you are
teaching people and I could tell he was reaching my students."
Thus began the chain of circumstances that led to John Waller
signing with Beach Street, which is owned by Mark Miller,
lead vocalist for the award-winning country group Sawyer
Brown. Mark Hall sent a CD to Mark Miller, anxious for him
to hear Waller's music. However, the CD stuck in Miller's
truck and it was quite some time before he was able to hear
Waller's music.
When he finally did, he heard the same
passionate vocals and lyrical integrity that his buddy
Mark Hall had identified with so strongly. "John sent me the entire album and
the thing that just impressed me more than anything was just
the messages in these songs," Mark Miller says. "It
reminded me of the approach that Mark Hall takes with his
songs. They are like mini sermons, message songs. I could
just tell when I heard the lyrics that this guy was much
more interested in what he was saying than being a rock star.
For me here at Beach Street, that's the kind of artist that
we're interested in."
Waller joined Beach Street's small,
elite roster that includes Casting Crowns and Josh Bates,
and began working on his debut CD with Mark Miller and
Jason Hoard, lead guitarist from According to John, producing
the set. The first single from Waller's new disc is "The Blessing," which features
Mark Hall. The lyric is a compelling challenge to other believers
to speak positively into the lives of those around them.
It encourages us all to choose to be a blessing to those
in our lives. "I believe in the power of spoken words," he
says. "My wife and I started speaking a blessing on
a daily basis over our three children."
One of the things that inspired this
practice is a book John read by Aaron Fruh titled "The Forgotten Blessing:
Ancient Words that Heal Generational Wounds." "It
talks about the Old Testament tradition of the father blessing
his son and daughter," he says.
Waller feels passionately about sharing
the message in "The
Blessing." He knows first hand the power of the spoken
word. Members of his family battled depression and unwittingly
spoke the affliction into John's life as a young boy. Consequently,
he battled the illness and was on medication for 20 years.
"For years I struggled with depression," he relates. "It
was all in my family. It was a generational thing that was
passed down and I believed I would always struggle with it.
As I started learning about who I was in Christ, this did
not add up. If I believed that I was a depressed person,
then I probably always would be a depressed person. If I
believe that I'm a joyful person and I've declared it and
realized that is who I am, then that's going to manifest
itself in my physical body."
With a strong circle of friends lifting
him up in prayer, Waller was able to break the bonds of
depression. He no longer found himself reliant on the medication
that had become part of his life. John's songs convey the
power of God's grace and the sense of renewal that flooded
his life. In the gorgeous, poignant "Breathe on Me" John sings "I
believe, I receive everything you have for me."
One of the most potent songs on the
album is "He Still
Calls Me Son." "Mark Miller actually called me
up one night and said, 'Hey I've got a challenge for you:
Write a song about the prodigal son, but don't ever mention
the word prodigal,'" recalls Waller. "I've always
loved the story of the prodigal son and I've always said
you either are a prodigal or you are about to become one.
I think anybody could relate to this song because we all
know what it's like to go our own way whether it's rebelling
from our parents or rebelling from God."
On the lively anthem "Say Your Name," Waller's
clear passionate voice celebrates the power and authority
we as believers can claim simply by calling on the name of
God. "Identity" wraps a powerful message in an
inviting pop/rock package that immediately invites listeners
to sing along. The lyric speaks of finding our identity in
Christ and not the things of this world. "All of the
songs celebrate life, who you are in Christ," Waller
says. "I just want to celebrate what God has done and
give him glory.
In listening to Waller's debut album,
it's easy to hear why Mark Hall says he's impressed with
Waller's musical sensibilities, but most of all with the
words he's sharing. "For me
the song is all about what you are saying," he relates.
I think anytime an artist comes out and they are saying something
that goes right into your home, right into your life, right
into what you are doing right now, then it's something you
can use. I'm not saying it needs to be simple, but at the
same time, there has to be a purpose in what you are doing.
John Waller's music has purpose."
What John Waller has to say comes out
of a servant's heart and a desire to draw people closer
to God. "He's a praise
and worship leader," says Mark Miller. "He's tied
into his church and I think—like Mark Hall—there's
a difference when they have contact day-to-day with their
flock. We're not just talking about artists who sit around
in the studio and write all day. They actually have interaction
with people in their church so a lot of things that John
writes about are experiences that he's had and seen. You
hear that in these songs. He's still very young, but he's
seasoned in the church and spiritually and that comes out
in his messages. You can't write the kind of songs that John
Waller writes and not be touched by the hand of God."
John Waller knows God orchestrated
his steps to this exact place, with these people, at this
time. He laughingly admits, it wasn't the time frame he
would have chosen, but it was God's perfect timing. "I thought the Lord was going
to put me on the fast track," he says of his early ambitions, "and
the fast track was about 17 years. It wasn't fast at all,
but I wouldn't trade that time for anything in the world
because it defined who I am."
These days he has a clearer sense of
mission than ever before. "God
has called me to use my songs to help set people free. It
could be from depression or some other strong hold," he
says. "I just believe it's about delivering people.
I had to be free before I could set people free. I want to
help give people a new legacy. God can create a new legacy
in their life to pass on to their children. That's what I
think my ministry needs to be about."
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