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Kim Walker-Smith: Jesus Culture Music's prophetic voice

Radio Hayah spoke to Jesus Culture's Kim Walker-Smith about her 'On My Side' album.

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For over 10 years, the worldwide Church has come to recognise that Kim Walker-Smith is one of the most anointed, recognisable and emotionally involving singers in Christendom. Now with the release of her solo album 'On My Side' the worship leader spoke to Radio Hayah.

 

RH: I think 'On My Side' is your best work yet. Have you seen any reviews?

 

Kim: I haven't seen a lot of reviews. I usually try not to. But I have gotten a lot of feedback from different people. The best so far has been, "You're putting language to the season that I'm in right now." That's really meant a lot. In my humanity it makes me go, "Oh, I'm not the only one who walks through these seasons with the Lord."

 

RH: A lot of Christian music seems to be pretending that once Jesus comes into your life everything is wonderful.

 

Kim: When you read Scripture, I think that Jesus was trying to prepare us, telling us it's not going to be easy: following him does not mean that everything in life will work out smooth. But I think we get that in our heads. Especially as artists - worship leaders, songwriters, preachers even - there's unspoken pressure that because they're on the stage they have to do it perfectly. That can send a message to people that they shouldn't expect to go through anything difficult or wrestle through anything with the Lord. This project was me going, 'I really want to be vulnerable - write songs that really express the journey I've been on with the Lord.' I want to tell this story; I want people to hear it's not been perfect, it's not been easy, but there's been hope, and Jesus has been with me the whole way through.

 

RH: Was the recording of these songs emotionally difficult? You're baring your soul on 'On My Side'.

 

Kim: Definitely. "On My Side" - the song we titled the album after - was probably the hardest for me to sing. I had to stop multiple times. I had to come into the studio and process my emotions with the producer and a friend I had there with me. I couldn't get through the song without processing what I was feeling, because the emotion was just coming out in the song. I had to talk my way through it, get a few tears out and get back in there. It was the emotion coming out in every song, but it was also exposing my heart to the world in a way I haven't before.

 

RH: In live recordings with Jesus Culture you've prophesied in songs. In the studio I suppose there's not the same opportunity to do that.

 

Kim: We worked hard to create a little bit of that because it is who I am. If I'm leading in a live setting, that's what comes out of me naturally as a worship leader. It felt like I couldn't abandon that completely. So I had a long talk with Jeremy Edwardson, who's produced all of our records - he's a great friend; I've known him for many years - and expressed to him that even though I'm making a studio record, I still want to find a way we can capture a little of that. There's a bit towards the end of "Fresh Outpouring" where we capture a little of that. It's not what I'm used to in a live setting, but it still felt like a piece of me. I let that go a little bit, and I had to talk myself into it for a little while. "Kim, you're 35 years old, you've been doing this a really long time, and at this point you can do this - you can branch off into something different. You will survive!"

 

RH: Do you find you have to shut your eyes and block out some of the things in the studio?

 

Kim: Yeah. There were a few times I had them turn off the lights - every single light - and I was standing there in pitch blackness. That was the only way I could get my mind in the right headspace and focus on the song. It was a little bit distracting. On the stage there's other things that can distract you. I spent a year at theatre school, studied stage acting and screen acting. Stage acting, you have to use your entire body and all of your voice. With screen acting, you can have the camera up close, on your face, and you have to convey a huge emotion with a very subtle look and maybe a whisper. It's much harder. On stage, we can convey a message with so much - the physical act of worship, lifting our hands. In a studio, it's hard to convey that emotion and energy; and if you don't find a way to bring that, you can hear it. As a singer, you actually have a tendency to sing flat and not even be on pitch. There were times I had to turn off the lights so I could imagine I'm in a room with all the people I love and we're doing this together - something like that to build up some energy to convey the emotion of the moment.

 

RH: Have you roadtested these songs?

 

Kim: No. The only song that had been sung before a congregation multiple times was "Fresh Outpouring". I was so excited when that one was written that I wanted to do it right away. The next week I was doing it at our conference in Los Angeles last summer. It took off. People responded really well to it, and I started doing it at church. I did "Undone" at a ladies' conference in Colorado. I was a speaker but I did a session of worship. The conference was actually called Undone. The ladies loved it. "When will this song be on an album?" I said, "Soon!"

 

RH: How much of your time is spent out of music but administrating at Jesus Culture Music?

 

Kim: I just recently stepped down. I'm about to have baby number three - a little girl in June - so I decided to step down. I've always had regular work days, and I love that. I love the organisation and the business side of things; I worked as a banker before I was full-time in music. With a third kid coming, I don't know what's going to happen to my life. When I'm not writing, not leading worship, I'm home with my kids, sorting out life with them.

 

RH: Do you think "On My Side" will be the next one of your songs to go around the world?

 

Kim: It is so tough to say. For me, that one or "Fresh Outpouring". "Fresh Outpouring" is the cry of so many churches, so many people - not just for our church but for our homes and our families. Both of those - one resonates in a deep place in our hearts, the other in the corporate cries of our hearts. So either one of those.

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