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Home: M : Mark
Schultz : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Warner Bros.Records)
Although the communication form of choice
during ancient times—Jesus himself greatly favored it when he taught
the multitudes—the conventions, inventions, and formulas
of the modern age unceremoniously dethroned storytelling
as the preferred vehicle for conveying truth.
Fortunately, Mark Schultz knows better.
Of course the title of his highly anticipated
third album, Stories and Songs, says something about Schultz’s penchant
for putting memorable parables to music. But as he’s
proven with his string of incandescent, chart-topping tunes
from his first two releases (Mark Schultz, 2000; Song Cinema,
2001), there’s a great deal more churning below and
beyond his lyrics and melodies than any album title could
possibly convey.
“For my first two records, all my songs were coming
from my experiences—and I was either recording or touring,” Schultz,
32, notes. “But for this record, I got to spend a lot
of time back home reconnecting with people who are important
to me. This album’s all about the depth of relationships.”
With a year off under his belt that recharged his spiritual
batteries, Schultz went for broke, meticulously crafting
the 10 new tunes on Stories and Songs with layer upon layer
of rich complexity.
Gut-wrenching trials. Incredible triumphs. At once personal
and universal themes. Humor and insight. Miracles. Then after
hitting it off famously with legendary producer Brown Bannister,
Schultz spent countless hours in the studio perfecting every
verse and chorus, every guitar lick and string arrangement,
every vocal stack, jot, and jam, until each track was filled
with the kind of verve and depth that eclipses everything
Schultz has heretofore created.
Schultz points to a pair of seminal
books he dog eared and highlighted to death—Wild at Heart (John Eldredge)
and The Silence of Adam (Don Hudson)—as prime-moving
forces in his life…and the new record. Their messages—written
specifically to men in the church—profoundly changed
Schultz’s self-perception, as well as the way he feels
God perceives him.
“I always used to want validation from other people,
to make other people like me,” Schultz reveals, “but
one of the big differences this year is that I finally learned
to accept God’s validation. You ride a roller coaster
otherwise, and it’s tiring to keep the plates spinning
all the time.” (This is the anchor theme to “It’s
Been a Long Time,” a new Beatlesque ballad that Schultz
fills with soaring harmonies and pulsating, melodic strings.)
Then there’s the lesson from Wild at Heart and The
Silence of Adam that hit him perhaps the hardest: “So
many men place work before time with their wives and families,” Schultz
explains. “And it’s because they know they can
win at work. But when they’re faced with providing
emotional needs for their wives and kids, that’s terrifying!” This
revelation not only inspired a new song (a devastating tearjerker
called “Do You Even Know Me Anymore,” written
in the vein of “Cats in the Cradle”), it also
nudged Schultz to plan on using his concert venues as preshow
prayer chapels where men can be ministered to.
After periods of fasting—another new habit Schultz
picked up during his season of internal transition—he
became awakened to people around him who’d been deeply
wounded and needed healing. People who “needed their
hearts back,” he notes.
“I was meeting with a friend of mine—a really
successful guy who appears to have it all together. But as
we talked, I learned that a part of him is still a 14-year-old
boy whose father said he wouldn’t amount to anything.
He told me, ‘I’m still waiting for my kids to
turn out horrible and for my wife to leave me and for my
business to fail.’ When I assured him that he’s
a man of God, he was weeping and saying, ‘Please keep
telling me that.’ I really want to help people discover
where those wounds are so they can heal.” That conversation
helped spawn the soaring, sunny “You are a Child of
Mine,” a musical manifestation of God’s love
penetrating the thick, dark cloud that often find surrounds
us and pulling us back into his light.
That’s how it went during Schultz’s year sabbathing—conversation
after conversation, page after page, prayer after prayer.
And just about every day Schultz would retreat to a music
room he fondly calls “The Chapel” at the First
Presbyterian Church in Nashville and write and compose for
hours on end. (Believe it or not, Schultz writes songs only
at The Chapel—he won’t even attempt tunesmithing
at home. “All my songs were born in that room at the
church,” he reveals. “For me, it’s like
a little well. I just dump my bucket in there and usually
come up with something.”)
Two wildly different tunes from Stories
and Songs—“Letters
from War” and “Running Just to Catch Myself”—are
powerful, back-to-back examples of the top-shelf insight
and creativity Schultz seems to gain in that room.
“Letters from War,” on one hand, is an ebbing
and flowing musical poem that recreates the powerful letters
Schultz was reading one day, written to his great grandmother
from her son who, at the time, was overseas serving during
World War II. The drama in Schultz’s real-life lyrics
is far more poignant than in most war movies.
You don’t get much of a chance to reflect before Schultz
grabs the bull by the horns and lays out “Running Just
to Catch Myself,” a crazy, caffeinated tune that humorously
reflects on the pitfalls of 21st century living. But despite
its everything-but-the-kitchen-sink musical approach—Freddie
Mercury himself may have written it as a follow-up to “Bohemian
Rhapsody”—the zany verses and choruses hold deep
meaning that’ll force listeners to study the song for
a spell.
In the end, Stories and Songs represents
who Schultz is at the core. Fun. Real. Full of depth. And,
most of all they invite us to step out of own stories where
we are the focus and into God’s larger story, where
we can discover what we will do with the time that is left.
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