Show results for

Explore

In Stock

Artists

Actors

Authors

Format

Condition

Theme

Category

Genre

Rated

Label

Specialty

Decades

Size

Color

Deals

Empty image
Skeleton Psalms
  • Artist: The Disciple
  • Label: Bec Recordings
  • UPC: 810539026736
  • Item #: 2559628X
  • Genre: Christian
  • Release Date: 4/28/2023
CD 
List Price: $15.98
Price: $11.22
You Save: $4.76 (30%)
loading image
Get it between Sat. Jun 7 - Mon. Jun 23
Deliver to

You May Also Like

Description

Skeleton Psalms on CD

Since their debut album in 1995, Disciple has recorded 12 albums, earned 14 No. 1 singles, and sold hundreds of thousands of records. Their music has been featured on ESPN's NFL Live, WWE, Fox Sports, as well as in commercials for CBS' CSI: Miami and Criminal Minds. They've received multiple Dove Awards, played thousands of shows worldwide, and have their 13th album due September 13th on Tooth & Nail Records. The full-length, Love Letter Kill Shot, continues their legacy as a band immune to burnout. If anything, their latest record takes their legacy and amplifies it; the project is full of prolific guitar riffs, new collaborative lyrical contributions, and fresh themes. The title takes inspiration from the salvation message in the Gospel, acknowledging that when we accept the love of Christ we learn how to lay our own lives down and live in Him. "It's the duality of our perceived identity and Christ's identity in us that shapes the album," says band frontman Kevin Young. Using personal stories of depression, anxiety, and suffering, Young and fellow bandmates Josiah Prince, Andrew Stanton, and Joey West, highlight the redeeming truth that Christ uses all tragedy for victory. Love Letter Kill Shot unleashes the band's enthusiasm for heavy rock and scripture that heals-utilizing this record to speak less to Jesus and more to the listener about how they can find their hope in Him. What they're talking about, how they're saying it, and the way they're playing it proves that Disciple is a group who after all these years still lives to outdo themselves.