- Intro
- I Believe
- Make It Loud
- Crazy
- I Need You
- Open Up the Sky
- Oceans
- He Is the Holy One
- Worshiping You
- Revolution
- Lifting My Hands
- Dear Jesus
- Whisper His Name
- Make Us Holy
Will the real Jonathan Stockstill please stand up? He may not be a household name, but the talented worship leader was standing front and center for 2006's Let the Church Rise, the national debut for Bethany World Prayer Center, a multicultural congregation that provided significant relief to hundreds of Katrina evacuees. The album itself was an adept representation of the ethnic makeup of the church, as it mixed contemporary praise with gospel and pop elements, plus Stockstill's own rich baritone.
The man is front and center again for
Deluge, however, is a little different. In the case of the Hillsong guys, there's still some stylistic common ground between grown-ups and kids. Not so with Deluge—the band sounds
And what a forte it is. For the first half-hour or so of playing time, it's hard to nail down who exactly Deluge sounds like. One moment they channel early-day Green Day ("Make It Loud"), only to recall "Message in a Bottle" by The Police in the next ("I Believe"), and they can even do a believable Mars Volta impression ("Crazy"). There are some U2-isms in spots ("I Need You"), but they serve as breathers among all the raw, rock 'n' roll dynamics at play.
Things become decidedly more commonplace as the album progresses, but they're never aberrantly ordinary or middle-of-the-road. Stockstill is a piano man, so he anchors the songs with enough personality and color to avoid musical cliché, like the interesting "Oceans" and the ardent "Worshiping You." Bottom line,