Delirious- World Service
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World Service

Track Listings
1 Grace Like a River (4:06)
2 Rain Down (4:51)
3 God in Heaven (4:28)
4 Majesty (Here I Am) (5:31)
5 Inside Outside (5:41)
6 Free (3:59)
7 Everyone Knows (4:30)
8 With You (4:36)
9 Mountains High (3:55)
10 I Was Blind (5:52)
11 Feel It Coming On (5:10)
12 Every Little Thing (4:36)


Discography
World Service (2004)
Access: D (2003)
Libertad (2003)
Touch (2002)
Deeper: The D:Finitive Worship Experience (2001)
Glo  (2000)
Mezzamorphis  (1999)
King Of Fools (1998)
The Cutting Edge (1997)


  Grace Hotel
  Overall rating: +++-

 

 

Album Reviews

Delirious? is back with another new album, this one perhaps their best so far. With crystal clear lyrics that don’t hide behind vague creativity, World Service offers a beautiful scent wisping back to King of Fools. This album seems to be what Delirious? is all about. It has the flavor and style of their first albums but with the edge of their newer. All their previous albums seem to balance out in World Service. For this reason, I think we are hearing the best of Delirious? and an album that defines the band better than any before. Have they finally arrived? No, they’ve been here. But I think they just completed a huge stage of development on top of a foundation which has been established for years now. Sincerity and cries of worship are the back-up vocals on this album, singing songs that you will find yourself meditating on and singing yourself.

~ Shawn

 

Very few bands in the world can pop up rock music like Delirious? Here are twelve more tracks that in a world without prejudice would be as all over the radio as anything else released this year. What Delirious? do they do deliriously well. Wonderful melodies, great song structures, memorable riffs, brilliantly executed. They rock you to the core. It is inspirational, celebratory and out of the rhythm of modern glum rock with an almost 100% positivity. Rain Down and Everyone Knows are particularly impossible not to go on singing all day long.

For too long they tried to please everybody. At last they have decided that they don’t need anyone’s affirmation but their own – and I guess in the life of faith these guys inhabit God’s. As they say on Free, “I am free to be the man you want me to be/I’m alive when I’m alive in you.” Caught between whether they were the front runners in worship music exploring new territories or a rock band trying to squeeze Jesus into the pop charts they have at last got happy with themselves and World Service sees a band no longer striving but doing what they do best. There are fewer hints at who they are trying to copycat to be relevant in HMV and you get the feeling that they are a band who have relaxed and we are all going to reap the benefit. This is not a worship album strategically placed between two chart attempts as Glo was between Mezzamorphis and Audio Lessonover? This is the bringing together of the two. Delirious? not as they think they should be but just as they are. That in itself is a practical outworking of the message of the songs – grace!

Yet, still as with most Delirious? albums I am feeling left just that little bit short. The difference with World Service is that at last I know where the problem lies. Those that Delirious? no longer need to please includes me. The only thing that is at fault in this album is my expectations and whims. I am still a little confused at the repititiousness of God focused rock. There have been a million new worship songs in the past ten years but only about two ideas and twenty different lines. Poetically there is a dearth of new ideas. It all seems as if we find a new tune and shuffle the words like a deck of clichés and then churn it out. I have sat during times of worship and as the next song goes up on the projector asked myself why we changed song or even did we change song and finally is there not another song? I guess my challenge to the D:boys would have to be to do with the lyric what they do so well with the tune; move it on.

And there are more than enough signs that they can do just that. From track 9, the poignant piano led Mountains High about the loss of a close friend, to the end we get a little more mood and the final track Every Little Thing’s “I built my house where the ocean meets the land/it’s time to live again/Pull my dreams out of the sand” shows a dexterity of words that we need to replace the recurring words that are in danger of being worn out. There are more than few repeats of phrase and couplet here; fire and free, water images like rivers and rain and that we were lost and now we’re found. They are words that seem to buzz in the heart and souls of the supposedly free worshipping generation but just now it seems that they are a little trapped in a narrow tradition of song types and word use.

Again I need to say that this is my own personal frustration. As someone who preaches and teaches I am longing for songs that will lead us into that place of intimate connection where a Biblical plethora of issues might be sung about and where new angles on the old, old story will open up truth to captivate us afresh. This is an album that I come away from with a wide, wide smile on my soul but cerebrally not very challenged. Maybe that is what Delirious? is about. If it is – fair play to them; they do it better than anyone else.

~ Steve Stockman

  

     

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