Club Exit eZine Reviews Everybody's Got Something To Say...
DSP combine great music with some of the best word imagery I personally have encountered. Phrases such as "I've climbed the mountains of regret, when you're numb you cannot feel the pain." And "I'm rich with explanation, none at all." The concept of the album seems to center around the inward views of different people, and how they relate themselves to the person of God. This is begun in "Feels Like Rain" where the Prophets beckon us to follow them "across a dustbowl, Indian summer sky....through voodoo mystics, merchants and the thieves." So is the journey begun, where we enter the lives of ordinary people. "I saw it in the factories, where sweat has lost it's price. I watched it in the hospice halls, and tried to hold a smile. I saw it in suburbia, where bumper stickers preach." Each song from here through to "Whirlwind" catches a glimpse of a person, either from a personal point of view or from the view of Christ, who is calling out to each of them, crying and dying for each. Take the hit release, "Hitler's Girlfriend" which comes from the POV of a man who is bound within the confines of his own fears of being hurt. As they sing, "I'm remotely controlled, strapped to an engine stuck in idle, don't feel 'cause I fear, don't love 'cause I lost... don't know,
In "Baby's Got A New Dress" the song is written from the viewpoint of Christ, who is calling out to a woman who, while we may assume that she is "saved", is still flirting with "the world." As the Prophets sing, "Said he'd love you all night long, then in the morning put his pants on and he was gone. He left you naked. I'll never leave." "Hobo's Jungle", which is a song very reminiscent of Pearl Jam's "Jeremy" is about how people prejudge and preconceive what others are about. In the song, an encounter with a beggar causes this song's protagonist to rethink the "programming" he received as a child. "Fear formed his influence. Some say that forest holds the devil's kin, vagrants, homeless, the dregs of us. He believes and swallows deep." The beggar, though, teaches him that he, too, is a man. A man who is the victim of his circumstances, perhaps. "His smile felt like forgiveness, like mercy for a crook's last meal. He said we share the same roof, yours is wood, mine is sky." Thus showing that indeed they are more alike than different. That the God of mercy offers the same gift to both. "Love Song #58" is a song filled with passion and energy, one of the best on this album. The song itself states that only through Christ can we turn codependence on others into dependence on God. "Sister, could you be my crutch tonight? Giver, my words are clay but in you they mean so much....Someday I will be strong enough to say, I once needed to be loved, but when you stand by me, I can stand alone." "Ready For The Rain" is a bluesey guitar and drums song. The tune is catchy and will leave you humming the chorus. The lyrics are a retelling of the parable of the man who built his house on the sand, and the rains fell and washed it all away. It is a testament to the hope that we have in Christ; that when we build our foundation on the rock, the rains may fall but we will not be washed away. "Rain came down again today, the thunder howled, but I was not afraid. The winds made an awful sound, but I now live on solid ground, the rain came down again today." The final song, "Whirlwind" ties all these disparate ends together and summarizes the album. "They're just like you and me, we're one and the same. Everytime we try to do good something gets in the way....Take my hand, I'll help you if I can. Time is coming down like a whirlwind." If we could all only realize this truth, maybe the world would be just a little better. The song, and the album, finish with these lines. "Every time I look at you, I end up looking at myself, for everything you hide in your closet, I've hidden somewhere else. And sometime when you see me you're going to laugh, saying there goes a man with high ideals and a burden on his back." |