Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Donate to Christianity Today
login | my account
May 27, 2012

Home > Music > Reviews > 2010
Brian Doerksen and Christopher Greco
Prodigal God (Doerksen Music)
Our Rating3 Stars - Good
Your Rating
comment

Style: Broadway musical-style soundtrack

Top tracks: "Hold Me Now," "Unloved," "Life Is Sweet,"

What if neither son in the famous parable had it right all along? What if it was the father who was the wasteful one, squandering his extravagant love on his two lost and unseeing sons? That's the premise of Prodigal God, a musical created by CCM worship veteran Brian Doerksen and playwright Christopher Greco.

The two-disc, 23-song project is an eight-year labor of love for Doerksen and the soundtrack to a musical that doesn't exist—yet. But there's more planned: next year an audio script featuring select scenes and monologues and a complete script for theater companies; a film and concert tour in 10 years.

It's all ambitious, but the soundtrack lays a solid foundation. The music heavily outlines a compelling story that brings insightful, three-dimensional character development to the more basic parable in Luke 15. Doerksen plays the bitter, hyper-responsible yet jealous elder son. Worship pioneer Ron Kenoly's passionate bass brings weight to the father, especially notable on "Fragile Hope." Colin Janz delivers exuberance as the carefree, dreaming younger son. And the skillful storytelling features Marika as a slave girl who the younger brother falls in love with and tries to rescue.

The brothers trade some powerful lyrical dialogue, but the interplay of the reckless brother and the nomadic beauty provides the strongest musical exchanges. "Hold Me Now" is Act One's climactic love song, and "Unloved" compares her own lack of a father's love with the grim future of the child she now carries—the younger son's baby. The fate of the infant ultimately falls to the elder son and proves to be the key to unexpected healing.

Style varies widely, though most common is theatrical pop. But "Till We Return to Dust" rides aggressive guitars into the dark psyche of the elder brother's lament. And the fingerprints of world musician Boris Sichon skillfully paint the corners with an exotic Mid-Eastern soundscape. The vocals of the 20-member cast—including townsfolk, traders and refugees—are generally strong, and production is solid and even. However, "Who Needs a Plan" strays into cheesy '80s CCM synth pop. And the horns, tempo, and background chorus of "The New Wine" channel '80s Integrity/Hosanna worship, conjuring forced smiles in the most celebratory moment of the prodigal's return.

Theater fans and adventurous listeners willing to engage with the psychological epic will mine poignant insights. But the music overall is so rooted in its storyline that there's little that stands alone outside its original context.


Brian Doerksen and Christopher Greco
Prodigal God (Doerksen Music)
Our Rating3 Stars - Good
Your Rating
comment




Christianity Today


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!
[Reader Reviews]

Tim Wright

November 23, 2010  10:44am

The final 1 1/2 paragraphs of the review actually suggests why this CD deserves more than 3 stars. Prodigal God requires more of the listener than what the typical CCM/worship fare requires--it engages our mind, our emotions, and our spirit. I've listened to the CD several times, and the creative scope of the project reveals more with each listen. And, I worked in a Christian bookstore in the 1980s/90s where I was subjected to 80's CCM synth/pop and Integrity music nonstop, and I can assure any listener that "Who Needs a Plan" and "New Wine" are not retreads of these styles. Doerksen invites us to a musical feast in Prodigal God--musically, lyrically, and spiritually. He moves far beyond the musical cliches and bland, repetitive lyrics found in most modern worship/CCM and engages us at the highest artistic levels. Prodigal God deserves 4.5 stars and wide audience! Treat yourself to a copy.

Report Abuse

The allotted time for commenting has ended.

[Browse More Christianity Today]



Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working

The Conversation

The Conversation

A tribute to "The Reformed Journal."

more | current issue

Christian Bible Studies

Unbalanced Blessings

Unbalanced Blessings

The balancing act of...

Books & Culture

Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working...

Preaching Today

NFL Star Junior Seau Searched for Peace

Small Groups

Prepare with Prayer

Prepare with Prayer

Don't leave out this...

Search
Search
Search
Scripture Search
Go Deeper