Never one to mince words or fashion a spiritual, ?gfeel good?h project, singer/songwriter Derek Webb brings his A-game to the arena on I See Things Upside Down. Delivering his most compelling set to date, the Caedmon?fs Call alumnus follows up recent live recording The House Show with his second studio release.
Passionate vocals, cut-to-the-quick lyrics and rich yet stripped-down rhythms buttress one of this year?fs most inventive solo records. And while I See Things Upside Down is not a concept album per se, it frequently reveals an artist whose take on Christian values is forthright and convicting.
Fittingly, Webb indicts himself and others for misguided attitudes and actions. On the song ?gT-Shirts,?h he delivers this pointed discourse: ?gThey?fll know us by the t-shirts that we wear/they?fll know us by the way we point and stare?c they?fll know us by our picket lines and signs/they?fll know us by the pride we hide behind.?h Admonition continues on ?gBallad in Plain Red,?h where Webb rails against bumper-sticker brand Christianity (?g?cjust keep selling truth in candy bars/on billboards and backs of cars/truth without context, my favorite of all crimes.?h)
Though his words seem razor-sharp and are ostensibly directed at the greater evangelical community, somehow Webb does not come across as preachy or ?gholier than thou.?h Maybe it?fs because, in addition to targeting himself, Webb?fs message is embedded in a calm soundscape that floats from ethereal to smooth jazz to rootsy folk-rockāall without sounding incongruent. In the end, the listener comes away feeling spiritually culpable yet sonically satisfied.