Home Artists Big Daddy Weave
Big Daddy Weave PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 11 March 2008 22:39


Members
  • Mike Weaver (vocals, guitar)
  • Jeremy Redmon (guitars, vocals)
  • Jeff Jones (drums)
  • Joe Shirk (saxophones, keyboards)
  • Jay Weaver (bass, vocals)
Genre
  • Pop, folk
Label
  • Fervent Records
Status
  • Active

Bio

God's "I love you" was signed, sealed, and delivered to us when Jesus died on the cross.  There's nothing we can do to affect His end of the deal! Now our "I love you" back is  learning to simply trust and obey. ?Mike Weaver

Learning to "simply trust and obey" is a lot harder than it sounds, as the guys from Fervent  Records' band Big Daddy Weave can tell you. Sure, it may be easy enough when things are  going great?just witness the last few years of the band's career.

"Over the past few years and the other two Big Daddy Weave records [One and Only and Fields  of Grace], all of the subject matter is based on our relationship with God. We write about  all aspects of relationship with God," says Mike Weaver, lead vocalist and primary  songwriter for the band. "We were created?from Adam, in the beginning?to know and have a  relationship with God. It was Creator and the created. That's what we were made for. The  reason why we're walking and breathing and living on this earth is because of Him. We were  made, not just to go do our own thing, but we were made for Him."

Their sold-out, committed relationship with God has carried them far, as has their bond with  each other. The five guys from Big Daddy Weave have formed a family of their own, extending  past the blood brotherhood of Mike and bassist Jay Weaver, who are the basis for the band's  name. With Jeff Jones on drums, Joe Shirk on sax and keyboards and Jeremy Redmon on guitar,  Big Daddy Weave has found nearly seven years of touring and recording that have bonded them  in a way that is just as close as brothers can be.

Their debut project, One and Only, quickly became a fan favorite, debuting in SoundScan's  Christian Top 5, the highest debut for a new artist in 2002. A 2002 Gospel Music Association  Dove Award nomination for New Artist of the Year started their career off with a bang, with  hit singles like the upbeat "In Christ" and the worshipful "Audience of One," the band's  first number one song (Christian Radio Weekly CHR chart). Fields of Grace was the band's  2003 follow-up album, as the radio success continued with the hit title track from the  project.

But when it came time to work on the band's third project, the five young men in Big Daddy  Weave were really tested in the "trust and obey" category. They came up against a few  obstacles?more specifically, one large obstacle that went by the name of Hurricane Ivan.

The violent storm leveled the Weavers' family home in Mobile, Alabama, stealing photos and  memories and even ravaging the home office of Big Daddy Weave, which their parents maintain.  Unharmed, the Weavers' parents went to live with Jay and his new wife as they rebuilt, and  the rest of the members of Big Daddy cleaned up damage to their own homes after the  devastation.

Rather than heading to Nashville to work on the album, Big Daddy Weave brought recording  engineers down to their hometown. There, amidst the chaos, the band finished writing the  songs for What I Was Made For, and laid down the tracks for the project.

"From a recording side, there were a lot of things that all came together at once that  allowed our album to be postponed past our deadline, including the hurricane," says Jeremy.  "It definitely put a halt on things?our worlds kind of went upside down there for a little  while, in good ways and bad ways."

"But God is faithful," Mike says passionately. "At the end of the storm, making the album?I  feel like all of us are at a better place than when we went into it. We can see the hand of  God. We can see how God drew communities together in our area. In the middle of the abundant  life He's promised, in the middle of even the worst parts of that, honestly, He can turn  disaster into something miraculous."

In this case, something miraculous manifests itself in the soul-searching lyrics and dynamic  musical performances on the band's latest release. Having produced together previously, Mike  and Jeremy again took the helm as producers for What I Was Made For. Working together was  natural, say the two, and the band agrees that it was a perfect fit.

"When songs come to me, they come to me with things already in place?not just a chord  progression and when the songs come, they already sound like Big Daddy Weave," says Mike.  "Jeremy understands me. In so many ways, he already knows what is inside my head. He knows  how to really bring out the best in us."
"Musically I think as a band we've just grown," Jeremy says. "In some ways it is a little  more guitar driven, a little bigger, more rock and roll. We're definitely trying to figure  out ways to use the same elements, like Joe and the sax. We're trying to find new ways to  feature it, like with the bass sax, which has such a cool addition to what he's able to do  with some of the heavier rock and roll stuff. It's great to be able to bring in that element  and still sound like Big Daddy Weave."

The latest song to hit the airwaves is featured on both What I Was Made For and the compilation Absolute Modern Worship. "You're Worthy of My Praise" is a classic worship song  that the band has performed for years, made new with production by Otto Price and guest  vocals by label mates BarlowGirl. With the popularity of both bands, it is no surprise that  the song has become another No. 1 hit for Big Daddy Weave.

The band welcomes another very special guest, Fred Hammond, on "Killing Me Again," a reprise  from their early indie project. Described by the band as a fusion of Sting and Stevie  Wonder, the song's funky sound is punctuated by an intense message and Hammond in a unique  role.

"The lyric is kind of hard core, because it is about addiction, about dealing with habitual  sin," says Mike. "The song is about this situation where somebody is sneaking around to  participate in this secret sin, and then Fred comes in on the chorus like the voice of God,  saying, When I see you running away, it makes me want to cry, When I see you reminding me of  the day I had to die, Don't you know that in my heart, I still can feel the pain, because  when I see you, it's like killing me all over again."

Known as a powerful live band, Big Daddy Weave has been continually on the road, on tour  with Rebecca St. James, FFH, Geoff Moore, Todd Agnew and label mates Exit East. With all the  success and travel, you might think the band's personal lives would take a backseat.

Instead, the Big Daddy family has grown even more in the year-and-a-half since their last  album. Jeff and his wife Stephanie were the first to expand the Big Daddy brood with the  arrival of their daughter Hannah in mid 2004. Not to be outdone, Joe and his wife Amanda  welcomed baby Alana in early 2005. Younger brother Jay tied the knot in late 2003 with wife  Emily, and the two welcomed a daughter in the spring of 2005.

With Jeremy already married, the newest addition means that all of the Big Daddies are now  spoken for. May 2005 is set aside for the wedding of Mike and Kandice, with a match made in  Christian music heaven, so to speak?she is the marketing guru for their label, Fervent  Records.

"When Jesus said, I've come to bring you life, and life abundantly, it was like, that's the  gamut. It's not just, I come to bring you the good days abundantly, which some people read  into that. It's everything," says Mike. "And the biggest picture of that for me was that I  ultimately found the girl I was going to marry literally the same time that the hurricane  happened that tore apart my parents' home."

Brother Jay agrees. "Having gone through all the mess, I would still sit back and say I  would much rather go through my darkest day with Him than go through my brightest days  without Him. That's been huge for us. For a while it was crazy. My wife and I in our first  year of marriage, four months in, find out that there's going to be a little one coming  along, and then next thing you know, here's mom and dad. She's got the whole nesting vibe,  and they're living in the nest!"

As the boys in Big Daddy have seen, we all share life abundantly, from hit songs that change  lives to hurricanes that change lives. But even in the bad days, there is good to be found  in every situation when we let God's hand take control?simply trust and obey.

Official Artist Site: BigDaddyWeave.com

Discography

What Life Would Be Like(2008) 
Everytime I Breathe(2006)
What I Was Made For (2005)
Fields of Grace (2003)
One and Only (2002)
Neighborhoods (2001)


 
 
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