Coming Up to Breathe MercyMe

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/25/2006
  • Sales Rank: 11,972
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 828768064627
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

Coming Up to Breathe

1LISTENComing Up to Breathe 4:18
2LISTENSo Long Self 4:03
3LISTENHold Fast 4:38
4LISTENSomething About You 4:55
5LISTENYou're to Blame 4:14
6LISTENNo More No Less 5:46
7LISTENWhere I Belong 4:39
8LISTENBring the Rain 5:30
9LISTENLast One Standing 3:39
10LISTENOne Trick Pony 3:26
11LISTEN3:42 A.M. (Writer's Block) 3:35
12LISTENSafe and Sound 3:43
13LISTENI Would Die for You 12:49

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

There's a reason MercyMe is the hottest act in Christian music. The band has written hit after hit, time after time. With their latest opus Coming Up to Breathe there appears to be more coming. In a concerted effort to revert back to the days when they were more a rock band and less of a hitmaking machine, MercyMe delivers. While it's certainly not heavy metal, the songs definitely keep driving forward. Guitars are more prominent and production leans on a more earthy formula. "No More No Less" is a perfect example of straightforward rock meeting MercyMe; it isn't brain surgery but it is rock & roll and it's done well. The half-time breakdown at the song's conclusion takes it to a whole different level. The background vocals literally sound like the Temptations and are some of the best heard yet this year. One area MercyMe will never ignore is in the lyric department. Vocalist Bart Millard delivers some of the most poignant and heartfelt thoughts on Coming Up to Breathe. He and band take the cut "Bring the Rain" and weave it into praise & worship splendor while lyrically telling a relevant story. "Last One Standing" turns up the rock. There's a musical breakdown that could easily be the Foo Fighters when the vocals re-enter the distorted mix and set the tune off. "Hold Fast" is rock with polish and Nathan Cochran's bass groove not only sounds heavy but its very tone exudes sweat. The mid-song bridge shows the band at their pinnacle when the guitars build to Millard's intense vocals. "One Trick Pony" is one of the most diverse cuts, sounding like it's being played from the front porch in the swamps of Kentucky. This feel-good vibe drips with blues and country swagger, with acoustic leads sprinkled throughout and growling with soul. Even when the band plays what appears to be a more subdued melody like "Where I Belong," the guitar nuances and dynamic shifts soak the tunes with flavor that build to the lead guitar. Don't think MercyMe aren't delivering the hits. "So Long Self" has mass appeal musically and lyrically; the coolest part about the poppy hook is the ELO type vocals that penetrate the song's middle. MercyMe is able to rock on portions of each song but they always bring it back to a memorable chorus or a hooky verse. That's the formula that has always worked for them, and it does here, too. ~ Steven Douglas Losey, All Music Guide All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 4Reviews: 1

Mercy Me Rocks - Or Notby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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February 22, 2007: I usually don't care for rock music, but the music in this album is an exception. The vibrant music and lyrics have definitely captured the plight of the human condition, while being uplifting "I've done everything I can to get myself up on dry land. Now here I am again, reaching for Your hand." (From the title song) I particularly liked the background vocals in "Let Me Introduce Myslf to You", with the richness of the bass voices perfectly blending with the lighter voices of the sopranos in the second part of the song - "Lord, I wanna go home, nothing more and nothing less." My favorite song on the album is "Bring the Rain", because it expresses the desire to give God the glory, no matter what suffering life may bring. The lyrics of the second part, "Holy, holy, holy, holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty" is so strong in its quiet praise that I feel like I'm being lifted right up into the very heights of heaven! One thing I did not like was in the introduction to "Bring the Rain" the drum beats seem to be too loud. That was only like a speck of dust in the oil, though. I think the album as a whole is a significant contribution to Christian contemporary music. I am anxious for Mercy Me to give us more of the same.