Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Thoughts About the “Yesterday” Trailer...


Sometimes a trailer permeates your psyche and stay with you long after you watch it. 

The first trailer for the upcoming movie “Yesterday” is one of those trailers for me. 

The movie doesn’t drop in theaters until June 28, but it’s already on my “must-see” list for 2019.   


The film is directed by Danny Boyle (“Slumdog Millionaire,” “Steve Jobs”) and written by Richard Curtis (“Four Weddings and a Funeral”). 

The story follows Jack Malik (Himesh Patel), a struggling musician who is hit by a bus during a global blackout. 

When he wakes up from the injury, he discovers he is the only person in the world who remembers the Beatles (while playing the song “Yesterday” at a “welcome home” party). It’s as if the band never existed in Malik’s new reality. 


The struggling musician goes from obscurity to stardom when he plays — and eventually records — the greatest hits from the Beatles catalog as his own original work. 


The entire set of events appears to create an existential crisis in Jack — something akin to the existential crisis faced by Phil Connors in familiar/unfamiliar surroundings in 1993’s “Groundhog Day.” 

There is little doubt the movie will be schmaltzy and sweet. We need more of that at the box office. 


The lovely Lily James (“Baby Driver”) plays Ellie, Malik’s down-to-earth gal pal. She’s wearing a denim dress in the trailer, so it’s assured that the two will end up together at the end of the movie. 

The entire vibe of the trailer is terrific. Check it out:



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Thursday, November 29, 2018

Steven Curtis Chapman Talks About Life and Faith in his “SCC SOLO” Tour


Bridget and I first saw Steven Curtis Chapman in concert at Omaha’s Orpheum Theatre in 1992 for “The Great Adventure” Tour. 

Through the years, Chapman’s music has been a staple in our rotation. 


It’s interesting how music brings to mind peculiar memories. 

I remember wearing out a cassette of “Heaven in the Real World” on a Walkman while I painted houses in the summer of 1994. Whenever I listen to that album, I’m transported back to hot, sunny afternoons climbing ladders and crawling behind shrubs in an effort to sling paint in hard-to-reach places. 

That spirit is imbued in Steven Curtis Chapman’s SCC SOLO Tour — where the artist shared songs and “real life conversation” with his fans. 



Bridget and I had the opportunity to attend the show at Omaha’s Christ Community Church on Nov. 14. 

Compared to the four previous Steven Curtis Chapman concerts we attended, this show was more of an autobiographical journey for the artist. 

Through songs, pictures, stories, and video clips, Chapman took attendees through his life — talking about his enduring faith in God and how it has influenced his walk. 



He published a biography last year called “Between Heaven and the Real World: My Story.” Bridget bought a copy of the book at the concert (in a bundle with an exclusive CD from the concert — I’ll have a review of that in a future blog post). 

Chapman and his wife Mary Beth have adopted three children from China. He talked about that experience during the concert, and his charity “Show Hope” — which works to nurture adoption around the world.

Bridget opted for the tickets that allowed us early access to the church sanctuary so we could meet Steven. It was really fun — after all these years — to have the opportunity to meet one of our favorite artists. 



When I mentioned our first time seeing him was at a concert in 1992, Chapman exclaimed, “You must have been ‘younguns’!”



Bridget and I featured two songs by Chapman — “Go There With You” and “I Will Be Here” — in our wedding back in 2004. 

Chapman’s musical stylings combine pop anthems and folksy ballads. The Paducah, Kentucky-native definitely has a southern flavor in his music — featuring acoustic guitar, bluegrass licks, and scripture-based lyrics. 



Whether you’ve heard one of his songs 100 times — or are hearing it for the very first time — the tunes feel friendly and comfortable, like a well-worn pair of shoes. 

Chapman's setlist was heavy on classics in his catalog like "For the Sake of the Call," "Dive," "Live Out Loud" and "No Better Place." 

He also took requests during the show. God bless the woman who requested "Dancing With The Dinosaur" — a song of Steven's I hadn't heard live since his 1994 tour. 

I’ve talked on this blog before about my love of Christian music, and how it was one of the interests Bridget and I bonded over when we started dating in high school. 



The music dives into life’s truths. As Chapman croons in his song “More to This Life”: “Today I watched in silence as people passed me by / And I strained to see if there was something hidden in their eyes / but they all looked back at me as if to say / life just goes on”...

Chapman illustrates the benefit of living a purpose-driven life. He also shows the journey is rarely perfect and tragedy can befall even the most stout of heart. 

We had a nice time at the Nov. 14 concert. It wasn’t the first we’ve heard words of wisdom from Steven Curtis Chapman. I’m sure our paths will cross again...




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Sunday, July 29, 2018

32 Years Later, Christian Metal Band Stryper's Album Calls On Me


Sometimes an album finds you at the right time in your life... even if it takes 32 years...

When I was in junior high school, “hair metal” bands were in the midst of their musical heyday. The music was big, bombastic, and — in some cases — controversial. 

I grew up listening to Christian music. My brother Jay worked many years for a national Christian bookstore chain (Zondervan). During that time, he was able to procure albums, cassettes, and compact discs from a variety of artists. He also supplied me with promotional materials including standees, posters, prints of album artwork, and t-shirts. 

I remember one particular instance when he sent me a mix tape he had made of various Christian artists. One of the songs included on that mix was “Calling On You” by Stryper. 

I soon figured out that many of the kids at my junior high school — who seemed to have endless wardrobes of Iron Maiden and Motley Crue t-shirts — liked Stryper. Apparently, the band’s Christian faith wasn’t a “deal breaker” for my metal-loving classmates. 

At the time, I longed for a Stryper t-shirt to wear around school. More importantly, I wanted the band’s 1986 multi-platinum album “To Hell With The Devil.” 

I never could exactly put my finger on why, but my mom wouldn’t get me the album. It wasn’t that she was in any way strict about these things. 

I loved seeing Stryper’s music videos on MTV during that time (they were a fixture on the channel's daily call-in show countdown) — “Calling On You” being a particular favorite: 


Like many metal bands of that era, the sound sometimes tended more towards arena rock and pop — wrapped up in big hair, mascara, and spandex.

I abandoned my crusade to get the “To Hell With The Devil” album at some point during my eighth grade year. 

I still loved the band. In 1988, I purchased the band's fourth studio album, “In God We Trust,” and it has continued to get rotation in my personal music lineup ever since. 


By the early 90s, Stryper had broken up. Today they are back together — as strong as ever.

Nearly 32 years has passed since the release of the “To Hell With The Devil” album. Despite purchasing countless albums in the intervening years, I never added “To Hell With The Devil” to my collection. 

The other day I found a Stryper concert video on Amazon Prime Video. I remembered loving Stryper’s music. I started watching the concert and was taken back to 1986.

I don’t know if the guitar-laden chords triggered a long-dormant memory in my mind, or if it was divine intervention. In that moment I thought, “I’ve never actually listened to the whole ‘To Hell With The Devil’ album...”

So I opened up the YouTube app on my Apple TV (the box is hooked up to our Vizio TV, with the sound pumping through a JVC receiver I’ve had since 1993, and four Yamaha speakers), found the official Stryper channel, and pulled up the “To Hell With The Devil” playlist (which has all the tracks neatly segmented): 


Sometimes long-gestating "likes" from your youth don’t always live up to expectations in the intervening years. 

But as the meaty chords of the title track pounded out over the speakers, I realized I’d been missing something special the past 32 years.

“To Hell With The Devil” is a terrific rock album. The 11 tracks illustrate why Stryper became a popular act in the 1980s — and why they continue to endure to this day. 

One particular highlight is “Sing-Along Song” (track 7) — a pulsing anthem that is brilliant in its simplicity:


Overall, the entire album benefits from the fact that it doesn’t feel “over produced” like the band’s follow-up album, “In God We Trust” (which is still a favorite of mine).

After listening to the entire “To Hell With The Devil” playlist on YouTube, I asked my wife if I could order the album. This time, I wasn’t denied... 

There have been a number of discouraging things going on in my life recently. Listening to the songs on “To Hell With The Devil” took my mind off those irritations, and helped me escape to a simpler time when the music was big, and the hair even bigger. 

In the liner notes, each band member has a Bible verse next to his respective photo. One of those scriptures — 2 Timothy 4:7-8 — includes the following:

“I have fought a good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness...” 

Sometimes words of inspiration can come from the oddest places. 

After spending the week becoming reacquainted with the band Stryper, I felt like I finally had the answer to why my mom didn’t purchased the “To Hell With The Devil” album for me in 1986. 

I wasn’t meant to experience it then. I was meant to experience it at a time, 32 years later, when I needed to hear those words the most...