|
This is a saved page of Colts player moonlights with Christian band (Reuters) This is a copy we made of the page on 03-Nov-2007. The original page may or may not still be availible and pictures and text may have changed since then. Click Here to view the original page at the original website. |
By Deborah Evans Price Fri Nov 2, 11:25 PM ET
In partnership with longtime friend and fellow worship leader Chris Wilson in the group Connorsvine, Smith has helped fashion one of the most impressive debuts to hit Christian music this year.
Wilson has long had a love affair with Christian music and began leading worship by the time he was in middle school. Smith and Wilson met in 2001 while leading worship for a young adult ministry at a church in Indianapolis.
"We really didn't set out intending to start a group," Wilson said. "We were writing songs to use the next week in worship. People started coming up to us saying, 'You guys should start recording.' Then we started thinking maybe God had something in mind."
INO Records released Connorsvine's self-titled debut October 23.
"When we started this whole process, we knew it was going to be unorthodox. We knew the whole football thing would play a part," said Smith, acknowledging that the Super Bowl champ-turned-artist angle held press appeal, but that there would also be scheduling challenges. "We also knew it would be a hindrance as well. We knew a conventional record label might not be the best way to go. We needed people who were willing to think outside the box."
With Smith in the middle of football season, Connorsvine interviews and appearances have to be scheduled around his Colts duties. After football season, Connorsvine plans to embark on a tour.
How does Wilson feel about his musical partner juggling another high-profile career? "For a number of years, I've actually been looking for a professional athlete to do this," Wilson said, as he and Smith erupt with laughter. "Actually, I'm not a football fan, not a sports fan at all. I had no idea what Hunter did for a living. When we were introduced, we just hit it off."
And how does the music industry compare with professional football?
"Art is art, and there may be people who don't like your art, but it doesn't mean it's bad art," Smith said. "Football performance is not as subjective. (The careers) are similar in that you're in front of people, but one is much more cut and dry in terms of how success is defined."
The duo's unusual name was inspired by a friend at church who gave them some fresh tomatoes, grown by his son Connor, thus coming from Connor's vine.
"We looked at other names, but Connorsvine kept coming back," Smith said. "We felt like it had a great meaning behind it -- the whole idea of a young man with childlike faith who planted seed and reaped a harvest and was bearing fruit."
Reuters/Billboard
( What's this? )
Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.