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Home: L : Lincoln
Brewster : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Vertical Music)
There are a lot of amazing things about
worship leader, songwriter and performer Lincoln Brewster – the story behind his
career, his acclaimed talent on guitar, and his heart for
worship. But perhaps most incredible of all is the fact that
he was willing to leave behind the potential for mainstream
fame and fortune to pursue Christ's calling on his life.
What leaves Lincoln himself most amazed is that God truly
does fulfill the desires of our hearts when we delight in
worshipping Him alone. His newest album, Amazed, is a culmination
of his long and winding road to complete abandonment – to
laying down all his dreams and seeing that God can do a much
more beautiful thing than we could ever imagine when we trust
it all to Him.
Lincoln was born on the cold tundra of Fairbanks, Alaska.
When he was only one year old, his mother, Cheryl, recognized
his ability to keep rhythm at one of her band practices.
In lieu of a babysitter, she had given him an old pair of
drumsticks to play with and soon noticed he was keeping time
with the music. Following a divorce, she moved the family
to a rustic cabin two miles off East End Road in Homer, Alaska
(just down the street from future pop star Jewel) and settled
in without the luxuries of running water or electricity.
Despite their limited funds, Cheryl was already beginning
to instill her own love of music in Lincoln's heart as she
sang her kids to sleep on snowy nights.
Mom introduced Lincoln to the mandolin
at age five, and in no time he became a "professional," playing
alongside her for tourists. "I'd play and she'd sing," Lincoln
remembers, "and for the grand finale, I'd play the mandolin
behind my head!" In his first headline appearance, the
seven-year-old sat on a stool by himself in the harbor's
local general store and offered songs to the fishermen and
tourists for prices ranging from $0.25 for a short song,
up to "$1.00 for a long song behind my head. I remember
making $29.00 in one day," he grins. "I can't imagine
going into a town now and seeing that – I'd probably
die laughing. But if I did, I'd have to go for the full $1.00!"
When he was nine, Cheryl brought home
an electric guitar amp. Lincoln plugged it in, played his
first chord, and it was over. "I was ruined forever," he admits. After
that he grabbed up any album he could get his hands on and
picked out the songs himself, particularly those of his uncontested
early favorites, Roger Fischer of Heart and Eddie Van Halen.
Touring bar bands noticed his talent as well – and
often offered a free lesson and a chance to join them on
stage for a song or two.
Eventually, mom, siblings and stepfather
moved down the coast to sunny California. "I hated it," Lincoln
admits of his initial arrival in Modesto, California. At
fifteen, right in the middle of school, the transition was
a tough one for Lincoln, but God had an important purpose
in the move. During his junior year, he met a sweet and very
attractive young lady, who would not only later become his
wife, but who, together with her family, introduced him at
age nineteen to his Savior. Lincoln also began making the
contacts that would solidify the direction of his musical
career for the next several years.
By this time, Lincoln knew in his heart
that he wanted to pursue music full time. Once again in
concert with Mom, he played for a local Top 40 band for
a while, but dreamed of writing and recording his own music
and began working on some instrumental demos of his own.
Through a long and convoluted series of friends who knew
friends, Lincoln found himself with an address on a slip
of paper that led him to the office door of the vice president
of A&R for Columbia Records,
and a return phone call two months later from none other
than former Journey lead singer, Steve Perry, who heard Lincoln's
demo and hired him shortly after.
For the next three and a half years,
Lincoln recorded with Perry, and then toured the For the
Love of Strange Medicine project. His time with Perry introduced
Lincoln to the industry and solidified him as one of its
top new guitar talents. Yet while he was enjoying his newfound
acclaim, he was also growing into a man of deep and devoted
faith in Christ, and he began to wonder if God had more
for him. "I remember
being on stage in Cincinnati one night," he recalls. "I
was wrapping up my guitar solo at the front of the stage,
and people were grabbing my legs and everything – it
was like they were worshipping all of us on stage. I looked
up and said, 'Lord, I'm sorry – you're not getting
any glory for the gifts you've given me, and a lot of these
people are hurting, and we're not giving them anything that's
going to make a lasting change in their lives.' It just didn't
have a whole lot of purpose."
That realization led Lincoln to come off the road and settle
down with his new wife Laura in Modesto and spend several
months at his church, Calvary Temple. During this time, he
sorted through the past three years, plugged into his local
fellowship and allowed Christ to give him a new sense of
direction for the future. Lincoln's reputation followed him,
though, and he soon found himself faced with several impressive
tour offers from other big names in the music industry, including
some of the bands that had influenced him early on. Also
among his opportunities was the offer of a position at Calvary
as staff sound tech and youth worship leader. In what seemed
like a career-ending decision to his connections in the industry,
Lincoln chose to do what he felt Christ was calling him to,
and stayed at the church.
At times, his resolution wavered as
he realized the magnitude of what he had given up. "I cried every day for the
first month, or at least it felt like it," Lincoln admits. "It
was such a reality check for me that a year before, I had
been on tour making tons of money and being waited on hand
and foot, and here I was doing sound for weddings and stuff." After
a time of hard questioning, Lincoln reached a place where
he simply gave up his dreams to the Lord. "God told
me to quit writing songs, and just fix the P.A. systems at
church. When you delight yourself in the Lord, He'll give
you the desires of your heart, and that's translated that
He'll actually put them in there." God totally changed
Lincoln's heart, and gave him a passion for local ministry
that he still carries with him today as an artist in residence
at the church he and Laura now attend, Bayside Church in
Granite Bay, California.
"It got to the point where I wanted to sell all my
gear – I just had a passion for the sound at that church!" Lincoln
says. "So I fixed the P.A.s, and after a short while,
God released me to begin writing again. From that point forward,
my writing seemed to flow more easily than ever before."
In the years that followed, God led the Brewsters to help
start a church in Nashville, where Lincoln saw another old
dream come true, though one he was no longer actively pursuing.
Vertical Music signed Lincoln to a recording contract on
the Vertical label, and with the release of his first two
records, he once again found himself touring with an icon,
this time with Christian music legend Michael W. Smith. He
also had the chance to work with friend and label mate Darrell
Evans on Evans' Freedom album, and to tour with Mark Schultz,
and later with Third Day for their landmark Offerings tour.
Following his 1999 self-titled debut,
Lincoln returned with his sophomore project Live To Worship,
an album produced by Jeff Quimby and co-produced by Lincoln.
The album, a rock infused worship album, enjoyed AC radio
success with the singles "Take Me Higher" and "Power of Your
Love." Lincoln is set to release his third project,
Amazed, in the summer of 2002.
Lincoln, Laura and their new baby boy, Levi, make their
home in Sacramento, California where Lincoln serves as the
acting worship leader and artist-in-residence at Bayside
Community Church.
Lincoln's aptly-titled latest project,
Amazed, brings together the many steps God has brought
him through to fulfill the desires of his heart, with songs
from across his musical history. There are songs from his
time as youth leader at Calvary, a favorite from Hillsong
Music Australia, and a cover of the Delirious song, "What a Friend." All
ten songs are tied together by one consuming purpose – worship.
"I wanted this album to reflect
the true heart of the worshipper and be a worship tool
for churches. I really focused on writing simple but powerful
songs. All of the songs were written on acoustic guitar,
very basic, so that people at a church who don't have musicians
or a lot of production can still use them in a worship
setting. It's important to remember that a poignant lyric
and simple melody is still what hits people no matter what."
Amazed also gave Lincoln a chance to
turn the reins over to award-winning producers Monroe Jones
and Scott Williamson, a change for Lincoln, who has shared
co-production credits on all of his earlier efforts. Another
new influence for Lincoln on the album is fatherhood – he and Laura welcomed
their first child, Levi, into the world last year. Levi inspired
one of Lincoln's own favorites on the record, "All I
Really Want," a song that also epitomizes the process
he had to go through by entrusting the production of his
music entirely to someone else.
"Stepping back and letting go, trusting the process
to someone else, was really a good thing for me," Lincoln
shares. "I felt like God was calling me to do that – He
was saying 'You need to let go, be a Dad, a good husband,
and trust this process to these guys who know what they're
doing. The good part is that I'm very happy with the outcome!"
Perhaps in that sense too, Amazed sums
up Lincoln's entire musical journey to this point – a journey of learning
to trust his dreams to God's leadership, and of seeing the
truly amazing result when God plants His own desires in our
hearts: He leads us to worship.
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