 |

Brandon Heath likes the little
moments.
Those opportunities to observe,
process and act upon what he witnesses in the
world surrounding him are the primary traits of a
great songwriter, something Heath continues to
showcase on his second Reunion Records release,
What If We.
Even the album's title grew up
out of one of those little moments, a conversation
Heath was having with a mentor that sent the
Nashville native, now Houston resident, spinning
off into thought.
"Every part of that
phrase, 'what if we,' is important," Heath says.
"I don't even look at it as incomplete - dot, dot,
dot - because the 'what if' part is about
possibilities, obviously. But the 'we' part is
saying, 'let's do this together, let's not do this
alone.'"
"One of the things that bothers
me about this world is that we're all in this for
ourselves. We're looking out for number one. I
don't want to be alone, I want to live life with
other people. God even says it's better to join
together in service to Him."
Community is
at the very core of who Brandon Heath is both as a
private person and public figure. He shares this
idea with friends and followers alike, both of
which have grown considerably since the release of
his 2006 debut project Don't Get Comfortable which
produced national touring and multiple radio hits,
including the No. 1 blockbuster song "I'm Not Who
I Was."
Heath has garnered professional
accolades, to be sure, with the success of songs
like "I'm Not Who I Was" also generating the steam
that earned him multiple Dove Award nominations in
2008, including taking the trophy home for New
Artist of the Year. He was also nominated for
Songwriter of the Year and Song of the Year for
"I'm Not Who I Was."
Heath has also been
able to take that public platform and merge it
with his heart for community, working with Young
Life, Blood:Water Mission, Restore International
and unofficially many other human rights agencies
on the larger global scale, even turning his
attention to trials near his hometown of
Nashville. After parts of the city and surrounding
areas were ravaged by a string of tornadoes in
April 2008, Brandon quickly organized a
highly-effective benefit concert for the storm
victims, evidence of living big in the little
moments.
But even as success as an artist
started to come his way, Heath knew that his
personal, creative satisfaction was always going
to come in the form of his songwriting. And where
many new artists get caught up, for good or ill,
in the swirl of activity surrounding that first
record, Heath buckled down and maintained his
focus on the talent and skill that brought him to
the table in the first place.
"One of the
things I think was good about the season around
the first record is that I didn't stop writing,"
Heath says. "Going out and singing songs every
night was kinda something I initially dreaded, but
I loved it way more than I thought I would, which
is why it took me so long to become an artist
because I wasn't sure I wanted to perform for a
live audience."
"But my first love is
songwriting," he continues, "so I wrote and wrote
and wrote. I wrote with my favorite songwriters,
and I wrote with some people I had always wanted
to write with but was too afraid to ask. I put
myself out there a little bit more this time."
Heath, both working solo and together with
co-writers, wrote more than 40 songs in
preparation for What If We, and of the 11 that
finally made the cut, it's fascinating to take a
look at how many deal with those little moments --
moments of loneliness, of triumph, of questioning,
and of longing.
Heath admits the process of
collaboration with people like Jars of Clay's Dan
Haseltine, Charlie Lowell, Stephen Mason, and Matt
Odmark, plus award-winning writers Jason Ingram
and Chad Cates, helped draw out and sharpen those
individual moments. "I think the great thing about
collaborative songwriting is that you can take
some of their life experiences and meld them with
your own, and come up with some truly original
thoughts."
And so songs like "Give Me Your
Eyes," about God letting us see the world as He
sees it (which was born out of yet another little
moment opportunity; people-watching at an airport)
and "Sunrise," about holding out hope through what
seems to be one's darkest period, and "Fight
Another Day," about identifying those situations
where seeing trouble through to the other side is
the best option, grew up out of those
collaborations, taking Heath's ideas and
observations and sharpening them for maximum
impact.
"There are things I wanted to say
on this record that I wouldn't have been able to
without the help of another writer. In turn,
you're getting to help support them in what they
do, but you're also bettering your own art in
allowing other people to help mold what you do,"
Heath continues. "The other part of songwriting is
relationships, and I think that's what the human
experience is all about. So what better place to
draw from than relating to someone in a room? You
inevitably get into a conversation about the song
that you're writing, and you get these great
moments."
On the sonic side, Heath and
producer Dan Muckala set the course for What If We
with a purposeful groove, letting Heath's voice
convey both story and emotion as primary
instrument, but also paving the way for a certain
kind of sound. That intentional sound came out of
what Heath was feeding himself, from a pop culture
perspective, as the songs were coming to life.
"We had some songs that had a real Brit-rock
feel to them, but I had been watching all these
movies that were set in the West, dark movies like
There Will Be Blood and 3:10 to Yuma. These films
showed a period in our country where society was
still figuring out wealth - oil, gold, land - and
what order was going to look like, because we were
still civilizing ourselves," Heath says. "Dan and
I both started thinking, let's put something that
sounded a little more American on there, let's put
more growly guitar on it, more Stratocaster than
Rickenbacker."
Tracks like the
autobiographical "Wait and See" with it's updated
country shuffle, the power pop of "Sore Eyes" and
the crunchy anthem "Trust You" line up right
alongside What If We's quieter material, like the
abject love songs "London" and "Listen Up" and the
album's emotional core "No Not One," co-written
with Christy Nockels, formerly of Watermark and
current Passion worship-leader.
"I love
Christy's voice," Heath says. "It has always
compelled me and I've always wanted to write with
her. When it comes to Christian music, I think any
conversation about vocalist-of-the-century has to
have her in it."
Its relationship
experiences like these that have led up to this
moment in Heath's career. "All great ideas start
with the phrase 'what if we'," Heath notes. "If
anything, I love a title that's a good
conversation starter, but can catch people off
guard. It is a little bit left of center."
But it's those times of being left of center, of
being just a bit off kilter, or outside the
comfort zone of the everyday, that make us stop,
think, and take stock in the little moments all
around us.
It makes us wonder...what if
we...
Find out more visiting Brandon Heath's Official Website
|