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Casting Crowns

 
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Casting Crowns


Christian music group

Atlanta-based Christian band Casting Crowns went from being a local worship band to receiving eight Gospel Music Association awards within a year of their self-titled debut album. Despite their rocket trip to success, the band has remained modest, and they still work as youth ministers in their local church.

Frontman Mark Hall and the six other members of the band were all working as youth ministers at Eagle's Landing First Baptist Church in McDonough, Georgia, outside Atlanta. They made a CD of music to use for outreach with the church's youth group, and it came to the attention of Mark Miller, who was founding a new record label called Beach Street. He asked the group if they would be the first artists on the label, and they accepted. "It really did take us by surprise," Hall told Michel Herman in Christianity Today.

The group's first album, Casting Crowns, was an immediate success in the Christian music world. It featured an acoustic pop sound that Russ Breimeier, writing in Christianity Today, compared to that of Steven Curtis Chapman, MercyMe, Big Daddy Weave, and Warren Barfield. The album eventually sold over a million copies and won eight Gospel Music Association awards.

"We've Got to Stay Unplugged"
Hall has never wanted to emphasize the group's meteoric rise from obscure worship band to the top of the Christian charts. He told Herman, "I really don't know how to process all this 'chart stuff.' It's not real to me because I just don't understand it." However, he was excited about the personal responses the album got from youth pastors, who sent e-mails telling how helpful it was with their ministries. Hall added, "As far as reviews go, good grief! That's one person's musical taste in a magazine for millions of people—I've never understood that. We've got to stay unplugged from all that stuff."

Hall's emphasis on humility has a background in his childhood. He had trouble in school and was diagnosed with dyslexia at a young age. He went to special classes, and although he didn't feel different from the other kids at the beginning, by middle school he had become ashamed of his disability. He didn't tell his friends why he went to different classes. As he told Russ Breimeier and Andy Argyrakis in Christianity Today, "I had to become a master of changing the subject and moving around." He gradually came to terms with the fact that he learned differently from other people, and eventually saw it as a blessing because it kept him humble. He told Breimeier and Argyrakis, "I've never walked on stage and thought in my head, 'Let's rock!' Instead, it's more like, 'God, I'm going to blow this, and I'm going to forget all my words.'"

The album's success made the band members think deeply about what they were doing and what message they wanted to convey, since they now had "the ear of the church," as Hall told Breimeier and Argyrakis. They thought about each of their songs and why they were singing, to make sure they were not doing things to be "cool" but in order to send a spiritual message.

In 2004, Casting Crowns released Live From Atlanta, a CD/DVD collection of songs recorded in the band's home church. According to Andy Argyrakis in Christianity Today, the album "captures the spirit and emotion from the parishioners for whom they've frequently led worship." The disc also included interviews with each member of the band, an analysis of each song, the video for "American Dream," and a feature on the band's youth ministry.

Lifesong
The band's next release, Lifesong, featured this kind of examination of self and other, as in "Stained Glass Masquerade," which questions the honesty church members who act happy and "plastic" when they are really broken inside. Another track, "Does Anybody Hear Her?" accused the church of being too judgmental about pregnant teenagers. The album also featured worship songs, such as "Love Them Like Jesus," "Praise You In This Storm," and "In Me," which convey what the Beach Street Records biography called "their unwavering determination to be living, breathing examples of Jesus in the world." In Christianity Today, Russ Breimeier commented that the album is quite similar to the band's first album, calling it "derivative," but also noted that Hall's "insightful" songs would appeal to fans.

The group balances their recording career with their spiritual life, returning home every week to the Eagle's Landing First Baptist Church, to continue their work as youth ministers. In a biography provided by Beach Street Records and reprinted on the Christianity Today website, Hall noted that most of his Bible students have never heard of Christian music awards or radio play charts. They are dealing with family problems, difficulties in school, or problems in their relationships. Hall said, "We come home every week to people who desperately need a relationship with God. This is the ministry that God has called us to." He said that in order to gain the teens' trust, the band members have to be honest about their own lives, their struggles and failures, and how God has helped them. Then, he said, "others will see us and think, 'Hey, that's me too! God can do that in me!'"

Hall noted that despite the band's success, he does not want to spend a lot of time planning a future musical career. In the Beach Street Records biography, he commented, "All I know is that we're husbands and wives and parents first. And we know that we're supposed to be in the church doing what we're doing there. So we're going to bloom where God has planted us in this season and keep doing it until the next season comes." And he told Breimeier and Argyrakis, "The day when my wife and kids aren't [top priority] is the day when I know I need to quit all this. And the day when I can't minister in a church, I'll know it's wrong because that's my next priority. Casting Crowns is third."

Selected discography
Casting Crowns, Beach Streeet Records, 2003.Live From Atlanta, Reunion/Provident, 2004.Lifesong, Beach Street, 2005.
Sources
Periodicals
Billboard, March 6, 2004, p. 18; September 4, 2004, p. 14; February 12, 2005; July 9, 2005, p. 19; July 29, 2005, p. 19; p. 13; September 10, 2005, p. 74.
Campus Life, September-October 2004, p. 32.
Today's Christian, November-December, 2005, p. 13.
Today's Christian Woman, November-December 2005, p. 78.

Online
"Casting Crowns," Christianity Today, http://www.christianitytoday.com/music/artists/castingcrowns.html (June 27, 2006).
"Casting Crowns," CMCentral.com, http://www.cmcentral.com/artists/853.html (June 27, 2006).
Gospel Music Association Web Page, http://www.gospelmusic.org/newsmedia/pressRoom_detail.aspx?iid=14874&tid=33 (July 6, 2006).
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  • Genres: Gospel

Biography

The Christian pop group Casting Crowns formed in 1999 as a student worship band in Daytona Beach, Florida. Led by singer, songwriter, and youth pastor Mark Hall, the group's initial lineup also included violinist Melodee DeVevo and a pair of guitarists, Juan DeVevo and Hector Cervantes. The musicians relocated to McDonough, Georgia in 2001, and expanded their lineup by adding bassist Chris Huffman, keyboardist Megan Garrett, and drummer Andy Williams. This augmented version of Casting Crowns released two independent albums on CD, both of which were well received in the Atlanta area. One of the albums then found its way into the hands of Mark Miller, lead singer for the country group Sawyer Brown, who was struck by Casting Crowns' driving pop/rock style and Hall's vocal delivery of his hard-hitting but devout songs. Miller signed Casting Crowns to his fledgling Beach Street Records, a division of Reunion Records with distribution by the Provident Label Group, and took the group into the studio along with co-producer Steven Curtis Chapman, himself a popular artist on the CCM musical scene.

The resulting album, Casting Crowns, was released in 2003 on the Beach Street imprint. It fared extremely well in Christian markets, eventually going platinum and peaking at number two on the CCM charts. A sampler with five songs, Live from Atlanta, was released on Reunion Records in 2004, packaged with a bonus DVD containing band interviews and a music video. Lifesong, released in August 2005, became the band's most successful record yet, cracking the Top Ten in the secular market while maintaining the band's religious fan base as well. Like its predecessor, the record went platinum, and Casting Crowns' increased popularity helped send their follow-up album, 2007's The Altar and the Door, to number two on the Billboard album charts. Meanwhile, the single "East to West" spent a record-breaking 16 consecutive weeks atop the Christian charts. A Christmas-themed album, Peace on Earth, appeared in 2008, tiding over the group's fans (and yielding a number one hit, "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day") while Casting Crowns readied another LP of original material. Until the Whole World Sings arrived late in 2009, followed by the live album Until the Whole World Hears in 2010. Inspired by the story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well, Come to the Well, the band's fifth studio album, was released on October 18, 2011. ~ Steve Leggett, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Casting Crowns

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Casting Crowns

Casting Crowns performing in 2011 on the Come to the Well Tour.
Background information
Origin Daytona Beach, Florida, USA
Genres Contemporary Christian
Christian rock
Soft rock
Years active 1999–present
Labels Sony BMG/Beach Street/Reunion (U.S.)
Sony Music Philippines (Philippines)
Website castingcrowns.com
Members
Mark Hall (lead vocals)
Juan DeVevo (lead guitar)
Hector Cervantes (rhythm guitar)
Melodee DeVevo (violin, backing vocals)
Megan Garrett (piano)
Chris Huffman (bass guitar)
Brian Scoggin (drums)
Past members
Andy Williams (drums)

Casting Crowns is a Grammy Award and Dove Award winning Contemporary Christian/Christian Rock band. Casting Crowns was started in 1999 by youth pastor Mark Hall at First Baptist Church in Downtown Daytona Beach, Florida[1] as part of a youth group. He now serves as a lead vocalist. Later they moved to Stockbridge, Georgia and more members joined creating the band now known as Casting Crowns. Some members of the band currently work as ministers for Eagles Landing First Baptist Church in Stockbridge, Georgia.[2]

Contents

History

Formation and self-titled debut

Christian rock group Casting Crowns began as a student worship band in Daytona Beach, FL, in 1999. Led by singer, songwriter, and youth pastor Mark Hall, the group initially included guitarists Juan DeVevo and Hector Cervantes and violinist Melodee DeVevo. The group relocated to Stockbridge, GA, in 2001, adding Chris Huffman on bass, Megan Garrett on keyboards and accordion, and drummer Andy Williams. This augmented version of Casting Crowns released two independent albums on CD, both of which were well received in the Atlanta area. Both independent albums were efforts on the part of Mark Hall and the rest of the group as outreach projects for youth in the area.[3] The group won the GMA regional songwriters competition at Palm Beach Atlantic University, West Palm Beach, Florida in both the "Best Song" and the "Best Artist" categories in 2004. Although the group was not searching for a record label, one of the group's albums found its way into the hands of Mark Miller, lead singer for country group Sawyer Brown, who was struck by Casting Crowns' driving pop/rock style and Hall's vocal delivery of his hard-hitting but devout songs. Miller signed Casting Crowns to his fledgling Beach Street Records, a division of Reunion Records with distribution by the Provident Label Group, making Casting Crowns the first artist signed to Beach Street Records.[4]

Mark Miller took the group into the studio along with co-producer Steven Curtis Chapman, himself a popular artist on the CCM musical scene. The resulting eponymous album, Casting Crowns, was released in 2003 on the Beach Street imprint. The album quickly made them one of the fastest selling debut artists in Christian music history. The album's third single, "Voice of Truth", spent a record-breaking fourteen consecutive weeks at #1 beginning in 2003. "Voice of Truth" is also by the trailer and the ending from the movie Facing the Giants. The album was certified platinum in 2005,[5] and in 2011, the group received their first gold certification for a single for the song 'Who Am I' from their debut record.

Lifesong and Lifesong Live (2005-2006)

Lifesong followed in 2005, debuting at #9 on the Billboard 200 Albums Chart. The album had three singles: “Lifesong”, “Praise You in this Storm”, and “ Does Anybody Hear Her?”. "Lifesong" spent nine weeks in the top spot, with "Praise You in This Storm" remaining at #1 for seven weeks. Apart from being successful in the charts, Lifesong earned Casting Crowns their first Grammy Award for their work on the album in 2006.

In 2006, the group released Lifesong Live, which included live performances of songs from their studio album Lifesong.

The Altar and the Door and The Altar and the Door Live (2007-2008)

The band's third studio album The Altar and the Door debuted at #2 on the Billboard 200 Albums Chart[6] and #1 on the Hot Christian Albums chart upon its release in August 2007. Ten weeks after the album’s release date, it was certified gold by the RIAA.[7] On September 27, 2007 the band embarked on the ‘Altar and the Door’ tour with Leeland and John Waller . The tour was highly successful, grossing $4.4 million ticket sales.[8] Casting Crowns broke their own record in 2007 when the single "East to West" from The Altar and the Door hit sixteen consecutive weeks at #1. The song ended up enjoying the top spot for a total of nineteen weeks, now their most successful single to date. "Slow Fade" was also released as a single, and was included in the soundtrack of the Kirk Cameron film Fireproof.

In 2008, Casting Crowns scored their eighth number one hit with "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day", a track from their newly-released Christmas album entitled Peace on Earth.

Until the Whole World Hears (2009-2011)

In early 2009, drummer Andy Williams left to pursue a further calling with blessings from the band. The drummer was replaced with Brian Scoggin and his red locks of hair, an irony Mark mentions on tour.

Casting Crowns was one of the only American bands to ever have been invited to North Korea. They attended the 2009 April Spring Arts Festival in Pyongyang where they performed with The Annie Moses Band. This was Casting Crowns second time invited to the Festival sponsored by Global Resource Services, the first time being in 2007.[9][10] On August 30, 2009 Casting Crowns performed on Huckabee, Mike Huckabee's political show.

Casting Crown's fourth major studio album, Until the Whole World Hears, was released on November 17, 2009, debuting at #4 on the Billboard 200 and selling over 167,000 copies in its first week alone, setting a new record for the highest Christian album debut in history.[11] It was certified gold within 4 weeks.[12] The title track and first single from the album became the groups ninth #1 single in January 2010. Before the album was released, the band went on tour with Matt Redman for the fall Until The Whole World Hears Tour. They went on the first spring leg of the tour with Kutless, and toured with Tenth Avenue North on the second spring leg.

In April 2010, Casting Crowns won the Dove Award for Artist of the Year, their first ever win in that category. A music video for the title track of Until the Whole World Hears was posted on the band's YouTube page on August 23, 2010.

The track Glorious Day (Living He Loved Me) was released as a single in 2011 and reached #1 on Billboard Christian Songs during the week of April 23, 2011.

Come to the Well (2011-present)

Casting Crowns' latest song, "Courageous", was released as a single on July 19, 2011. The music video for the song was released on June 13, 2011 and promotes the film Courageous. The song was featured on their latest album, Come to the Well, which was released on October 18, 2011.

Ministry

Casting Crowns frontman Mark Hall calls the band's work a ministry akin to what the world would call "preaching to the choir." In keeping with The Great Commission, Hall describes their music as a "ministry of discipleship."

Four members of Casting Crowns currently minister at Eagle's Landing First Baptist Church in McDonough, GA where they play during the Contemporary Worship service on Sunday mornings. They do the band part-time around their full-time work of mentoring teenagers at the church.[2] They often tour from Thursday- Saturday so that they can be home for church on Sunday morning and Wednesday night.[13]

Members

Current

Former

  • Andy Williams - drums (2001–2009)

Books

  • Lifestories by Mark Hall
  • Your Own Jesus by Mark Hall
  • The Well by Mark Hall

Producers/Executive Producers

  • Steven Curtis Chapman - Producer for album Casting Crowns
  • Mark A. Miller - Producer for albums Casting Crowns, Lifesong, The Altar and the Door, and Until The Whole World Hears
  • Terry Hemmings - Executive Producer for album Lifesong, The Altar and the Door, and Until The Whole World Hears

Discography

Independent albums

  • 2001: Casting Crowns
  • 2002: What If The Whole World Prayed

Studio albums

Live albums

Music videos

  • American Dream
  • Does Anybody Hear Her
  • Slow Fade
  • Until the Whole World Hears
  • Courageous
  • Just Another Birthday

Achievements

  • Career sales have exceeded 5 million records.
  • Voted CCM Readers' Choice Awards "Favorite Band", "Favorite New Artist" and "Favorite Album" in 2005.
  • "Lifesong" voted "Inspirational Single of the Year" by online music fans in the 2005 CCMSingles.Net Awards.
  • "Praise You in this Storm" was the fifth most played song of 2006 according to R&R magazine[14]
  • "East To West" voted "AC Single of the Year" and "Inspirational Single of the Year" by online music fans in the 2007 CCMSingles.Net Awards.
  • Casting Crowns was the most played artist on Christian Radio in 2007, according Radio & Records Weekly charts (12/10).
  • Casting Crowns is the second fastest Christian band in history to have their first two albums certified platinum, the fastest being Jars of Clay.[7]
GMA Dove Awards[15]
Year Award Result
2004 New Artist of the Year Nominated
Song of the Year ("If We Are the Body") Nominated
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("If We Are the Body") Nominated
Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year (Casting Crowns) Nominated
2005 Artist of the Year Nominated
Group of the Year Won
Song of the Year ("Who Am I") Won
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("Who Am I") Won
Rock/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("American Dream") Nominated
Inspirational Recorded Song of the Year ("Voice of Truth") Won
Worship Song of the Year (“Who Am I”) Nominated
2006 Artist of the Year Nominated
Group of the Year Won
Song of the Year ("Lifesong" and "Voice of Truth") Nominated
Pop Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("Lifesong") Nominated
Pop Contemporary Album of the Year (Lifesong) Won
2007 Artist of the Year Nominated
Group of the Year Won
Song of the Year ("Praise You In This Storm") Nominated
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("Praise You In This Storm") Won
2008 Artist of the Year Nominated
Group of the Year Won
Song of the Year ("East to West") Won
Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year ("The Altar and the Door") Won
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("East to West") Won
Praise & Worship Song of the Year ("Praise You In This Storm") Nominated
2009 Artist of the Year Nominated
Group of the Year Won
Christmas Album of the Year (Peace on Earth) Won
Short Form Music Video of the Year ("Slow Fade") Won
Long Form Music Video of the Year (The Altar and the Door Live) Nominated
2010 Artist of the Year Won
Group of the Year Nominated
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year ("Until the Whole World Hears") Nominated
2011 Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year (Until the Whole World Hears) Nominated
Long Form Music Video of the Year (Until the Whole World Hears... Live) Nominated
Grammy Awards[16]
Year Award Work
2005 Best Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album of the Year Lifesong

Partnerships and Endorsements

Partnerships

Endorsements

References

  1. ^ Norris, Jane (18 May 2009). "There's No Slow Fade in the Forecast for Casting Crowns". The Daily Progress. http://www.dailyprogress.com/cdp/entertainment/music/article/theres_no_slow_fade_in_the_forecast_for_casting_crowns/40282/. Retrieved July 4, 2009. 
  2. ^ a b "CASTING CROWNS SETS SALES RECORD AS HIGHEST DEBUTING CHRISTIAN MUSIC ARTIST IN SOUNDSCAN HISTORY; UNTIL THE WHOLE WORLD HEARS FIRST-WEEK SCANS EXCEED 167,000". Jesus Freak Hideout. 25 November 2009. http://www.jesusfreakhideout.com/news/2009/11/25.CASTING%20CROWNS%20SETS%20SALES%20RECORD%20AS%20HIGHEST%20DEBUTING%20CHRISTIAN%20MUSIC%20ARTIST.asp. Retrieved 1 December 2009. 
  3. ^ Owen, Linda (2005 November). "Casting Crowns’ "Who Am I"". Christianity Today. http://www.christianitytoday.com/tc/2005/novdec/14.13.html. Retrieved 2009-10-15. 
  4. ^ Herman, Michael (2004). "Overnight Sensation". Christianity Today. http://www.christianitytoday.com/music/interviews/2004/castingcrowns-0204.html. Retrieved 2009-10-08. 
  5. ^ "RIAA - Gold & Platinum Searchable Database". RIAA. http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH. 
  6. ^ "Casting Crowns ‘The Altar and the Door’ Debuts at No. 2". CCM Magazine. 2007 September. http://www.ccmmagazine.com/news/headlines/11553550/casting%20crowns/. Retrieved 16 September 2009. 
  7. ^ a b "The Altar and the Door Certified Gold by RIAA in Ten Weeks". CCM Magazine. 2007 September. http://www.ccmmagazine.com/news/headlines/11553550/casting%20crowns/. Retrieved 16 November 2009. 
  8. ^ "Casting Crowns Dominates Christian Music in 2007". CCM Magazine. 2007 December. http://www.ccmmagazine.com/news/headlines/11562037/casting%20crowns/. Retrieved 16 November 2009. 
  9. ^ Young, Eric (2009-04-21). "Casting Crowns Heads Home After North Korea Trip". Christian Post. http://www.christianpost.com/article/20090421/casting-crowns-heads-home-after-north-korea-trip/index.html. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  10. ^ French, Rose (2009-04-11). "Musicians hope to ease tensions in North Korea". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/states/tennessee/2009-04-11-2447326404_x.htm?loc=interstitialskip. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
  11. ^ http://www.jesusfreakhideout.com/news/2009/11/25.CASTING%20CROWNS%20SETS%20SALES%20RECORD%20AS%20HIGHEST%20DEBUTING%20CHRISTIAN%20MUSIC%20ARTIST.asp
  12. ^ http://www.jesusfreakhideout.com/news/2009/12/21.CASTING%20CROWNS%20CERTIFIES%20RIAA%20GOLD%20IN%20FOUR%20WEEKS.asp
  13. ^ http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/mark-hall-of-casting-486668.html
  14. ^ As played on the January 7, 2007 Weekend 22
  15. ^ "Dove Awards History Artist: Casting Crowns". Gospel Music Association. http://www.doveawards.com/history.php?x=artist. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
  16. ^ "Grammy Award Winners". The Recording Academy. http://www.grammy.com/GRAMMY_Awards/Winners/Results.aspx. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
  17. ^ Casting Crowns Partnership web site
  18. ^ [1]

External links


 
 
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