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Jars of Clay
Jars
of Clay began at Greenville College in Greenville,
IL when four young lads met and discovered
friendship through music. They were majors in
"Contemporary Christian Music", a somewhat recent
department in the college. Charlie Lowell, Dan
Haseltine and Matt Bronleewe had been there for
the year of 1992 and played in various bands as
well as producing their own studio projects.
These bands included Chrysalis, Jazon, Yellow
#7, Second Level, and many other school
bands involving students from the CCM
department as well as others. When Stephen
Mason appeared on the scene in September of
1993, and had similar interests in music,
the guys decided to write a song together,
"just for fun". Dan had met Stephen because
he had a Toad the Wet Sprocket shirt on, a
band which they both admired for their
unique sound.
The band wrote and recorded a song called
"Fade to Grey", which included many drum
loops and samples, a very techno-oriented
song. It was simply a studio project for
credit in a recording class. Their friends
enjoyed the song and they performed it in
late October for a college cafe called the
"Underground Cafe", which they had put
together to raise money for homeless
shelters and jail ministries. The
"Underground" was the dormitory that the
vast majority of music majors inhabited. The
band continued classes and when they found
more time, decided to play "Little Drummer
Boy" for the Underground Cafe on December
7th, as it was nearing Christmas time. A
strange and distorted version of "Rudolph
the Red-Nosed Reindeer" was also played
impromptu this evening, to the tune of
Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
Following Christmas vacation, the four
of them decided they'd like to write
additional songs to add to their live
repertoire and satisfy the requirements of
their recording studio class, but thought it
would be appropriate to give a name to these
collaborations. Charlie recalled a Bible
verse he had read which discussed the
frailty of man, and the irony that this
amazing life has been breathed into our
frail, physical bodies by our Lord. This
passage, which related the struggles of man
and the testing of our wills and bodies,
which ultimately provides us the strength to
endure the hardships of life, included the
phrase "Jars of Clay". The phrase was penned
by the Apostle Paul, and was from 2
Corinthians, chapter four verse seven: "But
we have this treasure in jars of clay, to
show that this all-surpassing power is from
God and not from us". The band thought that
was a good way to keep themselves humble -
to have a band name that would force them to
continually realize that all of their
blessings had come from God, including this
talent to write songs that their classmates
enjoyed. So in January of 1994, Jars of Clay
was born.
"Love Song for a Savior", a
repetitive but catchy pop tune, one which
was popular with classmates. In high school,
Dan had read a book called "Death by Child
Abuse" by Ursula Sunshine. The book detailed
the struggle for survival of a young girl
who had been abused and killed by a family
member. This touched his heart and the band
wanted to write not about the depressing
actions she underwent, but the hope that we
have despite the troubles the world has.
They penned "He" in March and recorded it
for fun. Following this, they played a brief
concert at Tower Grove Christian School in
St. Louis on March 18, and also scheduled a
concert at Grace Community Baptist Church,
in Trenton, IL for the 23rd of March. In
addition, they performed a concert in
Steve's hometown and played two shows at Six
Flags for a Christian festival.
The
classes continued and the band struggled for
time to write together. Charlie noticed an
advertisement in CCM Magazine for a talent
contest, which he thought would be fun to
enter - and had no expectations of being
chosen to play live months later in
Nashville for record companies. Ten
finalists were chosen from all of the demos
sent in, and Jars of Clay were elated to be
one of them.
On April 27, 1994, Jars
of Clay performed for the Gospel Music
Association Spotlight Competition at 328
Performance Hall in Nashville, TN. This
appearance was the final test of the
competition for best new Christian band, and
Jars passed the test obtaining the grand
prize. The played "Fade to Grey" and "Like a
Child" complete with choreography and baby
"binkies" in their mouths and met with great
response from record companies who were
present.
Also in April, the band decided to
finish up their demo cd which was entitled
Frail. They printed 1,000 copies for friends
and family members to purchase and had a
small release party at school. The copies
went fast, and by June they printed 500 more
for record companies and those who weren't
able to obtain them the first time around.
They returned to Greenville to finish up
the year and finally played for the school
again in May at a "Midnight Breakfast". At
this event they played "Love Song for a
Savior" and "Fade to Grey" for their
classmates, and received an overwhelming
response. Two concerts were performed this
month for the Agape Festival in Greenville
at this time.
Meanwhile, they received
phone calls on their dormitory pay phone
from record companies seeking out the band
and wanting to sign them for an album. The
band then decided that they should pursue
the avenue of music and move to Nashville,
putting their college careers "on hold".
Matt Bronleewe decided to continue with
school for the time, and was getting married
as well, so decided not to move to Nashville
with the band. Because the band's sound
included an acoustic guitar duo, it was
necessary to find a new member to fill the
gaps, and Charlie's best friend from high
school decided after much debate to join the
band and move to Nashville in August. Matt
Odmark had been at the University of
Rochester as an English major but enjoyed
playing his guitar at small cafe's. His
assimilation into the band was difficult due
to his lack of involvement in the music
industry, but by August the band was very
comfortable together while they lived in
close quarters in a small two bedroom
apartment in Antioch, TN. They also accepted
jobs during this time, at places such as
pizza shops, mall stores and book warehouses
while waiting for the contract, and wondered
if they ever really would be able to sign
with a company.
They shopped their
demo and met with many record companies
during the summer, negotiated their
potential contracts with a lawyer during
autumn, and in winter finally signed with
Essential Records, a division of Brentwood
Music (now collectively entitled Provident
Records). This was an unexpected step for
the band, as Essential was the smallest
company that they interviewed with, but they
felt it was most like a family. In addition,
Essential had solid backing power from the
larger Brentwood Music company which owned
it, and Brentwood used a secular
distributor, Silvertone Records of Zomba/Jive,
in order to reach a wider audience.
During autumn, they also made time for
occasional performances during their busy
work schedules. They played a show on
September 29 for about forty people at
"Stage Left" (literally the left side of a
stage) at Austin Peay University in
Clarksville, TN. They rented all of the
equipment needed for this show and actually
lost a significant amount of money but
enjoyed the experience. They played 40
minutes of their new songs and 40 minutes of
cover tunes by PFR, The Monkees, Third
Matinee, New Order, Toad the Wet Sprocket,
and others. They scheduled other occasional
shows, one with Sixpence None the Richer at
Rocketown in October, another acoustic
performance at AM/PM coffeehouse, one at a
Catholic high school in St. Louis, a concert
at Greenville again with Sixpence, and
finally, Caffe Milano in Nashville, TN.
During winter and spring they recorded
their debut album for Essential and released
the album in May 1995 following their first
real tour on which they opened for PFR and
Brent Bourgeois. An intern at Essential, who
was a good friend of the guys, happened to
be the niece of improvisational guitarist
and prolific songwriter Adrian Belew. She delivered the
Frail demo to him and he was very impressed.
Belew had also been investigating the
Christian faith, so he decided to produce a
couple songs for the album. His previous
collaborations with Laurie Anderson, The
Talking Heads, Nine Inch Nails, David Bowie,
Frank Zappa and longtime involvment with
King Crimson, not to mention many solo
albums, made him a primary candidate for
producer. They decided to have him produce
"Flood" and "Liquid", the more alternative
songs, and then they self-produced the
remainder of the songs on the album for lack
of money. Many studio musicians were brought
in to fill in gaps and Ron Huff did lush
string arrangements to embellish the songs
and give them their unique orchestral
quality.
The first single from the
debut album released to Christian radio was
"Flood", and lingered at number one for a
long time. The band met with high critical
acclaim in numerous Christian magazine
articles and other sources due to the unique
harmonies and instrumentation on the album
as well as their extreme honesty and
relational lyrics discussing real life
situations and faith in God who pulls us
through difficult challenges.
Meanwhile, secular radio stations somehow
caught on to the popularity of this song and
some of them began to play it. This is when
Essential Records decided to use parent
label Silvertone to promote the album and
send out CD singles to radio stations.
Many of the radio stations loved the
single and began to put it into regular
rotation because after it was played, the
phones would ring constantly with
inquisitive listeners wondering where the
song came from. Jars of Clay had now played
a few festivals in the summer of 1995 and
decided to sign up for another tour opening
for PFR and Brent Bourgeois. Following this
tour, they learned that they had been
invited to open for Michael W. Smith on his
national tour in early 1996 and accepted the
invitation with gratitude. A concert at The
Foundry in Nashville was held to raise money
for the Child Abuse Center of Middle
Tennessee and the Drummer Boy Christmas EP
was released to raise money for this agency
as well. Special guests at the concert
included Phil Keaggy and Cindy Morgan.
1996 was the year of intense success for
the band. "Flood" hit the #1 position on
numerous secular radio stations due to its
popularity in the northwestern U.S. where
many alternative bands were popular, and the
album remained in the top 60 albums for much
of the year, also remaining in Billboard's
Top 200 albums for the entire 52 week cycle.
The album went 'gold' and shortly after
attained platinum status. The debut album
has now sold around 2,000,000 copies.
The Michael W. Smith shows were very
successful and the band promoted the album
heavily by performing and interviewing at
many instore appearances and secular radio
shows. They continued to tour on their own
through the summer of 1996 and decided to
take the music to the club circuit where
secular listeners could feel comfortable
seeing the band where they see their other
favorite bands. This became an intense
ministry but also brought with it much
sarcasm and disappointment for the Christian
audiences who sometimes accused them of
"going secular" although nothing about their
lyrics, music or spiritual lives had
changed. Their goals changed gradually as
they realized that they could minister to an
audience that no one else could seem to
reach.
The band set up a very
professional headlining tour of theaters
such as The Roxy and House of Blues theaters
for autumn 1996. They purchased their own
sound and lights and brought Roddy Chiong, a
violinist, on tour, opening the shows with a
classical violin piece and using backdrops
such as folded curtains, oriental rugs and
candleabras. The Samples opened the concerts
for the first couple weeks and were shortly
after dropped due to an incompatibility with
Jars as well as their audience. The Gufs
were a nice opening band for the concerts,
and many other bands opened shows for Jars
during this time as well, including Sarah
Masen, Duncan Sheik, Matchbox 20 and Sarah
Jahn.
By the end of 1996, the band
was worn out from touring and in need of
some new material for their sophomore
effort, so they began writing songs to use
for a new album. They interviewed many
producers and decided on Steve Lipson, who
had produced Simple Minds, Prefab Sprout,
Annie Lennox and many other releases. Lipson
came over and helped to engineer the album
at Xanadu studios outside of Nashville.
Following this period they continued to tour
sporadically and take occasional trips to
London where Lipson resides, to mix the
album in his studio.
This was mostly
done in a somewhat dreary part of England,
when the guys were apart from their wives -
thus the occasional dark sounds & themes.
Although the band was very happy with the
album, it did not sell as many copies as the
first (although it still went platinum). If
anything, it was too perfect or
"overproduced" for the ears of most
pop-radio listeners. It did yield the normal
amount of Christian radio hits and Five
Candles & Crazy Times could occasionally be
heard on secular radio as well. The band was
also approached by many motion picture
companies during this period, and were
invited to participate in the soundtracks
for various movies. These included Hard Rain
("Flood"), Liar Liar ("Five Candles"), Long
Kiss Goodnight ("The Chair"), Jack Frost
("Five Candles"), and the Prince of Egypt
("Everything in Between") soundtracks.
The Much Afraid era also brought the
guys a Grammy Award for best Gospel album of
the year, and they had the privilege of
playing Fade to Grey with an orchestra at
the '98 Dove Awards. In addition, they
launched a few major tours: "The Bubblemaker's Dream Tour" (Fall
'97/Spring '98), and "Tour 101: Back to
Basics" college tour (Fall '98/Spring '99).
They also scheduled a special concert at the
Ryman Auditorium in Nashville with the
Nashville String Machine, where they
recorded a special fan-club only 2-CD
release entitled Stringtown. This helped
them to launch a world-wide fanclub which
has had great success ever since.
The
most important personal events during this
time period were the weddings of all of the
band members. Stephen Mason also entered the
next phase of his life as a dad.
International travelling also became a
regular part of the "job". The jars did
tours in Australia and Singapore in support
of Much Afraid, and also opened a Franklin
Graham crusade in Aberdeen, Scotland, and a
couple dates in London including the
Shepherd's Bush Empire.
This brings
us to 1999, when the band wrote perhaps
their most exciting album to date: If I Left
the Zoo. Aside from tours, writing the new
album, and their new marriages, the Jars had
a tiny spare amount of time left to help out
other artists as well. Most of them appeared
on Jonathan Noel's "Hand", and Charlie
played some accordian on TV appearances with
Sixpence None the Richer.
Joe Porter
was added as a new drummer to replace Scott
Savage, who pursued a career as drummer for
Jaci Velasquez, due to musical differences
with the rest of the band. They remain great
friends and Scott has even substituted for
Joe on occasion.
If I Left the Zoo is
an exciting new project recorded with
producer Dennis Herring (Counting Crows,
Innocence Mission, Cracker) in Oxford, MS.
The title refers to the earth as a zoo, and
the album, like most Jars works, is filled
with metaphors and lyrical imagery. The
title refers to what could potentially be
accomplished if we were to leave our present
"comfort zones". Written from a standpoint
that everyone can relate to, there is a
minimum of faith-related "buzzwords",
although the lyrics are based on strong
faith principles and references to scripture
and the person of Christ, and the grace
we've been given.
Find out more by visiting
Jars of Clay's website
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