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Local band wins Christian music festival, advances

Blake Maples, drummer in The Frequency, rehearses with bandmates in a west side home’s basement in Jefferson City on Wednesday evening. (Julie Smith/News Tribune photo)

By Michelle Brooks
mbrooks@newstribune.com
Published: Sunday, June 22, 2008 3:43 PM CDT
Fresh full-course meals served each hour, backstage passes, premiere parking, preferential treatment and hob-nobbing with top name artists like BarlowGirl or Downhere - being treated like a rock star is a childhood dream for many.

For members of The Frequency, they experienced it at the Crossover Christian Music Festival in Camdenton last weekend. They went from being unknowns to being sought out by strangers because of their grand prize-winning music.

Nick Bacon submitted a recording to the regional competition for the Christian Festival Association's National Talent Search with Provident Label Group.

The other guys thought he was crazy - until he called them with the news they had one week to write two performance-ready songs.

“I was ready, I was going,” Bacon said.

The guys met in Blake Maples's basement and worked out lyric ideas, instrumental sounds and infusing their faith.


“We turned on the strobe lights and turned off the lights and let the creativity flow,” said Maples, who plays drums and some keyboard.

Their sound is no different than secular music, so writing the music came easier to Maples and Tyler Long. But Bacon, their lead vocalist, had never written lyrics before.

Finally, they honed in on what became “Questions.”

“It's about personal struggles I had and how my faith pulled me through,” Bacon said.

Their second song “Welcome to the Light” came easier through upbeat fun and praise jamming, Maples said.

“It was God ... and the strobe lights,” he said.

As the days dwindled, they still were working out instrumental details and back-up vocals when drummer and rhythm guitarist Shay Johnson found out he couldn't go. That's when they called in Chad Brade, with two-days notice, to learn the new songs.

But the last night before their performance, their nervous feelings went out the door when they had the songs refined where they wanted them, said Long, who plays lead guitar. Even Raymond Schmidt was comfortable enough to try a special effect by using a cello bow on his bass for a part.

Friday morning when they arrived at the Crossover Festival stage, they learned they would be the first band up of 13 for the weekend.

“There were a bunch of out-of-state bands with their own recordings,” Maples said. “No one knew who we were.”

That was to their advantage as they took the stage with nothing to lose and hearts prepared simply to praise.

“It was our first show together ... it went perfectly,” Maples said.

Bacon added, “we just had fun up there.”

“It was an unexplainable feeling ... the vibe from each other,” Long said.

When The Frequency was announced as Friday's semi-final winner, that's when their pampering began. They even let BarlowGirl borrow their amp.

Saturday was different, as they listened to the other bands, including another Jefferson City group, who were very impressive.

“We got our doubts going, all we could do is pray and hope for the best,” Bacon said.

When their name was called a second time as the grand prize regional winners, they literally fell over themselves in celebration. But as Long took the microphone, “there was only one person to thank - God,” he said.

“It was too good to be true. We're going to Nashville to compete for a recording label,” Bacon said.

As days pass since their selection, the band members have transitioned from the feeling of royalty back to reality.

They'll need to write enough songs to fill a 30-minute performance this fall in Nashville, Tenn. And they need to line up some local gigs and raise the funds to cover their travel expenses.

“I think we're spiritually and emotionally ready to go (to Nashville),” Long said. “But physically and musically, we have a lot of work to do.”

But as they dream of the potential record label that would come with winning in Nashville, they continually remind each other to “have fun and play our music for a purpose, rather than for personal gain,” Bacon said.

“Bacon's on poetic rage and the Lord's got something to say,” Long said.

Long, Maples, Schmidt and Johnson had been the band, “A War in May,” for about five years.

This opportunity helped heal some hurt from their past and renew the camaraderie and sense of brotherhood the First Baptist Church youth have had.

“I never thought we would play together again,” Maples said. “It's God. I think he used this to bring us back together, it gave us something to write for again.”

For Bacon, who had devoted the last four years to high school football, “this was a chance to get into something I love,” he said. “Christian music ties in the faith factor and music.

“To get together with these guys was a great opportunity to join in our faith. It felt good because we felt it was not only ourselves ... our writing was inspired.”

The song, “Questions,” shared Bacon's personal story, ideas he had in the past reserved only for friends, he said.

To open up and sing about those thoughts, “shows people how much faith you have, that you're willing to talk about those struggles and believe there's something better.”

“It's cool our style can reach both secular and Christian people,” Long said. “We don't want to be limited to Christians - they've already been reached.”

Bacon agreed. “we have a sound everyone wants to hear (but with) a deeper message for those who want to listen.

“It's like going on a mission trip to help children (elsewhere), then you remember there are plenty of people here who need help too.”

Call (573) 230-8270 or e-mail: JCJaybirds27@yahoo.com to contact The Frequency.

Weblink:

www.myspace.com/thefrequencynation.



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