Acclaimed singer Plumb at The Christian Post's New
York City office on May 14, 2015.
Two years after the release of her
Sandy Hook shooting-inspired album Need You Now, acclaimed Christian
singer Plumb is back with what could possibly be her most raw and compelling
project yet and she's not afraid to let it be known that she's been through
some things.
Exhale, which debuted at No. 1 on iTunes earlier this
month, marks the Nashville-based singer's seventh studio album and she recently
shared with The Christian Post how overcoming a number of life's hurdles,
including the near demise of her marriage, inspired the new album.
"...I just made it with a
completely new heart, a different head space, a different agenda," Plumb,
40, told CP about Exhale.
"I feel like God has given me a
second chance at a lot of things, including my marriage and being an artist and
so I just have kind of a cup overflowing with thankfulness," she said.
"So this record lent itself more to worship … this is a typical Plumb
record which is a response to where I've been and it's like a journal coming to
life being put to music … I'm just in a really worshipful, thankful place and
so the record reflects that."
The singer-songwriter, otherwise
known as Tiffany Arbuckle Lee, said previously that "evil" was to
blame for her separation from her husband Jeremy, with whom she shares three
children. The couple, married for 15 years, was able to reconcile with the help
of a licensed Christian marriage and family therapist and by leaning on their
faith.
"God did a miracle in our
marriage and brought us back to each other, but before He did that He made us better
as individuals ... I feel like now we're sort of a force to be reckoned with
against evil," she said. "… We were headed for divorce and God took
his gloves off and told Satan where he could stick it. He fought for me, but I
learned that you have to give God that permission."
Since launching her music career in
1997, Plumb has sold more than 500,000 albums and over two million singles
worldwide.
She is often praised for her pensive
lyrics and angelic voice, which are exceptional and brought to a whole new
level on Exhale. The album, she says, is a testament to how following
Jesus enabled her to triumph over evil.
"The record as a whole is just
this one huge exhale of breathing out what God's allowed me to breathe in,
however; smoke, as we all know, is not breathable and when God redeems that
though it becomes oxygen," she said also noting that "Smoke" is
the name of her favorite song on the 12-track album.
"And so smoke leaves ash and
sit which is worthless but when God redeems that it becomes beauty. So I feel
like that song represents my existing story of just crash and burn and
redemption and rebuild so well. So on top of the fact that it does that, it's
also just sonically, artistically it's my favorite song on the record. It's my
favorite song to play live."
Last week the Dove award-winning
artist debuted the music video for the album's title track "Exhale"
and within its first week it received more than 40,000 YouTube views and
garnered over 500 likes. The clip has been hailed for its minimalist vision and
creative imagery.
"We just wanted something clean
so that the music could speak for itself and it not be too distracted by a
storyline," said Plum. "The aerial dancers in it I think give it a
definite texture of beauty, but if you listen to the lyric of "just let
go, let His love wrap around you and hold you close" and there's just a
freedom of [the aerial dancers] falling from the fabric. The freedom in their
dancing, it just kind of … it's kind of a reflection of the energy of the song but
there's no spiritual meaning to the aerial dancers it was just beautiful. A
clean, live band."
For years, Plumb has been praised
for her ability to reach broad audiences and propel them closer to faith
through her music, which in the past has successfully crossed over from
Contemporary Christian music into dance. While for many fans, her songs are a
testament of the gospel, the singer admits that staying grounded in her faith
is not always easy.
"It can be difficult, I think I
used to answer that kind of flippantly and just be like 'oh it's just who you
are' but I got really off track [in the past] and so I take that a lot more
seriously and a lot more intentionally about that," she shared. "But
I think community is probably the most important, having people in your corner
that are going to fight for you even if that means they're going to fight you.
And that they know who you are, with or without your artistry, music, money or
fame…people who don't care about that stuff, who just love you. So for me
having a really tremendous community that knows me before I was ever an artist
and they're still active and living this journey with me helps to keep me
grounded because it reminds me who I really am and who I've been and who I
wanna be."
No comments:
Post a Comment