reinventing the wheel by andy gullahorn — an album review
Andy Gullahorn is one of those artists that i keep “rediscovering.” i’m sure you know what i mean. i’ll listen to his records for a while and then, for some unknown reason, i’ll just stop. no real reason. maybe i just get distracted by other things, or something like that, but somehow his stuff will fall out of rotation for a couple of months. then, as i’m scanning through my iTunes library, i’ll see his name and realize that i haven’t listened to him in a while, and then i’m floored as to how songs like his could ever fall out of rotation. or why i even bother listening to anything else at all!
my first exposure to andy was a couple of years ago at Andy Peterson’s Behold the Lamb of God show in Nashville (if you ever see the BtLoG dvd, you might see a familiar face [*cough*me*cough*], as the picture fades to credits at the end; but i digress). at this show, Andy played a song called “Holy Flakes” that, quite frankly, was and is hilarious. however, i was not prepared at all for the end of the song in which a hammer was lowered that struck to the very heart of Christian consumerism. it was at that moment that i realized that a special talent was standing on the stage in front of me.
andy’s songs span a wide spectrum of themes. funny, serious, thoughtful, love songs. yet his genius is found in making each one of them deeply profound and deeply penetrating. i don’t know that i’ve ever met an artist who so clearly and quickly spoke directly to me in their songs. not at so deep a level as this, that is.
Reinventing the Wheel is Andy’s third album, and, in my opinion, it’s his best album to date. from lamenting the passing of the great work it takes to break in a new baseball cap, to the realization that a lifetime spent with the one we love is still not enough time spent with the one we love, to a beautiful ballad detailing the triumphs and trials of one of Andy Osenga’s toes (for those of you keeping score, that is 3 different “Andy’s” that have been mentioned in this post), these songs are a wonderful testament to Andy’s gift of storytelling and poetry.
the song on the album that i’ve been digging the most in the last few days is his “More of a Man.” this is a sort of “coming of age” song, but in a different respect. it talks about the changes that come from crossing the river that runs between the land of singleness and the land of marriage and family, and the struggle that comes in leaving behind your independence and “manly” things like chicken fried steak and Jean-Claude Van Damme, in exchange for maturity, responsibility, and Dora the Explorer.
my wife and i have not entered into the “with kids” stage of this adventure yet, but i can definitely relate to the song because so much sacrifice is required in marriage. there are many times when i long to be back in a place where i can spend all my time playing video games, watching mindless action movies, and drinking beer. but then i remember about the place that God has put me in and the relationships he has called me to pursue and invest in, namely with my wife, and all of a sudden those “manly” things don’t seem as important anymore. it seems more manly, especially in this point of history, to focus on being a good husband and growing in intimacy and relationship with my wife and friends, than any amount of (regular) dr. pepper could ever be.
so check out andy gullahorn if you never have. you will most certainly not regret it.










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