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19th
April, 2006
JOE
MONTAGUE
In another time, at another
place, he might have been a minstrel - perhaps a contemporary
of Chaucer, Milton or Christopher Marlowe. Kevin Max, however,
was born centuries later in the United States and instead
uses his brilliant musical mind to pen poetic lyrics for contemporary
songs that challenge you to think about your faith, life and
how you are going to improve both.
Weighing up whether he would rather be a poet or a songwriter,
Max says he would rather be "by far, a poet because poetry
is all about being in the moment and to me it is most exciting
when you are in the moment”.
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“Poetry
really inspired me as a writer. As a young kid I used
to read the poems of Walter Whitman and Oscar Wilde
and E.E. Cummings. Without that I wouldn't be interested
in songwriting.”
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“Poetry is
about creating and it seems to me to be a lost art,”
he says. “Poetry really inspired me as a writer. As
a young kid I used to read the poems of Walter Whitman and
Oscar Wilde and E.E. Cummings. Without that I wouldn't be
interested in songwriting.”
But Max does add that it would be a difficult choice to make.
"I like singing so much. I grew up singing. I would opt
for poetry though because then I could grow a beard and walk
around the streets in Seattle. If I could go down in history
as a poet or a songwriter I would want to be a poet because
poetry was here way before songwriting was. There are enough
songwriters around."
Max admits to being an introspective writer. In fact his song
Shaping Space is reminiscent of the Beatles' Strawberry
Fields Forever and Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band.
"I am a big fan of the Beatles, (especially) their later
stuff,” he says. “I really loved a lot of Lennon's
solo stuff. Imagine is one of those songs that you
could play throughout the day and not get tired of it. I think
what Lennon did for me as a Christian singer/songwriter was
to cause me to question what I believe in. Do I really believe
that the Scripture is true? I believe to this day that my
faith is warranted because of my studies and understanding
of the Scripture as truth."
He says Lennon's song Imagine influenced what he was trying
to accomplish with his own song Shaping Space.
"A song like Imagine can still make you understand
the grace of God. What I was trying to say with Shaping
Space is God is much bigger than the four walls that
we like to put Him inside. Shaping Space is one of
those decadent songs that some people will say you just let
all of your influences spill out. I wanted to write a song
that was all about bringing people together. In my mind that
is what the song Imagine was trying to do."
One might be inclined to say that Kevin Max tells hard-hitting
parables not unlike those Jesus told. His in-your-face lyrics
are intended to encourage those who understand their meaning
and hopefully to jar out of complacency those who are more
intent on maintaining political correctness.
The title track from his 2005 CD, The Imposter, is
a beautifully textured song. Driven by Byron Hagan's heavy
drum beats and some memorable guitar riffs from Max, Erick
Cole and bassist Elijah Thomson, The Imposter possesses
thought-provoking lyrics.
Sonically, Max's music has imprints of British rock bands
from the Seventies and Eighties. Your Beautiful Mind,
for example, has a sound reminiscent of Freddie Mercury and
Queen. The story behind it is one of a believer's struggles
with faith: "And I find your beautiful mind in everything;
And everything is all I need; I find your beautiful eyes see
everything; so show me something beautiful; I find your beautiful
eyes see right through me; so show me what you want me to
be."
Max says he wasn't into American rock 'n roll in high school
and college.
“It
is almost impossible to get out of the shadow of DC
Talk at this point in my life...”
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“I listened
to the Brits because in my opinion they were making the best
music and continue to on different levels today. I think American
music has a great past and history but it is a little bit
before my time."
"When I was growing up bands like The Who, Pink Floyd,
Echo, The Smiths and Queen were who influenced me (musically).
Actually I was talking to someone yesterday who asked me who
influenced me and strangely enough it was Bryan Ferry and
Roxy Music. People thing I must have been listening to Stevie
Wonder or the Imperials. The point is it is completely the
opposite. I have made no bones in the past about what influenced
me," says Max.
There is an influence from Max's past that although he is
proud of it, only now, after four years, is he starting to
escape its shadow. was a member of the four time Grammy winning
group DC Talk that sold in excess of eight million records.
"It is almost impossible to get out of the shadow of
DC Talk at this point in my life. Maybe 10 years down the
road it won't even be a story,” he says. “Right
now it is a difficult thing to get people to realise that
I am a solo artist. The music that I make is not DC Talk.
It is not even on the same level of what DC Talk was trying
to do as far as the motivation, vision and goals behind it
(the music).
“Creatively, my motivation and goals are very different
than the ones DC Talk had. (I find) it difficult to separate
myself from all those perceptions. I am not bitter about it
because when I look back for the most part I think DC Talk
made a lot of great music. I am very proud of the CDs
Jesus Freak and Supernatural. I think they were
two really great records. We did some good videos and some
good tours behind those projects so I am proud of it but at
the same time it is very difficult to shake the image of being
one of the guys from DC Talk."
Max's creativity hasn't suffered from his being a solo artist
and his CD The Imposter is populated with plenty
of great tunes such as Platform and Stay (The
Same As Yesterday) that bear that European influence.
"I think European culture as a whole has a different
outlook on creativity and art. I think they look at being
creative as almost a way of life. Americans are propelled
more by the idea of making money and that is not to say Americans
don't think creatively as well. I think we spend more time
thinking about the industry rather than how we can sit down
and grow somebody's mind. European culture is more about taking
risks and being creative.
“I really appreciate the fact that artists like Radiohead
instead of going out and making the record everybody wants
to hear might move off the path and make something like Amnesiac.
I look up to people who can do that and put great art into
the industry."
The second major change in Max's career occurred when he moved
to the American west coast city of Los Angeles.
"Nashville would have been a lot easier for me to survive
as an artist because of the history of DC Talk and (the band's)
relationships,” he says.
"To
work only the Christian music industry is not the
primary goal to me. One of the goals is to continue
building the crowd that I have affected through DC
Talk and through the last four years of being a solo
artist."
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“It would
have been easy to program the same music and reach out to
the same (audience) that we were involved with as DC Talk.
In Los Angeles, (however) I am in a brand new market altogether.
Even though we continue to bring music to the Christian market
I have also been branching out into the general market. I
have been pitching to general market booking agencies. Recently
we have been taking The Imposter to general market
labels. The goal is to see this music happen on a large scale.
To work only the Christian music industry is not the primary
goal to me. One of the goals is to continue building the crowd
that I have affected through DC Talk and through the last
four years of being a solo artist."
Max says the accessibility to large distributors, agents and
mainstream labels in the City of Angels helps create better
opportunities for him to broaden his listening audience. "I
can sit down and have a meeting versus sending people CDs
or music through the internet. It is however (still) about
the music. If you are able to create the music that is going
to get the ears of the right people who will project your
music into the general public then you are doing well,"
he says.
Just so people don't get the wrong impression Max views broadening
his audience as a way of influencing more people for Christ.
Although not all of his songs will have overt Christian lyrics
one shouldn't forget that he is addressing everyday life issues
from a Christian perspective.
Songs such as Sanctuary from The Imposter CD
extend an offer of hope to those going through difficult times
and living in a war torn world.
"It is the first song that Andy Prickett and I wrote
together for the record. To be honest I started writing that
as a political tune about peace. I decided to stay more subtle
because I am not into politics that much. I think it was good
for me to write more about heaven than anything else and heaven
as being the place of ultimate peace."
Even though Max still has a passion for performing, the aspect
of his career that brings the most enjoyment, is getting into
the studio to create and write music.
“I would have to say the joy in creating a song is number
one in my books."
The most important facet of his life these days, however,
is wife Amanda Lynn and daughter London Ava Kay.
"I look at life through my daughter's eyes now. I think
where are we going with all of this? As a musician 10 years
down the road am I going to be able to get her braces? Am
I going to be able to put her through college? Am I going
to be able to buy her favorite dress? How are we going to
raise her within the church? How are we going to tell her
about good and bad?”
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