|
Home: K : Kirk
Franklin : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Gospo Centric Records)
In the summer of 1993 a young unknown
gospel musician from Fort Worth, Texas, released-to little
initial fanfare-his self-titled debut album, Kirk Franklin & The Family.
Wildly accepted and embraced almost immediately by the masses,
it went on to spend 100 weeks at the top of Billboard magazine's
gospel charts, while also crossing over to the R&B side,
and becoming in the process the first gospel album ever to
sell over a million units.
But despite that auspicious, record-shattering entrance,
the world had seen only the smallest foreshadowing of the
work of a man who, in less than a decade, would come to stand
with the likes of gospel royalty Thomas A. Dorsey, James
Cleveland, and Andrae Crouch as one of the pivotal, defining
forces of 20th-century-and-beyond gospel music.
With several stops along the way (to write and produce hits
for 1NC and to score and write/produce the major motion picture
soundtrack to Kingdom Come) separating him from his own last
solo album, 1998's two-million-plus selling Nu Nation Project,
Kirk Franklin returns with the new, mind-boggling solo release,
The Rebirth of Kirk Franklin. The album is more than aptly
named.
Displaying Kirk's absolutely breath-taking
grasp of the full breadth and depth of nearly all genres
of contemporary and traditional music-secular as well as
sacred-it leaps so far above and beyond even his greatest
previous work that it could be thought of indeed as a daring
but ever-engrossing rebirth of one of modern music's already
most fertile minds. With dramatic spoken narratives laid
atop cinematic soundscapes, interspersed between 11 Kirk
originals (with help from the late Rich Mullins on "He Reigns")
of profound lyrical substance, Kirk continues to speak
to millions of people of all walks and persuasions.
But with a title that clearly portends
evolution, and images of Kirk as a young boy on the packaging,
it's clear that there are some serious philosophical changes
going on in this "rebirth" as well.
"I can look over my life and career now and see both
seasons of success as well as struggles and pitfalls," says
Kirk, "and God has allowed it all. It's all done with
the purpose of the Lord drawing you closer to Him-getting
you closer to where He wants you to be. And it can be painful
sometimes until you reach the point where you can see it's
all been for a purpose, and that's a true moment of awakening
and rebirth.
"No artist can honestly say they don't care if their
work is promoted and taken to the people in an effective
way or not," he continues. "Of course I want my
label to employ all the resources they have-in the honorable
and Godly ways in which they always operate-to make this
album heard. The difference is that I have a sort of `been-there-done-that'
attitude now, but that's not cynical or arrogant. It's only
to say that I've been blessed with some very high highs,
some very low lows, as well as some in-betweens to go with
them. I see myself getting off the merry-go-round of worrying
about whether I can top myself, or striving for commercial
gain above all else. The rebirth concept and images of me
as a boy are very significant. That's youth. That's innocence.
That's the boy who loved the Lord and sang to Him purely
out of love before ANY other considerations came into the
picture. I'm not rejecting the realities of marketing and
business. I, personally-Kirk-am going back to that place
of purity that that little boy lived as a natural matter
of course."
Kirk has always been celebrated for
weaving seemingly disparate musical influences-R&B, modern rock, hip-hop, pop, jazz,
traditional gospel-into a seamless fabric, creating his own
singular style and sound that truly transcends any and all
boundaries of genre, race, denomination or societal background.
And while the consistency of his growth in broadening the
very definition of "gospel music" has never waned,
The Rebirth of Kirk Franklin reaches levels of self-realization
and brilliance surpassing all that has preceded it. And that
is saying… a lot.
A collection of back-to-back tours-de-force, featuring a
panoply of some of today's hottest gospel artists-including
Donnie McClurkin, Richard Smallwood, Crystal Lewis, Pastor
Shirley Caesar, Jaci Valesquez, and the late traditional
gospel great, Willie Neal Johnson and others, makes the act
of choosing highlights on the album almost superfluous. But
still, The Rebirth of Kirk Franklin does indeed harbor moments
that rise from tremendous to truly transcendent.
A powerful traditional/contemporary
choral arrangement on "Caught
Up" elicits a show-stopping performance from gospel
diva Pastor Shirley Caesar. "911" is a wrenching,
yet ultimately uplifting dialogue over a punchy bottom end
and soulful backing vocals, between Kirk and Bishop T.D.
Jakes-recently proclaimed in a Time magazine cover story
as "the Next Billy Graham"-in which Kirk dramatically
pours out fears of the post 9-11 attack on America, as well
as the perils and daily struggles of ordinary life, receiving
stirring comfort from Jakes, who, as Kirk's fellow Dallas,
Texas, neighbor, has indeed served as a mentor in his "little
brother's" life.
Another powerhouse original included
here in both a studio and live version, is Kirk's hymn/ballad
collaboration on "The
Blood Song" with guest slots on the live version from
Alvin Slaughter and gospel greats Crystal Lewis, Donnie McClurkin
and Jaci Velasquez on the studio version. Running a gamut
from the irresistible good-time funk of "Brighter Day" and
a Latin-flavored "He Reigns," which contains portions
of Rich Mullin's "Awesome God"-to the punchy gospel/R&B
of "Lookin'Out" and a bonus cut with DC Talk's
tobymac that carries a hard-rocking edge reminiscent of '90s
modern rock icons, Nirvana, Kirk hits home with a musical
range that is nothing short of dazzling.
Born and raised in Fort Worth, Texas, Kirk, as a child and
adolescent, was no stranger to both pain and the comfort
of the Lord. Never knowing his father, and abandoned in infancy
by his mother, he was raised by a devoted aunt. A strict,
church-going Baptist, she saw to it that her charge was well-versed
in the Christian faith from his earliest years. The youngster
not only thrived spiritually in the church environment, he
displayed early on prodigious musical gifts. Recognizing
Kirk's artistic anointing, his aunt collected and resold
aluminum cans to raise money for her nephew to take piano
lessons when he was only four.
The funding for that instruction was money well-spent, for
Franklin was a natural musician who could sight read and
play by ear with equal facility, and at the tender age of
11, was leading the Mt. Rose Baptist Church adult choir in
Fort Worth. Despite his strong background in the church,
Franklin turned rebellious in his teens, trading in the values
and morals on which he'd been weaned for a life of violence,
intimidation and larceny. It took the shooting death of a
close friend to jolt Kirk, then 15, into a realization of
the error of his ways, and back into the safe fold of the
church where he began composing songs and recording demo
tapes with a passion.
Nurtured on a steady diet of traditional
gospel music, Kirk had also kept an ear open to the secular
R&B, rock and
pop music of the early and mid-'80s, and he absorbed the
best of both musical worlds. Along with the power and passion
of innumerable classic gospel artists, he was impacted by
the sounds of an eclectic, far-reaching mix of R&B/funk
and rock icons, from Cameo, George Clinton and Rick James
to rockers U2, INXS and Depeche Mode, among others. Little
did he know at the time how mightily the Lord was preparing
to use him, and all his talents and influences, to accomplish
great things in His service.
In the early '90s he formed a 17-member
vocal ensemble of neighborhood friends and associates,
dubbed "The Family".
His life took a dramatic turn in 1992 when Vicki Mack-Lataillade,
President and CEO of the then-fledgling Gospo Centric Records,
listened to one of his tapes and, amazed by what she heard,
quickly signed him to a recording contract. Since then, a
decade of the greatest commercial successes and brilliant,
groundbreaking artistry and inventiveness ever seen and heard
in gospel music has followed.
"It's taken me these 10 years, and longer to fully
realize that keeping everything we do focused on the love
of God is what music, and life, is all about," Kirk
concludes. "And it's kind of ironic to be this many
years into the pilgrimage only to realize that's the way
it was at the start, still is, and always will be."
And that simple but profound realization
is the very heart of The Rebirth of Kirk Franklin. Though
it rides on a sharp cutting edge that gives new meaning
to "contemporary," this
landmark work is no crass "career adjustment" to
accommodate the fickle tastes of the masses that is the death
knell of so many acts that flash through the public eye for
only a few, fleeting moments. It is a man of the people,
a minister to the many, and a musician of the masses, coming
a long, full circle to a place where fads no longer figure
into the formula, and timeless truths stand steady and secure,
forever.
|