|
Home: L : Lisa
Bevill : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Lisa Bevill )
"Do you know what it is like to really feel God loving
you?" Lisa Bevill whispers to the ceiling. As she redirects
her gaze to you, it is clear this is not a rhetorical question.
She is talking about LISA BEVILL, her long-awaited, testimonial
album. "There is a sense of urgency burning throughout
the album, begging people to wake up and ask themselves that
question."
Produced by long time friend Cliff
Downs (Sierra, Pam Thum), LISA BEVILL is Lisa's most personal
album to date, running the gambit from introspective ballads
to aggressive, in-your-face, apocalyptic rockers. "The record is self-titled because
it really represents who I am," she explains. "Everything
I feel is in this record. There was such a freedom to sing
like I have never sung before. I wrote six of the eleven
songs and even played the piano on this record. It will be
interesting to see how people relate to it because it's a
little different from past records."
With 3 other projects under her belt,
Lisa is no stranger to making music that works. She holds
many number one hits including "Place in the Sun," "Turn and Love," and "Only
a Savior" from these previous recordings, and this new
project is predicted to hold it's share of chart toppers
as well.
Lisa's eagerly-anticipated fourth solo
project was a long time coming. After five years of constant
touring she found herself physically worn and emotionally
drained. It all came to a head on Mother's Day during her
final tour. "I
called home to talk to my kids, and listened in helpless
desperation as my husband recounted the events of the day.
Our three year-old son, Trevor, had been missing for over
an hour. He had followed a puppy, fallen into a creek and
was soaking wet and terrified, when a neighbor found him
and brought him home. Three thousand miles away in a lonely
hotel room, I came to the realization that I needed to re-prioritize
my life."
With her last recording contract at
an end, Lisa wasn't sure she would ever record again. "I remember looking
out my window one day, praying and asking God, 'was that
it?' My dream since I was twelve years old was to sing and
now it seemed as if it were over. And I felt the Lord say
to me, 'No, I just haven't heard your best yet. Now clear
your calendar, go home, and give Me two years.'" Two
years turns out to be a very important number.
Lisa finished her remaining commitments, and then shed her
diva image like a worn out housecoat. She continued doing
session work, lending her passionate, mellifluous vocals
to projects by such superstars as Garth Brooks, Michael Bolton,
Faith Hill, Amy Grant, and Michael W. Smith.
And she started cleaning house.
"I felt the Lord telling me to clean my house," she
remembers. "I went through every drawer, every closet,
everything. I really looked at my house, and it was very
cluttered." Lisa points to herself, "And this house
was really cluttered, too. While I cleaned the physical house,
there was a lot of spiritual cleaning that happened as well."
In the midst of this two-year soul
cleansing, Lisa experienced a spiritual awakening. "I was missing something," she
confesses. "I knew there had to be more of the Lord
and I was hungry for it. I'd heard that some of the youth
from Brownsville Assembly of God from Pensacola, FL were
coming to speak at a local church in Nashville. And I was
hungry to hear about the revival happening there and wondering
what it was all about. Before the service even started I
fell apart in the pews while talking and praying with a dear
friend." She recalls the night when the Holy Spirit
fell on her like never before. "I got a taste of something
I had never tasted before and felt the deep, abiding presence
of God. It gave me strength to walk through that desert season."
Lisa continued to press into this newfound
intimacy with God, pondering the mysteries He was showing
her in her spirit. Exactly two years later, she felt the
release to begin writing again. She penned "No Turning Back," a song about
faithful endurance that the Lord had given her during this
process. She wrote "How Strong He Is" for a friend
who was going through difficult times in his marriage. And
then she wrote the uncharacteristically aggressive, "Something
Worth Dying For."
In keeping with her tradition of dedicating
a song from each album to the young ladies from her girls'
camp, Lisa wrote "Life Is A Mystery," as a challenge and an
encouragement for girls to slow down and enjoy their youth. "Come
Back To Me" is a song she thought she was writing for
her runaway niece. "My niece had run away from home
for the 4th time, and no one knew where she was. To me, this
song is the tender voice of the Lord saying, 'Please come
back to me so I can sing over you, and bless you.' But when
I sang it the first time, I heard the Lord say, 'Despite
who you think this is about, I wrote it about you.'
"Ride," one of the project's
most powerful songs, almost didn't make it onto the album.
Ten songs had been selected and recorded, and both the
time and money for the album were already spent. But after
much prayer and with a strong sense of confirmation, Lisa
approached her producer, Cliff Downs, with the song anyway.
"I was at an early morning prayer gathering in October
1997," she recalls. "It got really intense, really
fast. The Holy Spirit fell on the room, and it got incredibly
quiet. I felt the Lord say to me, 'Do you hear the horses
running? Do you hear their hoofbeats on the plains of the
earth?' And I saw a vivid picture of a wide-open plain. On
my left was a tall wheat field, ready to be cut, and on my
right was a corral, filled with horses. And far off on the
crest of a hill was Jesus - waiting, looking at the wheat,
and back at the horses. Just waiting. And I saw the hand
of the Lord reach down and take the pin out of the lock on
the corral. The gate opened and the horses took off running."
"I went home, wrote down the vision, dated it, and
promptly forgot about it," Lisa continues. "In
October of 1999, while looking out my window at the leaves
coming down, a melody began to run through my head, and I
felt the Lord say, 'The horses are running. Go write the
song to the melody I just gave you.' It was the exact same
week, two years later. I knew we didn't have the time or
the money to put this song on the record, but I just prayed
over it and presented it to Cliff anyway. After hearing it
he pulled out a poster print of white horses running with
their riders, following Jesus over the plains of the earth.
And at the bottom of the print was the scripture, Revelation
19:11-14. I later found out the artist, Vera Foster, goes
to our church. She is 70 years old and has Alzheimer's disease.
She painted that picture from her perspective on that day
when she'll ride her horse home with Jesus." Downs not
only agreed to do the song, he wanted Lisa to play the piano
on it, something she had never done on a record.
"I had asked the Lord for peace and constant confirmation
on the whole recording process or else I wasn't going to
move without Him," Lisa says. "And He has given
that, continually. It is such a precious thing. I am the
happiest I have ever been. I know and feel for the first
time, that God really loves me. I actually feel Him loving
me. And for the first time in my life, I feel truly alive."
|