Bethel Music “Discover Bethel Music” Album Review
There are many albums out there that are choked with worship tunes. What is underserved is this: few are the records that venture to create worship
moments; moments where we can bare our naked souls before God in sheer honesty
and in earnest contrition. Bethel Music
serves such a lacuna with their brand of worship. When this church team leads
us in worship, it is a challenge for us to keep our hands to our side; it takes
extreme restraint not to sing along; and yet it certainly doesn’t take much of
an effort to enter into the holiest moments of worship. Bethel Music is the worship ministry of
Bethel Church in Redding, California. Over
the last four or five years, It has grown exponentially from being a local church
ministry into a worldwide worship phenomenon. Their song “Love Came Down” was featured on
American Idol on their “Songs I Wish I’d Written Night,” while “One Thing
Remains” was nominated at last year’s Dove Awards for “Song of the Year” and “Praise
and Worship Song of the Year.” Their
latest triumph is that their single "Chasing You" and its ensuing album “Tides” topped both the US iTunes
Inspirational Singles and Album Charts last year respectively.
“Discover Bethel Music” is the church worship team’s first compilation
record. As the titular suggests this is introductory
foretaste into the first fruits of the church’s music for those who are
uninitiated. Though there are no new songs, these 16 tracks are lifted from
half a dozen of their albums going back to as early as 2008’s “Where You Go I
Go: Live in Bethel Church in Redding, CA” to last year’s “Tides.” These 16 songs also present to us a cross
section of the best songs led and co-written by the church’s various worship
leaders including worship pastors Brian and Jenn Johnson, Jeremy Riddle,
Steffany Frizell Gretzinger, Amanda Cook, Matt Stinton and William Matthews. Even
right at their burgeoning stages as a worship team, they have already exuded finesse
for worship that is unhurried, contemplative and challenging. Setting the ball rolling in terms of this CD
and their career of worship staples is “Where You Go I Go.” In our western culture where we are prized independence
and self-sufficiency, the message of dependence on God of “Where You Go I Go”
is so counter-cultural, yet it is so Biblically true and compelling.
Also lifted from their “Where You Go I Go: Live in Bethel Church in
Redding, CA” is the Jenn Johnson’s “O Taste and See.” With a pounding 80s soundings beat and a driving
melody, Jenn Johnson incarnates each and every note of “O Taste and See” with
her entire being. Her passion is so
intense that when she sings about savoring Jesus, she sings as if she would
actually die of starvation if Jesus were out of her gasp. This, my friends, is what true worship sounds
like. Jenn Johnson shows no sign of
showing any restrain on last year’s anthemic ballad “For the Cross.” Though her
hubby Brian sings the opening verse but when it is Jenn’s turn to shine in the
chorus, she rips the song apart with such passionate love for our Savior’s finished
work on the tree. Though Jenn Johnson is
the best among the female leads, Amanda Cook doesn’t trail too far behind with
her lighter Brooke Frazier-esque vocals on the contemplative “I Will Exalt.” Though the intro is a little on a tedious
side, Steffany Frizell Gretzinger’s breathy take of “Closer” is the show stealer
from their 2012’s “For the Sake of the World.”
To offset the often high energy, bass heavy and glossily produced
ballads, Brian Johnson offers an almost unplugged acoustic take of one of the
best songs on Christ’s incarnation “Love Came Down.” One of Bethel Music’s most
recognizable cuts (which was also recently recorded by Phil Wickham) is the Jeremy
Riddle hook-laden “This is Amazing Grace.”
And not to be missed also is their career defining “Hope’s Anthem” (here
led by William Matthews) which has already been in heavy rotation across many
churches of late. If there’s any
criticism about Bethel Music, it would be that one would like to see more interaction
between the various worship leaders; rather than each leader taking charge of
various songs, one would like to see more integration among the team. Nevertheless, in a nutshell “Discover Bethel
Music” ensembles many of the church group’s finest and most popular compositions
on one disc. If you have never really own a Bethel Music CD, this is a great
start to find out what the fuss is all about.
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