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Todd Agnew Pt II
I asked Todd Agnew what I
thought was an easy question, "Why did you decided you wanted to do a Christmas
album at this time in your career?"
I wasn't prepared for his
answer, "The weird thing is, I didn't."
As Agnew and I both break
into laughter he explaind, "A Christmas album (Do You See What I See) was
not on the list of my career to do things. It wasn't something that I ever
really wanted to do. Last October I was studying the story of the wisemen
and felt God was challenging me by saying, 'Are you willing to prepare
like they did to encounter Christ at Christmas?' They (the wisemen) studied
really hard. They journeyed and brought special gifts."
"It was like He was saying,
'You shop at the last minute, and run up to see your family and say oh
and Jesus thank you for coming. That is your encounter at Christmas.' I
(thought) we prepare every other side but we don't take a lot of time to
prepare spiritually for Christmas. We work much more on our Christmas music
at church then we do on preparing our hearts. That was an indictment on
me so I told the Lord I was going to spend every morning from October to
Christmas studying the Christmas story," said Agnew.
He continued, "I am the
church kid. I know the Christmas story. When I was little I had to memorize
the story in Luke chapter two and recite it before I could have my presents
on Christmas morning. I was thinking, Lord I am going to do this but you
are going to have to do something here because I have read this thing thousands
of times."
When you listen to the tremendous
vocal and instrumental arrangements that Agnew put together for his album
Do You See What I See you will agree that God more than answered his prayer.
The singer/songwriter has created a wonderful musical worthy of a King.
There are breathless vocal performances by Joy Whitlock, Shelley Jennings
and Christy Nockels. There are bold new interpretations by Mike Weaver,
Michael O'Brien and Anthony Evans. Agnew's own deep vocals often provide
the earthiness required to portray the magi and innkeeper.
Agnew said, "This story
came to life like the Bible hasn't for me yet. This just exploded off the
page. I started realizing that these are real people, encountering a real
God. It's not a little three point sermon, it's messy. When God jumps into
the mix a lot of times it gets messier but it is beautiful in the end.
That was the idea for the record."
From October of 2005 until
June of 2006 the songwriter committed himself to studying all that he could
find pertaining to the coming of the messiah and the nativity. What emerged
from that intensive study is the record Do You See What I See. We should
tell you at this juncture that it is not by accident that the album title
sounds a lot like the song Do You Hear What I Hear? In fact it is by mistake!
Just as this scribe often has trouble remembering song titles, Agnew mistook
the name of the traditional tune as Do You See What I See? Some might call
it a mistake but when you read how the music evolved you may be more apt
to talk about Gods providence.
"We always look at Christmas
from 2000 years later. We know the whole story and we put a little polish
and varnish on the nativity scene. That's not how it happened. Mary had
eight sentences from an angel and was supposed to be the mother of God.
Joseph had his girl come and tell him that she was pregnant with someone
else's kid. His heart was broken. The shepherds were probably cussing out
in the field and running for cover as the angels jumped into the sky. It's
this crazy time and I think that is what it is probably like for most of
us when God engages our lives," he said.
Agnew said, "This really
started coming to life for me and I wanted to just try and take my shot
at telling the story as it happened to real people not as if it was this
polished thing with little perfect people."
Agnew tried to get inside
the mind of Joseph and said if it was him, "I would be mad at God. '(I
would say) You could have sent the angel a week earlier and all of this
would have been avoided. You broke my heart and you did it on purpose.
You aren't explaining yourself.' When you put it into perspective how many
times have we questioned God about things in much the same manner?
Then Agnew stated something
we all know to be true of Joseph before asking a monumental question. "He
is supposed to be the (earthly) father of the son of God. How do you do
that? There are no James Dobson books on how to raise the Messiah," said
Agnew.
"Joseph started breaking
my heart and song after song started pouring out. Eventually this album
came out of it," he said.
Last summer when Todd Agnew
first walked into the studio to record Do You See What I See he was greeted
by Christmas lights strung everywhere and a big Christmas tree. "My label
and management are just amazing," he said.
Agnew made the distinction
that he didn't set out to record a Christmas record but he was creating
an album about the Christmas story. To do so he enlisted the help of some
very special friends. He said, "It was really exciting to have some of
my dear friends and people who I really expect as ministers to be a part
of the record."
One of those friends is
Mike Weaver from Big Daddy Weave who portrays Simeon through the song "He
Is Called Jesus." "The story of Simeon is really special to me. A lot of
times those stories are the ones that we have a difficult time telling.
I was really wrestling with this. While I was on tour with Big Daddy Weave
Mike and I would just sit on the bus and talk about Simeon. Finally I got
the song done and it was really natural to say, 'Hey Weaver I want you
to be a part of this.' It is a powerful story," said Agnew.
Agnew said he cried the
first time he listened to the mix of Christy Nockels singing the "Magnificat"
as Mary. "Christy and Nathan (her husband) have always had this powerful
ministry with Watermark and been great worship leaders," he said.
Agnew raved about the contributions
of Anthony Evans backed by a gospel choir from Memphis who provided the
angelic praises. "I love music like that ("Glory To God") It was really
fun to write a track like that and then to watch Anthony bring it to life,"
he said.
Shelley Jennings took Elizabeth's
lullaby "Sleep Well" and in Agnew's words, "It just became this beautiful,
beautiful song which is what I had hoped for. Shelley just knocked that
out."
Joy Whitlock gave Agnew
everything he was looking for and more on the song "No Room." She is a
new artist who will be introducing her own CD in 2007. Agnew said of the
Memphian, "It ("No Room" gives everybody a taste of what she can do."
Agnew said that working
on the CD transformed his life much more than he expected it would. "It
became much more personal after a song was done. When you are a Christian
musician or a modern American Christian we can get so callous to God. We
talk about him all the time and all of the stories are the same. I have
been a Christian for a long time and this has been like a breath of fresh
air, a taste of sweet fresh water for me. To have something that I thought
about very intimately explode into life for me has been really powerful
and encouraging. God still does that. He is not just waiting for your one
youth camp moment when you walk down an aisle. He still plans to engage
in these powerful ways. Doing this study and having God bring it to life
for me (is a reminder) that God has that same plan for the rest of the
Bible. I am really looking forward to what he is going to do in the rest
of my life whether or not it turns into any songs.
By Joe Montague, exclusive
rights reserved
Joe Montague is an internationally
published journalist / photographer. His ministry is dedicated to the memory
of his late son Kent David Montague who went to heaven at the age of 18.
All copyright and distribution rights remain the property of Joe Montague.
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