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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
MercyMe [The Generous Mr. Lovewell], May 4, 2010
This review is from: The Generous Mr. Lovewell (Audio CD)
MercyMe's new album is called The Generous Mr. Lovewell. The album has already garnered a No.1 song with "All of Creation," almost four weeks before the release date. "He's like Buddy the Elf meets Forrest Gump," says MercyMe singer Bart Millard of the fictitious namesake behind the band's sixth studio album. "He sees the good in everyone and knows his neighbors enough to know their needs. Mr. Lovewell may not be the next Billy Graham, but he's changing the world each day in every little word and deed." His advisory board--Millard, guitarists Mike Scheuchzer and Barry Graul, bassist Nathan Cochran, drummer Robby Shaffer, and keyboard player Jim Bryson--equips the red balloon-toting make-believer with airy ideas ("Pay for a stranger's lunch today") that were already being embraced by MercyMe fans before this batch of songs left the studio.
The album kicks off with "This Life" with an electronic rock beat in the style of Electric Light Orchestra. The chorus "this life was meant to shine" sums up the message of the song and album. I've been telling people that the new MercyMe album reminds me of a classic theme album like Sgt. Pepper by The Beatles or Songs For Jane by Maroon 5, both in musical diversity and with the challenging lyrics. The title track keeps the dance floor beat going and brings the theme into focus with these lyrics "He wakes up every day believing he's gonna make a change. " I was amazed at the energy of the first three songs as "Move" actually takes it up a notch musically. "Move" has a fantastic rock-dance arrangement like "This Love" by Maroon 5. True to form lyrically, the song keeps the Love Well theme going as Bart passionately sings "gonna move to a different drum no matter what life brings." A major strength of the album is how the theme of loving others is found in every single song mixed with basically three musical styles. "Crazy Enough" and "Back To You" usher in a more laid-back musical style yet continue the focus on Christ's commandment to "love one another."
For those looking for MercyMe's classic worship-filled musical style, "All of Creation," "Only You Remain," "Free" and "Won't You Be My Love" are all worship choruses written for the Church in the style of "You Reign" and "God With Us." There are no songs that I find out of place and I love how MercyMe seamlessly weaves the best of what I've come to expect from this incredible band with some new twists and turns. Amazingly, even after all of those great new songs, the songs I keep coming back to are "Beautiful" and the closing song "This So Called Love." "Beautiful" was written with the band's daughters in mind. Having three young daughters, I'm extremely moved by the passion behind the lyrics speaking of how the world says we are never good enough, yet Christ saw something beautiful in us worth dying for. Closing song "This So Called Love" is equally moving as Bart sings "If all that we do is absent of Jesus, then this `so-called' love is completely in vain."
The message of committing to extravagant selflessness and faithful optimism threads its way through every song, and while "It's one thing to be kind to someone, to be decent," Millard concludes, " if we really believe we have this hope, then to stop short--to not be the hands and feet of Jesus--seems almost offensive. Our dream is for this album to inspire others to `pay it forward' to the cross. It doesn't have to be about major sacrifices. Just let your life become such that people know what you stand for."
CLOSING THOUGHTS
The Generous Mr. Lovewell is RIDICULOUS!! That means AMAZING if you remember when that word meant something else. If you are like me and have been enjoying this band ever since the first time you heard "I Can Only Imagine," then surely this is your most anticipated release of 2010. This album truly establishes MercyMe as the premier artist in all of Christian music. I didn't think MercyMe could top All That Is Within Me but The Generous Mr. Lovewell rocks, has some incredible new musical twists and Bart's vocals have never sounded better.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Their very best yet!, May 7, 2010
This review is from: The Generous Mr. Lovewell (Audio CD)
I was a bit sceptical about getting MercyMe's new CD as it seemed to me they spent much of their time after their "Almost there" CD attempting to create another "I can only imagine", their mega-selling classic while remaining creatively stagnant. After reading a few reviews which stated this was rather experimental, I decided to get it and I'm glad I did. This CD actually sounds in places like the work of an entirely new/different band.
Most of the lyrics touch on love, especially as the album concept centers on some fictional bloke Mr. Lovewell whose capacity to love is to be emulated. A few songs are their typical anthemic Worship ballads; the #1 Coldplay-style "All of creation" (with catchy singalong "Oh o o" refrain), and "Only You remain", but almost everything else is a musical revelation.
Opening is the buzzing synth/Rock "This life", followed by the Punk/Pop "The generous Mr. Lovewell", then the truly experimental bouncy clap-filled "Move" (with jangly guitars and a bridge that sounds like the Bee Gees popped by), and the haunting midtempo "Crazy enough" with a groovy bassline (which poses the crazy notion of changing the world by loving our brother for nothing in return, sung in a laid-back lower register that reminds me of Kevin Max from dc Talk), the latter two are my favourites.
"Beautiful" is just that, and starts off with quivering guitars and electronic flourishes transforming into an anthemic Rocker. "Back to you" is lilting and Reggae-tinged. "Free" is tempo-shifting U2-style quivering/pulsing Rock, "Won't you be my love" a majestic ballad, and closing is the brief atmospheric ballad "This so called love" which tells us that if all we do is absent of Jesus, then this so called love is completely in vain.
The harmonies are lovely, the musical diversity a delight. MercyMe sound like a band coming into their own.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Christian CD of 2010, May 6, 2010
This review is from: The Generous Mr. Lovewell (Audio CD)
I am impressed by this CD. I had only heard their single "All Of Creation" before purchasing it, but have been a MercyMe fan for years (ever since "I Can Only Imagine"). There are some pop/rock sounding songs with a Christian message (like "Move"); fans of Maroon 5 may like these songs. There are some worshipful songs and some songs about love. All the songs seem to have a them of loving one another and giving back. I recommend it to fans of contemporary Christian music.
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