Lifesong
Lifesong is the second studio album by American Christian rock band Casting Crowns, released on August 30, 2005 by Beach Street Records and Reunion Records. Produced by Mark A. Miller, Lifesong was the follow-up to the band's self-titled debut album. Although the unexpected success of the first album led to tremendous demand for new music from Casting Crowns, lead vocalist Mark Hall was advised by Steven Curtis Chapman (a co-producer of the debut album) and Mac Powell not to worry about commercial expectations. Lifesong, which has a pop rock and adult contemporary sound, focuses on challenging believers and indicting piousness and hypocrisy in the Christian church. Worship themes are also prominent in the album.
This article is about the album. For the song from the album, see Lifesong (song).Lifesong
August 30, 2005
Zoo Studio, Franklin, Tennessee; Lifesong Studio, McDonough, Georgia; Little Big Studio, Nashville, Tennessee
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Lifesong was received positively by music critics. Many critics praised the album's songwriting, although others felt the album's sound was derivative. The album and its singles were nominated for many awards, with the album winning the Grammy Award for Best Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album at the 48th Grammy Awards and the Dove Award for Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year at the 37th GMA Dove Awards. It debuted and peaked at number nine on the Billboard 200 and number on the Billboard Christian Albums chart, selling 71,000 copies in its first week. The 15th best-selling Christian album of the 2000s in the United States, Lifesong has been certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and has sold 1.4 million copies in the United States. All of the album's singles topped the Billboard Christian Songs and Hot Christian AC charts.
Background and recording[edit]
Following the unexpected success of their first album, there was tremendous demand for new music from Casting Crowns. Although lead vocalist Mark Hall, who either wrote or co-wrote all the songs on the album, felt "a little worried" about the band's follow-up album, fellow recording artists Steven Curtis Chapman (who co-produced the band's first album) and Mac Powell of Christian rock band Third Day encouraged Hall to "say what God wants you to say".[4] They also advised him to not worry about commercial expectations or whether "people are going to like it".[4] Ultimately, Hall "absorbed" the feedback their first record had received, using it as inspiration.[4] Lifesong focuses mainly on the "truth-can-be-a-tough-pill-to-swallow message" that "there are broken people within arm’s reach of the church, and if there is any hope of healing, it begins with people who will be the hands and feet of Jesus".[5] Hall responded to critics who felt the band's material was "preaching to the choir" by saying "How can writing songs that challenge the church, songs that ask Christians to consider their actions, be a bad thing? After all, it’s the message that matters... Everybody is passionate about what
they do, about what they feel called to, so for one to say the other’s ministry is more or less meaningful or spiritual or anything is ridiculous".[5] Hall also felt that there were "too many walls in Christian music" and said "I think people listen to you if you’re transparent... People want to hear the truth. You just hang around church for a while, and you’ll see. People
don’t want you to talk around it. They want you to tell it like it is, even if it hurts".[5] Hall ultimately wrote songs such as "Does Anybody Hear Her" and "Stained Glass Masquerade", which "challenge believers".[4] According to Hall, he was trying to say that he didn't think it bothers the world if people in the church sin. Rather, he felt that the world is bothered when Christians act like they don't sin.[4]
Lifesong was produced by Mark A. Miller, with recording and mixing done by Sam Hewitt at Zoo Studio in Franklin, Tennessee. Additional recording was done at Lifesong Studio in McDonough, Georgia. The album was mastered by Richard Dodd and engineered by Dale Oliver and John Lewis Lee III. The strings on the album were arranged by Bobby Huff and were recorded at Little Big Studio by Boeho Shin and Daewoo Kim.[6]
Composition[edit]
Musically, Lifesong is influenced by adult contemporary and pop rock music.[7][8] The album also has influence from worship music in the vein of U2, with songs building into "sweeping choruses and dramatic climaxes".[9] Much of the album's lyrical content is devoted to challenging the Christian church[4][5][10][11] and indicting hypocrisy and piousness within the church.[7] Songs such as the title track and "Father, Spirit, Jesus" have worshipful lyrics[7][8] while others such as "Stained Glass Masquerade" note the inability of church congregations to share their burdens openly.[8] "Does Anybody Hear Her" condemns the church's focus on judging rather than realizing pain[10] and gives the message than condemning other people is wrong.[7] "Set Me Free" is set from the perspective of "the demon-possessed man", who is calling to Jesus for relief. It also incorporates more of a rock sound than Casting Crowns normally uses.[8]
Release and promotion[edit]
Lifesong was released on August 30, 2005.[12] It sold 71,000 copies in its first week, debuting at number nine on the Billboard 200 and Billboard Christian Albums chart.[20] It spent a total of two weeks atop the Christian Albums chart[21][22] and later appeared on the Billboard Catalog Albums chart in 2007, peaking at number thirty-four.[23] By April 1, 2006, Lifesong had sold 503,000 copies.[24] It had sold 950,000 copies by August 25, 2007[25] and, as of December 5, 2009, it has sold a total of 1.2 million copies.[26] As of March 2014, the album has sold 1.4 million copies.[27]
Three official singles ("Lifesong", "Praise You In This Storm", "Does Anybody Hear Her") were released in promotion of Lifesong.[2][3][28] All of the singles topped the Billboard Hot Christian Songs and Hot Christian AC charts.[29][30] An additional song, "Set Me Free", was released to Christian CHR radio,[31] and peaked at number 23.[32]