I guess this is the best place to post this. I recently went through the entire discography of a Christian band called the
Newsboys. They had a couple songs that were pretty integral to my childhood, and unbeknownst to me my church incorporated quite a few of their songs into worship services. Of course I'm an atheist now but it's really interesting to hear how well they succeeded when they were on point. I'm fully aware that likely no one on here will care (maybe
@JudasMyGuide ?), but I have to put my ramblings somewhere lol.
The band originated from Australia but have had American members and been primarily based in the States from what I know. There are three distinct eras of the band's career, based on who was the lead vocalist. Peter Furler was the primary songwriter throughout the first two eras, often working with producer Steve Taylor to write songs. Since Furler's departure, the majority of the songwriting has been done by people outside the band itself.
Prominent members:
- Peter Furler, initially drums; later vocals and guitar (1985-2009, 2018-2021)
- John James, vocals (1986-1997)
- Jody Davis, guitars (1992-2003, 2009-present)
- Duncan Phillips, initially keyboards; later drums (1993-present)
- Jeff Frankenstein, keyboards (1994-present)
- Phil Joel, bass and backing vocals (1994-2006, 2018-2021)
- Michael Tait, vocals (2009-present)
JOHN JAMES era
Read All About It (1988)
Simple songs with simple lyrics, definitely feels like the local youth group has banded together to preach the Gospel in the city. There are some tasty guitar pieces every so often, but there just isn’t much substance to these songs. Very weak debut.
D-
Hell Is for Wimps (1990)
Slightly less guitar, a few more ballads. A slight step up from the debut but it’s overall more of the same. The band is preaching to you more than they are relating to you. Far from great.
D
Boyz Will Be Boyz (1991)
Definitely better than the previous two albums and you can tell the band is trying to find their voice. The songs are better constructed and often more interesting, but they’re still very simple and they’ve got a ways to go before they pull out of the dillweeds. The record is also definitely of its time, with the youth group ensemble incorporating ‘90s elements like hip-hop beats and rapping into their sound to appeal to modern audiences. Please guys, you’re too white for these raps. Stick to the melodies!
C-
Not Ashamed (1992)
They still have a ways to go but this is the first sign that maybe the Newsboys can get somewhere in the music scene. The addition of producer Steve Taylor has resulted in a boost in the songwriting department, and the title track for instance is a complete bop. Other songs like “Dear Shame” and “Lost the Sky Again” have great melodies. We’re starting to get somewhere. Keep it going guys.
B-
Going Public (1994)
About in the same category as the previous album, but the good songs are really, really good. “Shine” was a big Christian radio hit and is super fun. “Let It Rain” is Steve Taylor fully showing off his production chops. “Elle G.” is a haunting and beautiful closer about a woman committing suicide. These songs really showcase the band growing as songwriters and musicians, just needing to fully harness their talents and move away from the fillers that this album also has in its log.
B-
Take Me to Your Leader (1996)
DAMN! The band has finally pulled together and delivered a genuinely good, perhaps even great record. Their original singer John James is present for the last time on this album, while new bassist Phil Joel and primary songwriter Peter Furler start taking over vocal duties. So many of these songs are absolutely fun, strong, and memorable. Whether they’re riffing on Hell not serving breakfast, or retooling alien cliches in the title track for Christian purposes, the band is fully locked-in with each other now. The only song that doesn’t work for me is “Cup O’ Tea”, and it’s minor in the grand scale of the album.
A
PETER FURLER era
Step Up to the Microphone (1998)
The first album without John James is a bit of a mixed bag. The album has stellar production and plenty of details that give each song unique and interesting qualities as far as the sound goes. There is a lot of filler though, as though the production took focus away from the material. That said, there are some really standout tracks among the lesser ones. Opener “WooHoo” is sublime, and “The Tide” is a wonderful late album addition. The best songs though are the hit single “Entertaining Angels” which is fantastic in scope and performance, and closing track “Always”, a haunting and beautiful track about a child’s missing father.
B
Love Liberty Disco (1999)
The Newsboys’ disco album doesn’t actually feel like too radical of a departure for them. It’s a fun experience and the string orchestra is a lovely touch. Definitely feels like a ‘70s throwback. I wouldn’t say that any of the songs are truly outstanding, but all of them are solid and enjoyable and the album as a whole is short and sweet.
B+
Thrive (2002)
The first thing you notice on Thrive is that the guitars are Turned UP. “Giving It Over” and “Live in Stereo” are a good couple of opening tracks, but once “Million Pieces” kicks in the album starts ascending further and further into great territory. “Million Pieces” is one of those songs from my childhood that still holds up today with fantastic melodies and a killer chorus. One of my favorites from the band. Elsewhere they try their hand at various things: “Cornelius” is a fun singalong, “Fad of the Land” attacks capitalism (?!), and “John Woo” is completely experimental. But they’ve also included some tracks that would not be out of place at all in a worship service: the lush title track, the passionate closing “Lord (I Don’t Know)”, and especially “It Is You”, a simple and repetitive track that somehow does exactly what it attempts to do. The worship team at my family’s church sang it A LOT. The original is way better. Well-produced, well-written, and immersive as a full album, Thrive is easily one of the Newsboys’ best records.
A
Adoration: The Worship Album (2003)
“It Is You” set the direction for the band’s follow-up album Adoration, comprised entirely of worship songs. Opener “He Reigns” starts off quietly with almost simple, tribal-esque rhythms as Peter Furler sings about “African plains”, “Amazon rain”, and “Asian believers”, effectively bringing the whole world together before they erupt into an utterly glorious and powerful chorus of “Hallelujah, he reigns”. I’ve heard that chorus a lot throughout my life but the original is on a completely different level. It’s a powerful, passionate song; no wonder it was a major hit on the Christian charts.
From that point on, the album feels essentially like the setlist to a worship service. You’ve got five other original tracks, two good covers (“You Are My King (Amazing Love)” and “In Christ Alone”, again songs that I’ve heard many times in church), and a couple live versions of the worship-driven Thrive tracks “It Is You” and “Lord (I Don’t Know)”. My one gripe is that I think the album would’ve flowed better if the two live songs were tacked on at the end, but as far as an encompassing worship album goes this is actually really good. Thing is, it also feels right for them to be tackling such a project now. The whole band is working as a unit, and that Steve Taylor production completes all the links in the chain. And beyond being a worship album, these are also just really good songs. It’s something that a lot of other Christian contemporary artists - including modern Newsboys - are missing out on.
A-
Devotion (2004)
The momentum from the past two albums grinds to a bit of a hault with this record. It’s another worship album, but Steve Taylor isn’t producing and guitarist Jody Davis has left the band. It’s competent, don’t get me wrong, but there just isn’t much life in these songs. I’m sure there was passion in the making of the album but it often doesn’t feel like it really pops the way good Newsboys songs do. “Blessed Be Your Name”, a cover song, is a good example: complete with a female vocalist dueting with Peter Furler, it just feels hollow where so many of their songs, even the covers on the last record, were filled with fire. This is just your typical CCM. That said, there are two aces hiding away towards the back of the album: “Landslide of Love”, a track that wouldn’t have been out of place on Adoration; and “The Orphan”, a gorgeous, stirring ballad.
C+
GO (2006)
The band gets back on track with a bit of a return to their usual sound, albeit far more pop-oriented. And for the most part they pull it off. The first three songs especially are excellent: “Wherever We Go” is a Christian party rager with an infectious chorus; the title track is a fun take on the Great Commission; and “Something Beautiful” is lush and joyful and feels like if a CCM song was actually able to breathe instead of being churned out like radio fodder. The rest of the album is mostly solid but sometimes hit or miss, and “Your Love Is Better Than Life” is actually terrible. But by and large this is fun stuff and a course-correction from Devotion.
B-
In the Hands of God (2009)
I don’t even know where to begin with this one. It’s just a mess. Whatever they had going for them on GO is gone. Jody Davis is back on the guitars but bassist Phil Joel has departed. The production doesn’t come together in the way some of these songs are asking for, but then again the songs don’t really come together either. There are some heavy moments on this record but they feel fake. I don’t even know how that happened specifically because the writing team hasn’t really changed. This is the final album before primary songwriter and singer Peter Furler left the band, and I was expecting a change after that but Jesus this album is just… lifeless, boring, and completely forgettable. A sorry farewell.
D
MICHAEL TAIT era
Born Again (2010)
Peter Furler is gone and the band is left without a primary lyricist. New singer Michael Tait is a pretty strong replacement, but damn, with the writing being done by multiple third parties, it just does not at all feel the same. The last album was a bore; this one is too. Maybe it gets off the ground once or twice but it’s never truly airborne. Even the cover of “Jesus Freak” from Tait’s former band DC Talk is just a hollow redux of the original. There’s just no reason to come back to this album. It’s just a bunch of songs churned out to make a product for a Christian audience that will eat up anything that speaks positively about God and Jesus. And I am not that audience.
D
God’s Not Dead (2011)
If the band has now fully entered their Christian contemporary arc, devoid of what made this band interesting in the first place, then I just want them to have decent CCM songs and perform them well. Surprisingly, this album actually does just that. Of course the title track was a big hit for the band, being included in the stupid-ass film of the same name (and it was about the only good thing about the film, frankly). But a lot of these songs work pretty well. The production lets them breathe more, there are several strong covers, it definitely feels like these tracks were made to sing in church on Sunday. It’s a decent CCM album; but of course a decent CCM album is still a far-cry from the band at their best.
C+
Restart (2013)
Newsboys embrace EDM and it’s fun. Nothing to deep here, big opener (“That’s How You Change the World”) followed by a head-bopper (“Restart”), and keep the momentum flowing with a little diversity from a ballad about moms (“That Home”) and a closer that has become one of their most popular worship songs (“We Believe”). It’s fine.
C
Hallelujah for the Cross (2014)
This album actually really works. It’s basically a cover album of classic hymns, and I think that they do them justice. The band is focused and you can hear more passion in this than their original material. Tait kills it, especially the final track where it’s literally just his voice layered. “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” is the one song that plods too much for me, but on the flipside I don’t think I’ve heard a better version of “It Is Well” in my life. These songs are given new life with the modern Newsboys sound and it’s good. It’s actually good.
B
Love Riot (2016)
It’s fine. Fun head-boppers. Hard to remember anything from these albums, but… it’s fine.
C
United (2019)
Peter Furler is back! Phil Joel is back! Holy shit!! This album has mad hype around it, man. Does it live up? No. It’s mostly just modern Newsboys with the added voice of Peter Furler and Phil Joel doing some great backing vocals that are lost in the mix. I don’t even hear much bass in this album, sadly. The two opening songs pop a little harder than usual but the vast majority of this album, including the handful of songs Furler wrote (along with Steve Taylor, his old accomplice), is more of the same. That said, “Never Setting Sun” is probably the best song they’ve done since at least God’s Not Dead, if not even GO.
C
STAND (2021)
Furler and Joel have left again and it’s… back to basics post-quarantine modern Newsboys. It’s like all their other albums, only this time I was actually starting to lose focus on the songs. They all sound the same. It’s fine. It’s whatever. It’s fine.
C-
Overall:
The band had pretty lowly origins but managed to really make something amazing from it. When they were on point, they managed to write songs that frankly feel like they deserve more attention even in the mainstream alt/pop-rock world. Even when doing more typical Christian contemporary songs there was a lot of love, passion, and attention devoted to every track. Unfortunately since about 2009 the band has been coasting, doing songs that appeal to Christian audiences and nothing more. They went from being a standout Christian act to becoming... just a Christian act. I find it unlikely that I'll ever listen through most of the albums from 2009 onwards. That ten year period from 1996 to 2006 was pretty special though.
- ALBUMS RANKED -
So, you want to check out the Newsboys...?
12 Classics You Should Know
- "I'm Not Ashamed" (Not Ashamed)
- "Shine" (Going Public)
- "Take Me to Your Leader" (Take Me to Your Leader)
- "Breakfast" (Take Me to Your Leader)
- "Entertaining Angels" (Step Up to the Microphone)
- "Million Pieces (Kissin' Your Cares Goodbye)" (Thrive)
- "It Is You" (Thrive)
- "He Reigns" (Adoration: The Worship Album)
- "You Are My King (Amazing Love)" (Adoration: The Worship Album)
- "Wherever We Go" (GO)
- "Something Beautiful" (GO)
- "God's Not Dead (Like a Lion)" (God's Not Dead)
16 Deep Cuts Worth Your Time
- "Dear Shame" (Not Ashamed)
- "Let It Rain" (Going Public)
- "Elle G." (Going Public)
- "Lost the Plot" (Take Me to Your Leader)
- "WooHoo" (Step Up to the Microphone)
- "Always" (Step Up to the Microphone)
- "Lord (I Don't Know)" (Thrive)
- "In the Belly of the Whale" (VeggieTales)
- "The Orphan" (Devotion)
- "Landslide of Love" (Devotion)
- "Go" (GO)
- "Something to Believe In" (GO - bonus track)
- "Stay Strong" (The Greatest Hits)
- "The League of Incredible Vegetables" (VeggieTales)
- "It Is Well" (Hallelujah for the Cross)
- "Never Setting Sun" (United)