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BY ED VITAGLIANO
| AFA JournalNews Editor
Rock music seems more omnipresent than ever, being used to pitch
everything from Big Macs to Cadillacs. So why not use it to make
a pitch for the kingdom?
Christian rock has been around for decades, but what one Christian
group does is unique: rewriting the lyrics of secular hits to reflect
a Biblical message.
The group is called ApologetiX, based on the word apologetics,
which refers to a defense of the Christian faith. For the last 12
years, ApologetiX has parodied secular rock n roll,
rap, and country music by mimicking the sound of popular hits. And
because the songs are parodies of the originals, the approach is
perfectly legal.
John "J" Jackson, who writes most of the lyrics and sings
lead vocals for the group, told AFA Journal in an interview,
"I started out writing these parodies to teach myself Bible
verses and the guitar." He said he never dreamed that God would
use such songs in the manner that He has.
Jackson and the other regulars in ApologetiX Karl Messner,
lead guitar; Keith Haynie, bass guitar; and Bill Rieger, drums
are all born again Christians with one goal in mind. "What
we try to do is to reach the lost and teach the rest," he said.
Music, of course, can be a great teacher. "Many of us learned
our ABCs from the words which were sung to the tune of Twinkle,
Twinkle, Little Star. Using music to teach is an old technique,"
he said.
And using parody is also effective. Noting that parody has been
around since the days of ancient Greece, Jackson said that even
today many people in Western culture seemed particularly attracted
to it. "I think things like Mad magazine, Saturday
Night Live, Weird Al Yankovic that have all been around
for a lot of years I think parody is attractive to people,"
he said. "So why not use the thing thats already effective?"
ApologetiX has a current library of over 500 parodies, with about
200 out on the groups nine CDs.
When listening to their albums, one finds the groups musical
talent is obvious, such as the guitar work in "Cheap Birds,"
a parody of the Lynyrd Skynyrd hit, "Free Bird." Most
of the songs are a dead-on imitation of the original recordings.
But the lyrics are the most captivating thing about the ApologetiX
approach. Most of the songs are extremely clever, like "Bethlehemian
Rhapsody," a funny David-versus-Goliath take on "Bohemian
Rhapsody," a rock classic by the group Queen.
The songs are also sometimes quite inspiring, such as the uplifting
message in "You Aint Been Nothing Yet," a song about
Moses, based on the Bachman-Turner Overdrive early 70s classic,
"You Aint Seen Nothing Yet."
The group does parodies of up-to-date songs as well as music from
the more classic vein, and the dual approach has paid off. Jackson
said, "One of the things we see is that there will be two or
three generations at our concerts, and theyre all identifying
with our music," because of the wide selection.
"Having done this for 12 years now, weve seen its
effect on people. People get saved, they get encouraged to read
their Bibles, encouraged to share the gospel with others. Weve
even seen suicides averted," he said.
Its one of those God things that you back
into, you think, by accident, and then you look back in retrospect
and you see that He was guiding it all the time.
www.apologetix.com
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