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dc
Talk's "Supernatural" Experience
Rebecca St. James
"Prays," Fall 1998
Audio Adrenaline,
"Some Kind of Zombie," Spring 1998
Audio Adrenaline,
"Bloom," Winter 1996
Michael Card, "Soul Anchor," Fall 2000
Steven Curtis
Chapman,
"Signs of Life," Winter 1997
Steven Curtis
Chapman, "Heaven in the Real World," Summer 1994
Jars of Clay,
"Flood," Spring 1996
Geoff Moore & The
Distance, "Threads," Spring 1998
Geoff Moore &
The Distance, "Home Run," Summer 1995
Third Day,
"Conspiracy," Spring 1998
Third Day, "Time," Spring
2000
Third Day,
"Offerings," Spring 2001 |

Moore's 'Home Run'
soars out of the park
July 28, 1995
By Frank "Buzz" Trexler
for The (Maryville, TN) Daily Times
Just looking at blond-haired Geoff Moore brings images of America: baseball, Old Glory
and applie pie. His recent project, "Home Run," says nothing about the latter,
but lots about the former two.
"My dad was a retired AAA professional baseball player with the Toledo
Mudhens," Geoff recalls fondly. "So life was always referred to in sports
analogies. In Home Run were saying , look, we are all part of a
team, and we have an opponent that were playing against that is going to throw us
all the junk that he can come up with to strike us out. And that we have friends on base
at different points in the spiritual walk. So we need to take responsibility to see that
they get home."
The groups video by the same name, which recently debuted on Z Music Television,
was shot at the minor league ballpark in Nashville and featured former major league
baseball player Tim Burke.
"I figured if we were gonna do that, I wanted it be a pretty real deal,"
Moore said in a telephone interview Tuesday from Phoenix where the band was performing at
a Church of the Nazarene national youth convention.
The 34-year-old Moore, who lives in Nashville with his wife and two sons, takes a
team-oriented approach in his political views as well and reveals something of that in
another cut on "Home Run" called "The New Americans," a
hard-rockin tribute to the "home of the brave" that Moore says has been
adopted by the youth prayer movement "See You at the Pole."
"Theyve created an album of songs that kind of encourage patriotism and
public faith and theyve included that song," Moore said.
Is the song a call to greater patriotism and political activism, or a recognition that
this happening?
"Its both acknowledging that theres a movement afoot to encourage more
people to be involved in it," Moore said.
"We are so quick to name any movement or any kind of activity in our country,
whether it be pro-life, pro-choice, the religious
right, the left, you know, were quick to want to adhere names to
every kind of movement," he said. "I think that what I really wanted to
communicate with that song was that ... whether you are of the mind that our Founding
Fathers were Christians or not, the truth is that the country was founded on Christian
principles."
Still, while that position can sometimes be divisive, Moore said the message is true no
matter where the listener is in relation to faith.
"I think part of what I wanted to communicate is there needs to be Christians
leading the way and a return to basic values, those basic biblical values that our country
was founded on," he said. "But thats also a message to people that are not
believers outside of the Christian faith. Because I think those principles are what
work."
"Part of, I guess, what I wanted to say is that, you know, loving your country and
trying to return to Godly principles is not necessarily a political affair," he said.
"Its really a personal thing, you know, its something that you commit in
the way that youre going to live.
"Hopefully it encourages some people just to be thankful for where we live and
think about what they can do to return our country to some of its basic value
systems."
Moore said his concerts attract a wide range of people, even non-Christians. His band
has played nine major festivals this summer. "When you have that many kids
youve got a a percentage of them that are faithful regular parts of the church, and
then youve people that are being invited and just come along, youve got people
that are checking it out because theyre curious, or theyre on the perimeter.
"So, you know, its certainly not like going out and playing in a club, where
youre reaching possibly a completely or a largely unchurched audience, but
theres definitely exposure to every kind of young person who comes to these events.
Its the same way with our concerts.
The band opens its fall tour Sept. 7 with Big Tent Revival, a folk-type band that
covers a lot of ground on its recent self-titled ablum from gentle acoustic sounds
to edgy blues and rock with a bit of 60s pop blended in.
Moore said Contemporary Christian Music is gaining respect, blowing away its past
reputation of being "second-grade artistically."
"Yes, there is Christian music created in a world that is not of the highest
artistic standards, but theres also a whole lot of pop music thats the same
way," Moore said.
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