Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Grow Your Niche: Discovering Your Abilities, Talents and Gifts Pt. 2


The last thing I addressed on talents and gifts last week was growth, and I insisted that we can never undermine the role growth plays on talent: unless a talent is grown, it will soon fade away.”
Today, we continue with the third part of the four main points I was discussing which will help us grow our niche through identifying our abilities, talents and gifts;

3.     Our Passion
Quote: Passion is an aggressive approach towards talents/gifts.
I met a certain young person sometime back with an interest in building and creating mobile apps and a probable OS (yeah, that was his dream, and yes, it is right here in Kakamega – note: we’re awesome like that. Hah.) But the problem was that the boy is forever complaining about capital. Capital? Yes, capital. So I was like, “Capital my foot!!”

After hearing him rant about lack of capital, I decided to grill him. I asked him how many developers he knew that make apps that are similar to what he was going to make. Nada, he didn’t know any. Then I asked him what he wanted to call his app. No, he had no idea about that either. (Okay, he wanted to call it a name that was already existing but he knew nothing about it…) I asked him if he knew coding. No, he didn’t. Then I asked him a final grilly one: “So what do you want to make and how do you want to make it if you don’t even know it and you have no idea of your competitors?”

We reached a conclusion that he lacked passion. He lacked a deep interest in what he wanted or as aspiring to do.

We see it a lot: “I wanna be this, I wanna be that… I wanna build this, I wanna build that… bla bla bla, but these kids (anyway, even old people do this) don’t even know what they are saying.
You see, if you claim that your abilities and interest(s) are in science and that science is your stuff; or that music is your thing and you are a musician, you need to know that s*** really well. Yes, you need to know it like you always know you are hungry. Do you consult anyone – say, a doctor - to know you are hungry? No. Alright, do you consult your dad or mom to know that you need to visit the washrooms? No? Yeah, then you need to know what you are doing or what you are engaging in reaaaaaalllly well.

Let us be realistic. Without passion in your area of specialization, you are doing useless work and you are neither building your niche nor creating a brand, yet that is all this is about.
Passion is when YOU KNOW what you are doing (when you know your abilities, talents or gifts) and you are now developing them with enthusiasm (a.k.a. zeal) and enjoyment. It is when once woken up in the middle of the night and you are asked a question concerning your talent/gift, you’ll reply without hesitation or blinking, right in your sleep, and give a fascinating answer! Passion is when you stand out in the crowd because you know a little more than everyone else and your perfection in doing whatever you do is higher than everyone else. Passion resists the urge to only start a business when there is “enough” capital (like my friend above). It denies you the pleasure of being normal.

I will give you a few examples: a singer who can’t freestyle is yet to be passionate. (It’s like joining that Jaza Mistari show on @KTNKenya yet you don’t even know the lyrics of a single song… *sigh!*). A poet or a writer who needs hours in order to create a post is yet to develop passion in/for what they are doing. A dancer who needs to practice forever in order to give forth something of worth is still underdeveloped in their passion. It is passion that differentiates a good scientist/artist form a great scientist/artist. It is passion that makes your schoolmate get employed before you do, because they are awesome at what they do. Passion is a mark of awesomeness. Yeah, you need to get me really good: passion is a mark of awesomeness!!

a) Master your talent/gift
Quote: If you are able to master and enjoy every fine detail of whatever you do, then you can nurture it, grow it and create a brand out of it.
In an article Strive Masiyiwa wrote last week titled Be Consummate About What You Do!”, there is one point he reiterates: to become consummate in area of specialization, you need to master and enjoy doing whatever you do. Here is the whole article;
Last week, I attended an international conference, where I was a keynote speaker on the subject of Mobile Money Transfer services. The audience, wanted to know how our company had built one of the most successful services of its kind known as, Ecocash. One of the first things I did was to show them a slide, showing, 'key performance indicators', based on a comparison with similar services, in other parts of the world, such as Kenya's M-PESA (the best such service in the world). This is 'benchmarking': how you are doing against the best, in your game.
I told them, that we did not 'invent' Mobile Money Transfer service, but we studied carefully what others had done all over the world. Our teams, went on field visits, to countries, like Kenya, and the Philippines. Our people also did 'focus group' studies with customers, to try and evaluate their needs. Then we ran a pilot service, for many months, which we used to evaluate customer responses, and redesign the product.
When you are in a business, you must join associations, (both local and international), so that you can exchange ideas, with people from the same industry, including your competitors. This is how you 'benchmark'. Before you dash off to implement something, try and find out what others have done, or not done... This is really how you should be using tools like the Internet.
Do you want to raise chicken? That's good, but now go out, and become a member of that industry... go down deep. Yes, learn about the industry... make yourself, a 'chicken guru', eat, sleep and talk chicken! If someone asks you about chicken, talk about the Chinese and American industry, tell them who is the biggest player in Nigeria...what type of chicken are preferred in Brazil... It’s your game!
My game is telecoms: the other day someone asked me, over dinner about the history of 'prepaid service', I gave them a lecture, tracing its history, all the way to the first lab tests, in Israel! When I open a newspaper or a magazine, I flip through looking for articles, first on telecoms.
Anything related to communications... I just devour it! It’s my game! So you think, there is nothing about pigs, or rabbits? When you finish reading this, do a search on the internet about the global 'pig industry', or the 'rabbit industry'...
Even if you are working in an organization, as a professional, it is important to remain current, about the job you do, and also about the industry you are in. Be proud of what you do. There is no better way of doing this than subscribing for professional and industry publications. What you are reading locates, you... it’s your game! What are you reading?”
That's why the likes of Paul carried and read books wherever he went: for the sake of mastering what they did! I need not say more about this.

b) Persistently aspire to change your world  
Quote: passion is about creating opportunities for yourself and making others want to copy you.
If we have a strong urge and desire to positively change our world, we need to aspire to learn, on a daily basis, something new about our talents and how to use them to make things easier and better. We need to learn how to create opportunities for ourselves and to better other people’s lives.

Passion is not about rising to fame overnight. No. It is not about creating a name for ourselves out of our “awesomeness”. No. Passion is about building a system THAT WORKS. A system that has been proven to work. A system that changes how things work by simplifying them. Through growth and practice, passion proves that a certain method can be optimized until a formula, protocol or method is achieved. This is how mathematicians came to making and proving mathematical formulas. This is how researchers come up with new technologies. It is passion that concluded that the piano can only be played in a number of ways within a certain number and bracket of keys. All these inventors sought to change their worlds and they therefore passionately found a way to make things easier for whoever will live after them. They never stopped until results were achieved. (You’ll understand this better if you’ve read The Art of War by Giles Lionel Sunzi.)

They worked and used their abilities and talents with the future in mind. They did it progressively without being selfish about the outcome. They saw the end-product in the whole process rather than the means and the fame. They were resilient and focused.
That is what we need to do if we can ever change our present world though the use of our abilities, talents and gifts.

One example I use is that I always tell people that I may not be that into technology but I’ll always dream of a day when my dad can search for specific words in his paper Bible without using sophisticated means, without needing a gadget and without need for the internet. I dream of my grandmother being able to read without actually knowing how to read. (Yeah, stop and think about it. It may be crazy, but it is possible.) In my scientific world, I always think of a day when cancer can be simply cured through the introduction of tumor-killing artificial microbes which can actually eat away any type of tumor… I think of things unimaginable in my world, but I think about them anyway. Dreaming is great. Dreams are ideas in a sleep-stage and it never actually means that they won’t wake up - because they surely will! Dreams always wake up and become a reality when we work on them passionately…


4.     Our profession and career
There are those amongst us who are blessed in a way that their abilities, talents, gifts and passion marry their profession. A few of us have split these into two parts of our existence, while others don’t even know what they’re doing. Well, it may be okay, but let’s address a few things here…

I am always against the notion that being great at school translates to being great in life or being great at your career. Well, prove me wrong by taking statistics of people who made it in life only because they had a First Class Honors in university; prove it to me that a whole 100% of such people have made it in life. Yes, please do it. Getting a First Class Honors is good, but unless one has something to add onto it, it is futile and useless. And if it is the only thing that drives our lives, what becomes of us after school and we are not immediately employed? Huh?

Oh well…

Some people study something else and become something else in life. Others don’t even study at all, yet they end up employing all those creepy bookwarms… Hah… The endpoint should be, after school, are you able to enjoy what you are doing? Do you feel excited when at work doing what you do to earn whatever you earn? Is your profession giving you a stir of passion and satisfaction when you are at it? If not, think twice about it.

A good percentage of people who go for a second or third degree are those who are trying “to diversify” their career or profession. The interesting thing about hearing the word “diversity” when dealing with career is that I always translate it and make it synonymous with the word “randomness”. This means that it always rings in my ears that these people may not even be sure of what profession they are made for. To curb this (the lack of knowledge on what you are made for career-wise), I recommend one to genuinely answer the following questions:
  • Do you enjoy it?
  • Can you do it for the rest of your life?
  • Do you feel excited to report to work (especially) on Monday morning?
  • Do you work for the money or for the love of the work itself?
  • Would you work under minimum supervision and achieve the same results as when you are working under supervision?
  • Do you aspire to grow in your area of work?
If above 70% of your answers for the questions above were “no”, you are in the wrong place. You may need to make your decisions really fast and change what you are doing before it is too late.

When it comes to choosing career, some people may choose it with reference to their abilities, talents and gifts, while others may not. It really doesn’t matter so long as you can pass the above test (the questions I posed above) by scoring above 70%.

As I finish up, the few things you need to know about career and growing/building your niche are listed below;

a)    They say that any skill can be learned in 21 days flat. This is good news to anyone who desires to learn any new skill. Grasp the opportunity and learn it. Stop wishing you had known something you can learn in 3 weeks!!
b)    God does not bless lazy people. Only lazy people use those useless "confess and possess" quotes because they think God is a robber: robbing people's blessings to hand them over to them. Haven’t you ever read in Exodus 23:29 where He says, "I will not drive them out from before you in one year, lest the land become desolate… little by little I will drive them out before you until you have increased and possess the land…”? Do you think God was talking to a lazy people? No? Okay, so work hard to get what is rightfully yours in Him!
c)     To some people, once school is over, their lives are done. But those guys who use at least 30% of their time in improving their social skills and talents have less hard time adapting to the new environment after school. Think about it. Apply it.
d)    Eventually, you’ll realize that a man's fulfillment is not in the accumulation of wealth, things or education but in servant-hood. It will do you more good to improve your social skills and talents than to know more mathematical formulas that are useless in real life. People will save you after failure, but that education you are seeking so brutally won’t give a damn when you are suffering out here. So care more about people, then go on and cram/learn your formulas. It is called balancing your life.
e)     If you sit down waiting for employment, it is likely that you're gonna wait forever, but if you keep yourself busy by utilizing your talents and abilities well, opportunities and favor can arise from any side and overtake you.
f)     In anything you do, seek to stand out and create a brand out of yourself.
g)    Believe in possibilities. Believe in God. Believe in the power of God to make you into anything great. Believe that you can become anything you put your eyes on. Then drive all you have towards achieving it. After all has been said and done, tell a testimony of how you became what you are through God’s faithfulness.

Till next time,
God bless.



Bonface Morris.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Grow Your Niche: Discovering Your Abilities, Talents and Gifts Part 1

Side note: It may be a good idea to start by reading this blog post I did 2 years ago.

A year or so ago, I had a conversation with a certain teenager who had just finished High School. He wanted to know how to become busy and stop being “bored” at home. (And about getting bored, I always wonder how someone can really get bored…).
Okay, I looked at him and asked him, “How much do you really wanna get out of your rut…?” “So much… it is screaming right inside my head and all over me!” he answered. So I told him, “I don’t think so. I am not seeing it in you. I think you just want a quick way to get money and acquire a platform upon which you will boast to your friends that you ‘ain’t the idle type’.
He took offense. I liked it. I like it when people take offense because I am telling them the truth. Yes, he took offense because I was telling him the truth. Of course, he really really really wanted to get something to do - to keep him busy - but truly speaking, he only wanted to get money and get over it – in the simplest way possible.

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A few years ago after leaving High School and because my parents were not able to immediately take me to College, all I could actually do was to sit around and become idle. I bored my mom. I really did. I bored her because I was not useful. So she called my dad and told him about it. (This was mid-June after my KCSE – which I did about a decade ago, yeah I am that old… J)
They agreed that I should get to where my dad was and probably get to do something meaningful with my life. (Meaningful was the key word, and I won’t mention towns because that is none of your business... Hah.)
Well, when I got to live with my dad, he taught me a few things: that I had to learn to do stuff on my own and become independent. As the only son, you can only imagine what went through my mind. Learn to do stuff on my own and stand as a man? Oh no!! No way!! But in present-time Kenya, what do you expect if your dad is not the CEO of some company or when he is not “well connected”? You have to stand your ground and gain substance, or sit down and die poor. He always reminded me (my dad) that he won’t always be around and I should (as his only son) take charge and become a man my sisters and mom can lean on when he becomes old…
Anyway – so you are asking - why am I telling you all these useless stories?
Because of the following:
As much as I was able to do some menial work, earn a little income each week and become financially independent, I kept myself busy during my free time. I will share with you how I spent my free time in the next few lines… I began by writing music. This is something almost everyone does after High School so it should not be a big deal to you. Yes? Writing music was easy: figure out a few words, rhyme them, and I was good to go! (From then to now, I have ended up writing so many unreleased songs that I can’t even recall which one was my first song - I’ll expound on this story after I have become a recording artist one of these fine days.) The second thing I was doing during my free time was reading and falling in love with quotes (remember that I was only 18.) This moved me to the next level: writing tailored quotes. (I have two books full of personal quotes as evidence.) Quotes expanded my knowledge of phrases and words, so I decided to start writing my first book at age 20. (This also is none of your business, haha, so priss don’t ask me about it...) The internet was gaining popularity then so I used it often. Writing (yeah what you see here and what I post on several occasions is just the tip of the iceberg) loaded my room with a lot of stuff. I then decided to start making some research on people and personalities – because by then, I had been given a minor leadership position at my church. I wanted to understand people, so I read a lot about people – on the internet of course, because I am not fond of paper or hard cover books. Alongside writing quotes, a book and various songs, I also started writing poems and doing art and calligraphy (my pastor can witness that I brought him a lot of my artwork at this stage.) I was now 21 years old and still untrained (formally). But was I useful? Yes. 2 years earlier, at the age 19, I had joined the Praise and Worship Team at my church because I just refused to sit around and do nothing. I decided to also join my church’s intercession team which was mainly composed of women. Yes. Women. Lots of women. Dang. A tiny boy amongst a legion of women. Dang… again! We met on Wednesdays for fasting and on Saturdays for general prayer. 1 year later, I was teaching myself how to play the keyboard/piano.  I took (and still take) very serious that Bible verse that says, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me…” Philippians 4:13 and it has worked for me.
And I have now been improving on the things above and adding more for the past few years: I have learned teaching, public speaking, preaching, ranting (lol), bla bla bla, and have grown in my walk with the Lord.

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I am sharing my tiny – and almost useless example above - to give this blog post a practical background and meaning: that as far as I am concerned, whatever I am going to tell you about capturing and knowing your niche, abilities, gifts and talents, I am a devoted doer of it all. I drink that water yo!
Now, there are a few things you need to know and be able to understand well in order to capture and grow your niche (a niche is a position particularly well suited to the person who occupies it). These things, as listed below, are the very things I’ll address in depth in the two parts that are this blog post;
1.     Your abilities.
2.     Your talent(s) and gift(s).
3.     Your passion.
4.     Your career/profession.            

1.     Our abilities
Quote: Growing your niche is simply moving towards KNOWING YOUR STUFF.
Everyone is born with an ability. Everyone. The Bible says so, and anthropological studies also prove that all mankind is bestowed with the ability to do something. A society can’t move without people’s various abilities. There is not one person on this earth that lacks an ability to do something. Everyone has an ability. (An ability is defined as the quality of being able to perform or a quality that permits or facilitates achievement or accomplishment in something…)
I’ll give you practical examples in a simple nuclear family: your dad is able to lead, your mom is able to organize, your elder sister is able to give orders, the second born in your family is able to cook, you are able to read and understand; and all these people are endowed with qualities that enable them to do these things better than everyone else.
Note: Your ability depicts (describes or portrays) your talent and niche – it curves and exposes it.
Abilities are those tiny and usually neglected awesome acts in our family members or community that define the doers without asking. Is your sister able to cook the best meals than any of you by using the weirdest methods and with very few materials? Yeah, you get it. Is your brother able to naturally milk the cow without being taught? Yeah, now you get it.
Let me bring it further down…
Within a society, various abilities are exposed and discovered: a certain man has the ability to farm and produce crop all year long, another man is able to predict seasons, a certain woman is able to counsel quarreling families and bring them together, that chief you know or that man next door is a great peace-maker, another one is able to repair clothing without training, a certain young man is known for his ability to mend shoes and make electrical repairs and another has the ability to train people on nutrition, losing weight and physical fitness. Another young man you know is good at sports… Another one is the best artist in town – probably in graffiti or photography. A certain worship team member is known for being able to sing like an angel without being taught and a given dancer and keyboard player can do their thing so flawlessly that they are known for such efficiency. All these are abilities we experience in our communities in our day to day lives.
One fact is that people with certain abilities always wonder why some other person (or people) cannot do whatever they do in the simplest and most efficient way.
Have you ever met someone with the knowledge of coding or computers? They have abilities acquired through training that will blow you away. Scientists and doctors have abilities acquired through training too.
So as you come to realize, abilities are not limited to financial status, tribe, physique, level of education, or to the level of one’s IQ. There may be people with a very low IQ score, who have failed in school and some who never even went to school, but these people are damn good managers (the likes of Steve Jobs, Simon Peter and Jesus.)
There are people who are very observant and can detect mistakes in things/places that no one else was seeing, there are people who are very analytical in nature – whenever you want something scrutinized, you have to call them – and they know their stuff!! There are those who know how to save money. (Note: an ability - like extravagance in the use of money – one which wastes resources - is not a positive ability but a vice.)
If you were to ask me if I am lazy, I will tell you I truly I am lazy. I know it. My friends know it. But if you were to ask my boss, my pastor or my work mates if I am lazy, they will give you a different story. Why? Because my abilities differ. I may not able to wake up early and attend classes, but I damn know how to work smart. I may not be passing my exams, but I’ll give you practical life advice if you needed some. I always tell people not to ask me for advice on matters concerning school because I’ll fail them, but they can come for real life stuff - I have a lot.
To round it off, we have naturally acquired abilities (some inherited, and others learnt) and abilities/skills acquired through formal or informal training. These are the building blocks towards discovering your talent, gift and passion.
Therefore, if everyone has an ability [to do something], then everyone has a talent, a gift and a passion. It may be useful at home, or at school, or at work, or in the market place, or by the roadside, or at church, or in the community. You have it. Everyone has it. Scan through your life and discover it. Sometimes people tell you about it or point it out to you. Just be keen to listen when they complement you. Also remember that abilities are given to us or built in us mostly benefit others, so things like watching TV and movies, eating (being a foodie) and stinginess are negative abilities that should be avoided.

2.     Our talents and gifts
Quote: If you want to grow your niche, don’t be in the wrong place at the right time or in the right place at the wrong time.
A talent is defined as a natural ability or quality (so note that talents borrow a lot from abilities), while a gift is an endowment given to someone by God (mostly, gifts are only referred to when talking about one’s spiritual abilities – or abilities influenced by a spiritual force i.e. God.)
I’ll give you a few practical steps towards discovering your talent(s) and your gift(s);
a)     Have an incessant/unstoppable drive towards doing something positive.
In the present world, everyone wants to do nothing but achieve everything. Did you hear that? Everyone wants to do NOTHING, but achieve EVERYTHING. Now, the dangerous thing about wanting to do nothing but achieve everything is that we all end up idle and poor. Yes, IDLE and POOR we become.
The truth is that if everyone decided to do something in his/her society, (something constructive using their natural or acquired abilities – like the ones I have described above), there would be less begging and poverty. Poverty comes in because we all want to be lazy and useless (at least I am lazy but useful. Haha.) We are all driven towards doing nothing. It is our default setting. Doing nothing is our default setting. (And this is the cause of many divorces and breakups in relationships – both parties wanting to do nothing - all the time.)
If we want to discover our talents, we should be driven towards exploiting all our abilities. ALL. All of them. What do you love? Exploit it!! What do people enjoy whenever you do it? Exploit it!! Put all your strength in ensuring that you are moving all your might towards bettering a specific area in your life. What change do you need in your family, church, work place or community? Work towards solving it in the tiniest way you can!! You don’t have to be great, you just have to begin. You can start with working on one ability at a time, until (as I will show you later) you have developed a passion for it. We acquire the drive to explore and use our abilities through desiring personal growth. Unless we desire personal growth, we will never discover what we can do and achieve in our immediate society.
Many successful people work endless hours to meet targets, yet many lazy people think they don’t have talents or abilities. Talents are grown from the abilities God has given us: abilities that positively influence our immediate societies. Once we acquire a strong urge to do something about the little we already have, we grow into what we should become. We should remember that perfection is not acquired in one day. Talents can be discovered through the realization of needs: the need you see wherever you are is a platform upon which your ability and talent is built. Therefore, what disturbs you most to need change is what arouses and directs your ability and thereafter, your talent and gift.

b)    Develop consistency – practice a lot
I have been training several people on how to play the piano. (Those who know me well know that no one taught me how to play the piano. I just woke up one day, told the Lord I wanted to know how to play it, practiced a few notes for 3 months and voila!! I had already known enough to teach you a few things about playing it!!) Consistency worked for me. I have spent time telling every new student I have that unless you are consistent, you can never perfect any art. NEVER. You see, art depends on consistency, while science depends on specificity. Art without consistency will fail, and science without specificity becomes pseudoscience. (Yeah you can quote me on that one also. Lol.) So discover your love, your ability, your talent, learn a thing or two about it, but don't start boasting that you have known it. Seek to become better!! Our keyboard player and several other people always ask me why I am not recording my music, and I tell them, I need a phase in my composition and music writing where I'll become consistent in my music style and writing. I want to be perfect. I want my passion for what I do to be intact. You may see it as a waste of time and talent, but I wanna give out something complete, not half done – and only consistency helps you grow your talent towards that.
Thus this is how talent is nurtured through consistency: you discover your ability > you then focus your strength on that ability > after that, you keep on focusing your strength(s) on it until you are becoming better and better by the day…
An example is a person who is a great cook. First, they realize they can cook > then they do everything to better their cooking > then they expand their knowledge through research and learning new methods of cooking (new recipes and different cuisines) > they keep learning and doing what they do best until they ease themselves into perfection…

c)     Grow
I always say, “If you want to do something, start doing it. Now. Start doing it now. Stop wishing you can do it... If you have the energy, time and (whatever limited) resources at your disposal, still do it.”
Everyone knows that no business empire started with flourishing capital. No invention begun with people who "had it all". Someone had to believe that THEY ARE ABLE TO DO whatever was before them, and they did it. Simple. They did it.
This blog did not begin as a website - I had no resources for a domain subscription. But I want to assure you something - this blog will surely GROW into a website! Mark my words. I saw an opportunity, and I took it. Blogger offers free blog services, I took it. As write week after week, I dream of the day I'll register a website with my own domain. I dream of adding so much more to the website. But I am not just dreaming, no. I am using the free available resources available to me. I am writing.
So what can you do? Are you a poet? Do you have an ability in sharing your mind and thoughts? Is your ability in helping people? Can you lead? Do you cook? Do you love writing scripts? Do you design stuff? Are you a great critic? Is your ability to decipher things high? Are you moved when you hear people talk about technology or cars or games or plays or movies? Do you love singing? Don't wait to have a music producer for you to perfect a singing habit. Start it with what you have. Record those clips on your phone. Record them. Capture the opportunity. Research in your area of interest, get the loophole and go make it a reaaaaally biiiig hole!! Use the minimal resources you have to achieve the goal of growing your talent. Use your church's keyboard player to practice and rehearse. Use your mom’s garden to grow flowers and vegetables. Use your brother’s laptop to learn coding. Use your dad’s bicycle to run errands. Use whatever resource (plus a bit of the internet) to grow. Grow.
Simply grow your talent and gifts through exposure. Add in more effort through networking with people who are in the same field you are interested in. Use that phone of yours to research and grow instead of WhatsApping and chatting the whole day. Get mentors from the internet. Save articles. Read and re-read them again and again. Have blogs and websites you follow. That is what I call seeking to grow. So, grow. Grow your talent!!
Quote: Unless a talent is grown, it will soon fade away.

To be continued in Part 2…



Bonface Morris.

Friday, July 11, 2014

Hillsong Worship: No Other Name Full Review & mp3 Downloads

You love music? I do. You love contemporary Gospel music? O! I'm a great fan. 
 
Now, talking of contemporary Gospel music, and a lot more about Gospel soft rock and Gospel rock (I am not even sure there is such a genre of music, anyway, who cares? Hah), I wanna review a great Australian band by the name of Hillsong (formerly Hillsong, then Hillsong United, and now Hillsong Worship.)

I have been an ardent follower of Hillsong Worship ever since I got saved. In fact, I boast of having their entire discography – music from, let me see - from the year 1990. One of the first English songs I came to know after getting saved (weird as it was because I was a Hip Hop head while running secular) was a Hillsong song: "Shout to the Lord" followed by "Power of Your Love" and thereafter, so many more followed.

Boasting over 60 chart-topping albums with spiritual and theologically sound songs of worship and praise, thanksgiving and communion, Hillsong Worship is more than just a band. It is said that about 30million people sing a Hillsong composition every Sunday all over the world. Their creative team is one of those teams that seek to "make music worthy an ear and a heart" and moves to make Jesus known - with the artistic ability to even top secular music charts. This has been proven by songs like Oceans: Where Feet May Fail topping secular music charts, winning the Annual K-LOVE Awards and becoming their all-time best selling single.

But Hillsong has progressed over time. From the days of Shout to the Lord to the days of God He Reigns; from the days of Mighty To Save to the days of God Is Able their music style has radically changed.

The face of Hillsong in the earlier days was a music style dominated by an alternative genre of contemporary worship. This was the period between 1990 (under the album Show Your Glory) and 2000 (when they produced the album Shout to the Lord - The Platinum Collection Vol. 1). All this time, the Hillsong team was under the guidance and leadership of one Darlene Zschech. She wrote and directed most of the songs – becoming famous when Shout To the Lord went platinum in Australia and topped Christian music charts all over the world. It became the most popular song at that time in an era where contemporary worship was still a new thing to the church.

The period between the year 2000 and 2005 marked an inception of rebranded worship and more acoustics chipped in, making the music more radical and modern. From the year 2006 to present time, Hillsong Worship has moved bounds. When you examine the music style used in Mighty To Save (produced in 2006) to the music style in No Other Name (released this year on 1st July), one cannot cease to see the improvement in the fervency, lyricism and spontaneity, theological aptness, creativity and inspiration used while producing and releasing these albums.

Of course so much has changed since Darlene Zschech left in 2008 (she left to join and support her husband in their ministry, Hope Unlimited Church). The team is now under the guidance and leadership of the soft-spoken Reuben Morgan as the music pastor. Some of us were worried back then. We were tempted to ask (and we did ask), "What will become of Hillsong after Zschech? Will we still experience the movement of God's Spirit in their songs? Will they turn too contemporary as a team?" This is because, as we thought, Hillsong was synonymous with Darlene Zschech. Leading such a great team for more than two decades somehow makes you some sort of founder and brand... But we were wrong. Hillsong emerged to be more than just Darlene Zschech. Hillsong is a team – a band full of talent and build on the Word of God – it has proved that it is/was not founded on a one-man policy but the policy of many who trust in the Lord…

Oh well…

From This Is Our God (2008) to Glorious Ruins (2013) to No Other Name (2014), God has proven that Reuben Morgan is worth his salt. These projects have brought us countless church worship anthems. (I can't even start mentioning them here.) New members have joined the team: the likes of Taya Smith (who I now call "Hillsong's golden lady"). She sang their most popular song today - Oceans:Where Feet May Fail  and has sang my favorite song in No Other Name: Broken Vessels (Amazing Grace). She somehow has managed to take away the hangover I had while missing collaborations introduced by the band sometime back when Darlene Zschech was joined by Brooke Fraser in Faith+Hope+Love (2009) as a guest singer and when Brooke Fraser was included in Savior King (2007) and in This Is Our God (2008).

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Now, rolling through the years down to No Other Name (2014), you have a taste of soul-freeing music done to the taste of Scripture. No Other Name is a declaration worship album whose theme resembles one project they did in 2006: Songs For Communion. Obviously, the music style is different, but the message resounds the same thing – delivering to its listeners a deep theological message with Christ at the centre, something to remind us of Calvary, who we are in Christ now that we  are saved and the power and hope in His Name to believers.

The development of No Other Name begun in February this year when Hillsong Worship through their page announced that they are working and recording a new album to be released for July 2014 – having the same theme as their Annual Hillsong Conference held early this month (July, 2014).
Hillsong's music producer and director, Michael Chislett together with various team members announced that, "We just want people to tell of and know the name of Jesus, that it may resound in the hearts of all that there is #NoOtherName but Jesus Christ our God" and that "the new songs are bringing new life..." before the album was released. Their creative team leader, Cass Langton shares on The 10 Things She Has Learnt About leading A Creative Team.

The official album cover art for Hillsong Worship's #NoOtherName
On 23rd April in Times Square, New York City, one Jay Argaet was seen shooting the album art for the cover of the new album whose name was not mentioned until May 5th when they posted the cover artwork of the album (the same picture Jay Argaet shot of Times Square in New York City) which showed screens with the text, "No Other Name, Jesus" imprinted on it.)
Before doing this, they released and shared the album's first single, a song titled "Calvary" as an Easter single on 3rd April (which I actually shared on my Facebook and Twitter.)
No Other Name has a specific theme. The theme resounds throughout the album, and unlike every other Hillsong album released since the year 2000 when they began introducing high tempo songs and acoustics in their albums, it has no high tempo song. (Well this is a little of a sad story to guys out there who have enjoyed songs like Always Will, God Who Saves and Lift You Higher from the previous album Glorious Ruins.) But be it as it may, the album is great.
The album is 65 minutes 35 seconds long and contains 11 songs sang and arranged in a manner that tells a story from the first to the last song.
For instance, the first song is This I Believe (The Creed) which introduces you to the album with an old message most of us have well forgotten – a message contained in the Apostle's Creed. (Yeah, not many of us even know that there exists something called the Apostle’s Creed. Too bad.) The song was written by Matt Crocker and Ben Fielding. Click here to read about and watch a video on the story behind the song. 
The next song is HeavenAnd Earth sang by the same guy who sang the theme song Cornerstone in the 2012 album, Cornerstone. (By the way his voice resembles one guy I used to know in More Than Life (2004) and in Blessed (a 2002 album – singing a song called Magnificent.) (Yeah I had to mention that because his voice is cool like that… and by the way, get those two old but very cool songs…)
The third song, Broken Vessels (Amazing Grace) which is my favorite on the album - and which I have been playing endlessly by the way - is sang by their golden lady – Taya Smith. The song was written by Joel Houston (Pastor Brian Houston's son) and Joans Myrin. Now, Taya Smith is exemplary. Her voice is addictive. He falsettos are unique. The pulses within her vocals are beautiful. (I use her voice often to train mine, by the way.) Well, download the song here and prove it for yourself. Get blown away like I am. (By the way – yes, that's another by the way I guess - I have only known three other ladies who have a voice as addictive as hers: Brooke Fraser (of whom I have been waiting for her fresh album to be released this year but I am still in some sort of a hangover), another one called Lainey Wright and one Kim Walker-Smith… they all sing folk/pop Gospel except for Kim who mostly does soft rock and contemporary Gospel. Well, that becomes a story for another day…
Back to the album review...
The theme song No Other Name (click the link to download the song) is song number four, written by the same authors of the third song. And as it is characteristic with Hillsong, it comes with their usual anthem shouts – flaring harmonies that pull you into glory and vamps that repeat the theme, "There is no other name, there is no other name, Jesus Christ our God…" 
In the next song (song number five) Depths, you hear a continuation of the theme in the previous song. Okay, Hillsong has a habit of pulling words from the Psalms and all over Scripture into their music which, if you are a music writer, you know that it is never that easy. But with them, it comes out so naturally: I love You with all my heart, I love You with all my soul, I love You with all my strength, with all that is within me… are the lyrics you sing along to in this song, with the name Jesus being a sort of alternating bridge in the song.
To make a summary of the rest of the album (because I am avoiding boring you), Calvary (that Easter song) comes at number six, ThankYou Jesus makes a continuation of the voicing in Calvary at number seven, All Things New comes at number eight, My Story at number nine, Our Father is a prayer at number ten and Mountain seals the album at number eleven. (Please click on each link to download the song. I may upload the lyrics to some of the songs soon, so keep checking.) 
End Note: To finish off, some other Hillsong projects worth looking into are; Hillsong Young & Free who I think replaced Hillsong Youth Alive! (Shame on me that I have not shared with you guys some of their great music right here...) And I also think you may be interested in reading on Hillsong United/Worship's upcoming documentary film to be released in 2015. Read the details about it here. (Maybe it is about time I started doing reviews on some of the movies I watch, right? Oh well, we'll see about that...)

God bless.

Bonface Morris.