
Todd Agnew:
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Todd Agnew: Reflection of Something, Compact Disc [CD]
:
2005
Retail Price:
$17.98
CBD Price:
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Throughout his
two-year journey
into the artist's
life brought on by
his debut album
Grace Like Rain,
Todd Agnew has taken
ample opportunity to
analyze the reasons
and the motivations
behind the things he
sees, says and does,
and has channeled
them into the dozen
songs chronicling
the Christian
existence for his
Ardent Records
sophomore release. |
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![Todd Agnew, Compact Disc [CD]](http://graphics.christianbook.com/g/tiny/c/cd51927.gif) |
Grace Like Rain, Compact Disc [CD]:
2005
Retail Price:
$16.98
CBD Price:
$11.99
-
You Save $4.99
(29%)
.:Buy or Listen to Now:.
Todd Agnew offers
Grace Like Rain, a
well-crafted debut
of classic rock
musicianship, modern
rock relevance, and
bold-faced spiritual
confession. Without
hype or a hip
hairdo, he simply
offers one of the
best starts heard so
far in 2003. |
Todd Agnew: Artist Biography
From the first time you meet
Todd Agnew, you'll realize that
he's a T-shirt and jeans kind of
guy.
And his manner of speech will
certainly reflect his sartorial
taste: direct, straightforward,
to the point.
It's when you get to his music
that you will find the
complexities that inhabit Todd
Agnew's life. His debut album
for Ardent Records, Grace Like
Rain, is a dizzying array of
musical styles, none of which
seem out of place and all of
which help serve Todd Agnew's
dual purpose as a communicator,
horizontally reaching out to a
young generation looking for
inspiration and vertically
reaching out to the Creator who
provides that inspiration.
Grace Like Rain melds rock,
blues, soul and gospel in an
unabashed attempt to not only
capture as many ears as
possible, but also to keep Todd
Agnew from being pigeonholed as
an artist in his first time out
the gate.
"I haven't limited myself to one
style because musical creativity
is an act of worship to an
infinitely creative God," Todd
Agnew says. "I didn't want to
put out an album where you could
listen to one song and
immediately put a label on me as
a whole."
With a Native American
background, Todd Agnew was
adopted and embraced by Texas
parents who were dedicated in
their church attendance.
Crediting his spiritual growth
stemming from his family's
commitment to God, he was
enveloped by the music of the
church from his earliest
remembrance. But while his own
musical skills and interests
grew, including serving as
worship leader at local
churches, the traditional music
began to lose its power,
becoming ingrained as a habit
instead of a worship experience
and a relationship with God.
"As I grew as a worship leader,
I realized that when I learned a
song at a camp, I sang it with
all I had, but when I sang in
church, it was just routine,"
Todd Agnew explains. "I've been
in church all my life, and it
was just habit for me. I knew
every word to every song, and
there was no speaking of God in
that, just rote practice. But
when I started breaking down
these songs, realizing the depth
and value of their meaning, I
realized that I would have to
teach them again, making them
more relevant."
It's in that joining of the
familiar and the progressive
where Todd Agnew's music finds
its power. That's why a song
like "Grace Like Rain" makes
such an impact, taking text from
one of the world's best-known
hymns in "Amazing Grace" and
placing it within the context of
a groove-laden, alt-rock track.
Todd Agnew further adds his
gritty vocals, singing with a
concurrent joy, amazement and
thankfulness about his, and
subsequently our, sins being
washed away.
Todd Agnew knows that it's
because he chose to listen to
God's still, small voice that
he's been able to then sing
loudly from stage. Spending more
than a decade passionately
serving in the worship field, he
traveled to churches that needed
music where God sharpened his
performance and writing skills
before even thinking about
making a record.
"I was at a point where I had
many different avenues I could
have gone down in my ministry: I
was leading worship, I was doing
my little coffee-house,
singer-songwriter thing, and I
was playing cover stuff while
doing evangelism by playing in
clubs," Todd Agnew says. "That's
where you get all the Dave
Matthews, Creed, Counting Crows
pop music influences; it came
from playing covers.
"About a year and a half ago,
God said to me, 'why don't you
marry all of those influences
together?' I started combining
that mainstream sound with
worship because that's what our
generation liked, wanted and
needed."
As a result of the not-so-gentle
prods from a friend, Todd Agnew
reached out to Ardent Records'
Dana Key about using Ardent
Studios in Memphis, where Todd
Agnew had relocated, to work on
a record. The longtime Christian
music veteran gave Todd more
advice than he had expected.
"When I started it, I went to
Dana because I knew him from an
earlier project. He talked to me
about the business and
everything, and I had to
interrupt him, saying 'Look, I'm
not coming to ask to be on your
label, I just want to use your
studio.'"
"Walking by where Todd Agnew was
recording, I found myself
stopping and listening to his
music," says Dana. "It wasn't
long before I wanted to get
involved. Similarly, whenever I
play some of Todd Agnew's music
for people, it has the same
effect of stopping them in their
tracks. His music is definitely
not background material-it's
music that demands attention."
While plunging headfirst into
the miasma of the music business
wasn't exactly something Todd
Agnew was expecting at this
juncture, he knows that because
of his own experiences and being
in touch with what God has
planned for his life and career,
the rigors of what is about to
come will be handled. "This
wasn't necessarily something I
was aiming for," says Todd
Agnew. "God just took His time
molding before releasing me into
a world I could not have handled
earlier in my life.
"What God did with me was give
me a gift, so I started playing
and leading worship and doing a
lot of the other things, and God
basically took my heart and
started refining it and
sculpting it and telling me,
'This is who I want you to be. I
want you to be somebody who
wants to be about reaching
people.' Once I really had a
grip on that, those doors
started to open because I was
ready to start looking at
music."
And the music that has come
forth out of Todd Agnew is as
crafted and polished as any
debut to come down the pike in
years, with songs like "Reached
Down" rocking with an unfettered
intensity alongside quieter
tracks like "Still Here
Waiting," a tune excellent in
its reverence and message. Then
there's "Lay It Down," one of
the first songs Todd Agnew wrote
after relocating from Houston to
Memphis, and the one that most
vividly shows his love for
blues, rock and gospel.
Todd Agnew had been working with
Metro Bible Study in Memphis,
and pulling together a band of
professional players jumpstarted
his creativity.
"For the first time, I had a pro
drummer," Todd Agnew says. One
time I was warming up with some
Dave Matthews stuff, and I hit
the break in the middle of 'What
Would You Say?' and she just
jumped right in there, playing
Carter Beauford's part. We
started taking these worship
songs and turning them into rock
songs, or funk or blues or
whatever we felt like worked
best. That was a very freeing
experience for me, and combined
with the fact that it was
Memphis, it really affected my
writing.
"I'd been in Memphis about a
month when I wrote Lay It Down,
and through it, although I've
grown up in Texas and have been
listening to rock music my
entire life, the whole blues
influence is now a big part of
who I am and who I'm becoming."
Todd Agnew also lets it fly on
"This Fragile Breath," known by
its nickname "The Thunder Song."
The cut's big, anthemic sound
came after a long-simmering
revelation. "One day, it hit me
all of a sudden. 'You know what?
Worship music…it's power
ballads, just done on acoustic
guitars and djembes. If we're
gonna play a power ballad, let's
play a power ballad,'" Todd
Agnew says. "That song is all
about 'God, I'm here and I want
to worship you,' but when it
comes down to it, these songs
are very small, piddling and
insignificant compared to the
fact that He is God, and He
speaks with thunder and
lightning, and what do I have
that can compare to that? When
it comes down to it, I don't
have much, but whatever it is,
here, this is what I can offer."
For Todd Agnew, being cognizant
of his surroundings and
situations is a strength when it
comes to his relating to people
and leading them in worship. In
fact, it's all part of his
primary goal. "My focus when I
play as a worship leader is to
worship honestly. If you can't
sing something honestly, don't
sing it; you're not fooling
God," Todd Agnew says. "He's not
getting any honor by you singing
a line you don't mean. If that
means you have to leave out a
line, that's fine. We're not up
here taking attendance, seeing
who's singing which line.
Worship from where you are."
And if you're doing it wearing a
T-shirt and jeans, that's fine,
too.
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