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Building
429
In a way, Building 429 acts as a culmination and a
beginning for the trio, a stepping stone in a
faith journey through the highs and lows of life
on the road and the busyness of music, to a place
of solace and contentment in who God wants them to
be.
If anything, Building 429's eponymous INO Records
debut is a testament that the band is ready to go
to the next level-spiritually, musically, and
otherwise. You could say they're starting over:
with a clean slate, a reinvigorated sound, and a
renewed message.
Not that they haven't already reached exciting
plateaus in their past 10 years together. Having
played 200 shows a year as an independent
endeavor, Building 429 burst onto the scene in
2004 with their first project on a major label,
Space in Between Us. The album's breakout single,
"Glory Defined," was a record-breaker at radio, a
chart-topper that earned the band a wide mantle of
accolades and industry recognition. Topping eight
separate charts and declared as BMI's Song of the
Year, the band went on to capture the Dove Award
for New Artist of the Year. Jason Roy (lead
vocalist), Michael Anderson (drums), and Jesse
Garcia (keys, lead guitarist, background vocalist)
moved forward to release the next two of their
studio efforts, 2006's Rise, and 2007's Iris to
Iris, which were received favorably, making
significant appearances on Billboard's Christian
charts and heavily impacting Christian radio.
"This record feels like the beginning of a new
season in our career," says Jason Roy, Building
429's front man and chief songwriter. "Having
recently departed from Word Records, it felt like
we are starting everything over for the first
time. You don't always get that opportunity, so it
felt like this was the time to do a self-titled
record. We understand a little bit more about who
we are and what we're trying to do."
It was during this new season that Building 429
came in contact with INO Records. Roy recalls
vividly the first meeting he had with label
president Jeff Moseley. Having been a part of
Christian music's major-label system for three
albums, the bandleader wasn't quite sure what to
expect, but the occasion was an eye-opener: Roy
knew this is where his band belonged.
"Jeff said to me," Roy recalls, 'People aren't
looking for hooky, poppy songs anymore. They're
looking for life. And life can only come out of an
overflow of your relationship with Christ.' "
"Jeff looked at me and said, 'Son, you're about to
make a new record. You're writing songs. You'd
better be in the Word,' " Roy reminisces. "When he
said that, a trigger went off and I said, 'This is
the guy we're working with, no question.'"
With the INO partnership and a refocused sense of
ministry firmly in place, Roy, Anderson and Garcia
set out to record Building 429 alongside producer
Christopher Stevens, whose recent projects include
tobyMac and Sanctus Real.
The band's new-found methodology is at the
forefront of "Overcome," a no-nonsense power
rocker that declares Christ's triumph over this
world-a victory that frees up believers to
worship, while allowing them to face up to any
challenges life may throw their way.
"Greater is He that is in you than he that is in
the world," says Garcia, with resolve when talking
about the song, using a quote from 1 John 4:4.
"Our Savior has overcome that world and there is
nothing for us to fear."
One of the more buoyant songs Building 429 has
ever recorded, is the album's first single "End of
Me." "All I longed for I found finally, at the end
of me," Roy sings in the chorus, reminding the
listener that true fulfillment in life is found in
surrendering control to Christ.
"God has continued to work in a real powerful way
teaching us to step aside and allow Him to do what
He wants to do," says Roy in regards to the song.
"It is my constant reminder these days to live my
life by God's design. It always amazes me how God
works through us. Earlier this year my wife and I
traveled to Nicaragua with World Vision, and that
trip has become a cornerstone in how we watch God
move. When we talk about World Vision at our
concerts each night, it continues to blow our
minds to see the power of God move in people as
they respond by sponsoring thousands of children.
Once again, a humbling reminder of what He can do
through us."
Building 429 doesn't just excel at the
high-wattage performances. They also have a knack
for nuance, as with the heartfelt "Always," a
soaring ballad underscored by piano, guitars, and
strings. It doesn't take long for the song to
crescendo and explode into a powerful refrain,
with Roy reaching into his upper register.
"Everybody at some point reaches a defining moment
in their faith life, a moment with massive
questions that we don't have the answers to,
questions you can't ever really tie a bow around,"
Roy says. "'Always' is my attempt to answer those
questions. God has said that He is before us, He
is after us, and He will be with us along every
step of the way. All things work together for the
good of those who love the Lord. This life is just
one piece of the puzzle."
Realizing that levity and melody are also an
integral part of rock 'n' roll, Building 429
stretches its wings and goes places once unvisited
with "Shoulder," a bluesy piece that Roy likens to
Train's "Drops of Jupiter." From top to bottom,
the song is a pick-me-up-one of those moments that
have become signature in the band's repertoire.
"Staying alone is definitely not our strength,"
Roy says of "Shoulder," a song inspired by his
friendship with Anderson and Garcia. "We're kind
of a brotherhood of sorts. We've been through a
lot of stuff together. The reality for us is that
as long as we stay together, God will continue to
mold us for the challenges ahead."
Of this more lighthearted material, Anderson says,
"For a while, our live show was pretty dense and
serious. What we've realized is that we need those
worshipful moments, but we also need moments in
our show to let the audience have a little fun."
But somber or jovial, rocking or inspiring,
Building 429 is no longer operating from the
perspective of trying to replicate past fortunes.
More so than the music or the sound of things, the
band wants fans to remember Building 429 as its
most meaningful project thus far, a signpost that
testifies to how much the group has come along in
its ministry.
"I'm more confident than I have ever been in my
life when it comes to my calling, when it comes to
my brothers, when it comes to my band," Roy
concludes. "That confidence is not in myself. That
confidence is in the fact that the Lord is going
to do something great with us. We're just excited
to be along for the ride."
Find out more by visiting
Building 429's Website
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