Biography
Some
ingredients combine in a way that creates a new chemical
entity, with new properties, colors, purposes and uses.
Some images combine to create new ones, simultaneously
reflective of their original sources and unique unto
themselves. Like a soaring bird made of crystalline
glass, casting rainbows of refracted light strained from
overcast skies, the new musical group GlassByrd weaves a
tapestry of undying hopefulness, adoration and spiritual
peace that is as painfully aware of the gathering gray as
it is of certain eternal truths. Into a landscape
populated with music that is either worship oriented or
personally reflective, this new amalgam is all of the
above, and more.
Marc Byrd may
be one of the most successful musicians in Nashville. But
like so many stellar songwriters and producers before
him, he is rarely in danger of being mobbed by hordes of
fans. His band, Common Children, released two critically
acclaimed albums and traveled the country pounding out
driving, emotional and deeply spiritual rock and roll.
Failed record labels, consolidation, and the all too
common personal tolls of such a lifestyle found Byrd
homeless, tired and confused. Though he earned his
stripes the hard way, in the trenches of the alternative
Christian rock underground, his surprising rise to the
upper echelons of respect and acclaim came from an
unexpected place.
During a time
of particular struggle, including financial destitution
and artistic frustration, the floor-sleeping, guitar
strumming iconoclast wrote a simple song reflecting on
the only hope he truly knew. "I didn't know what else to
do except worship," Byrd remembers of that trying time.
"I just worshipped. My faith was all I had. I realized
that I don't have anything of worth to offer except what
has impacted my life, and that is my faith in Christ."
That time of personal worship yielded several private
songs. One of which would end up taking on a life of its
own. "God Of Wonders" found its way onto the breakthrough
City On A Hill album and went on to become one of the
most loved modern worship songs of the last decade. "The
thing about 'God Of Wonders,' 'With Every Breath,' and
'Holy Is Your Name,'" Byrd continues, "is that I didn't
know there was a City On A Hill. I actually wrote those
songs just because I wanted to write them. It felt good
doing that. I guess this is where Christian music really
makes sense."
Another
successful and critically acclaimed transplanted
Nashvillian by the name of Christine Glass entered the
picture years earlier. She and Byrd met when both were
signed to the same independent label. An instant artistic
chemistry was established, followed closely by a personal
connection that would eventually come to fruition when
the two married in 2000. Though their personal lives were
entering a new level of meaning and significance, their
musical efforts were struggling due to record label
problems. Glass received notice of her being dropped from
her record deal on one Christmas Eve and both found
themselves label-less shortly thereafter. "God can use
those awful things in your life," Glass assures. "He
brought me to a place of poverty and it made me rely on
Him." Fortunately for her growing cadre of fans, Glass
roared back with an astounding independent sophomore
album, Love and Poverty, produced by Byrd and Steve
Hindalong.
Like her
husband, Glass found great personal comfort and
encouragement in her times of worship, both corporately
at church, and privately at home. One of the fruits of
that time, a simple song called "You Are Holy," was
recorded by Nicole Nordeman on the second installment of
the City On A Hill series. As with her husband, her fresh
and honest approach to worship opened musical doors she
had never even considered trying. Despite widespread
respect and anticipation of a continued solo career the
classically trained vocalist found a different creative
path in front of her; one that involved her favorite
songwriter and guitarist - and soul mate - Marc Byrd.
When the two
artists, both well established in their own right, came
together privately for times of worship and writing, they
developed a vocal, melodic and stylistic chemistry that
breathed fresh wind into their creative sails. Writing
led to recording demos, and the demos led to a record
deal as a new musical identity dubbed Adore. Early
recordings appeared on the modern worship compilations
Eterne, Our God Of Wonders and Traveling Light, raising
anticipation of the band's debut album.
Fortunately,
when Warner Brothers took over the Word label and checked
out the work-in-progress that was to become the duo's
debut, they realized they had something special on their
hands. The name of the band has changed to GlassByrd and
at long last the beautiful chemistry of Christine Glass
and Marc Byrd will take flight. Songs of simple worship
sit alongside offerings of hope, consolation and
desperate love. Byrd's rock-tinged voice and gliding
emotive guitar style fuses seamlessly with Glass's
ethereal voice and innate harmonic sensibility to create
an entirely new sound. Falling somewhere between
worshipful modern pop and alternative spirituals,
GlassByrd is carving out a new and crucial niche in the
modern Christian music scene.
Lyrically,
whether from the purely worshipful perspective of "Jesus
You Are Beautiful," the comforting "Wounded Healers," or
the romantic "Tonight (I Want To Live In Your World,)"
Open Wide This Window is all about one thing. Byrd
explains, "We don't want to sound cliché, but it's all
about 'hope.' Our hope is in Christ. He is so identified
with the hopeless, the oppressed, and the poor. Sometimes
it's hard for us to admit that we are weak. But God
tabernacles in our weakness. He builds His presence in
our weakness. All we have to offer is our fumbling faith
and our hope in Christ." This lyrical thread ties all of
the songs together under a banner of humility, grace and
love. For Byrd and Glass it's definitely not about
preaching or flag-waving. "We're broken people and Christ
was broken," Byrd adds. "He identifies with our
suffering. We're just beggars telling other beggars where
we've found some bread."
Glass explains
further. "If we made a record that was all happy and
great that would be dishonest. That's not what we've
done. We've made a record about worship, we've made a
record about God, and we've made a record about the
things that are on our heart. It's a record about hope
and we've learned that our hope is nurtured within a
community. When I don't go to church I feel it. As weak
as I am, I need that connection and support. If this
record gives that to people in some small measure then
it's a complete success as far as I'm concerned."
(Continue)
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