Few bands in any genre can claim a Grammy nomination for every album they have recorded. Big Tent Revival is one such band. But even with three critically acclaimed albums, numerous Dove and Grammy...
Few bands in any genre can claim a Grammy nomination for every album they have recorded. Big Tent Revival is one such band. But even with three critically acclaimed albums, numerous Dove and Grammy nominations, and a slew of #1 radio hits to their credit, they insist that the accolades, while affirming, are not the reason the band exists. Driven by a desire for musical excellence and spiritual maturity, Steve Wiggins (guitar/vocals), Spence Smith (drums), Randy Williams (lead guitar), Steve Dale (bass), and David Alan (keyboards), hit the road for 200 dates per year for one single purpose—to tell the world about Jesus. Whether they are speaking to 5000 kids in a packed out concert hall, or having a quiet conversation over coffee at the local Waffle House, inevitably they will challenge their audience to Choose Life.Meeting at the corner booth at Merridee's Restaurant to discuss their recently completed fourth album, Wiggins, Smith, and Williams joke about a variety of guy things before settling into a battle of who has the best scar story. Wiggins wins with a hilarious tale of how he got stitches in his cranium. But, true to their calling, even jokes about scars soon evolve into a discussion about Jesus. The great thing about scars is that they remind you of what not to do, Wiggins says. Whatever you did that cut you, it didn't just heal—it left a remembrance. Our scars are defining moments in our lives, and we are often known by our scars. When you think about Christ, we are known by His scars.We work in an industry where people try to only show the perfect side of all these artists, he continues. But if we've learned one thing, it's that people don't relate to your perfection. They might admire it and give it a 'golf clap.' They might say, 'Wow, you are so cool. You sure are holy.' But they won't relate to it. People relate to your imperfections, to the struggles you go through in life, to your scars. If we were perfect we wouldn't need a Savior. We, as a band, try to be vulnerable enough to show the world our scars.This is a generation that needs to grow up, and shoulder some responsibility, Wiggins insists, but with close to 50% of marriages failing, they have no paradigm on which to build. On Choose Life, Wiggins draws from his experience as a husband and father to craft songs that speak to the needs of a fatherless generation.There are a lot of people out there with no father figure, Wiggins continues. But even if you don't have a father who is prominent in your life, there is a Father in heaven. And you are not bugging Him when you come to him with your problems. He truly loves you and he embraces you—not as a step-child, not as an orphan in need of sympathy, but as His child. Wiggins addresses this lack of a father figure in Livin' Off Of Your Love, an energetic, acoustic rock number that is all the more memorable because of the seriousness of its message. I was an orphan/ Alone and wild/ You said come to me just like a child. It is a message Wiggins says he, along with hundreds of thousands of kids can relate to. I didn't grow up in a broken home, Wiggins confesses. But I grew up in a breaking home, Wiggins says of his parents' divorce, which occurred after he was an adult. My parents stayed together for the kids, which is noble in theory, I suppose. But if you are going to make the commitment to stay together and hate each other for the next 20 years, you might as well make the commitment to stay together and love each other.
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