After his hugely successful career in the 90's with dc talk, TobyMac
(Tobias Kevin Michael McKeehan) decided to go out on his own and released
his debut album, Momentum, in 2001. Toby has been throughly enjoying
his solo career and recently released his second album entitled, Welcome
to Diverse City. This CD tells of Toby's passion to start a revolution
that will sweep through cities and erase the lines that divide and keep
people and cultures apart.
Toby's style is much like that of dc talk but with more of a hip-hop
sound. He likes to refer to his style as "musical gumbo" because of
the diversity of sounds he incorporates. Toby uses a mixture of rock,
pop, rap, and reggae to reach people of all races and color. His influences
include Arrested Development, U2, The Police, Black Eyed Peas, and Bob
Marley. Toby feels that U2 and Bob Marley have the greatest expressions
of spirituality in their music, even through Marley sings of a different
god.
TobyMac wants to start a revolution, one that will sweep through cities
and erase the divisive lines that keep people and cultures apart.
Throughout the 1990s, TobyMac achieved considerable success with his
Grammy winning group dc talk, stockpiling a number of gold and platinum
albums with seven million combined copies sold.
As the group moved into the rearview window, TobyMac boldly stepped
out on his own with his solo debut, Momentum.
Earning rave reviews from Billboard to CCM Magazine, the 2001 album
debuted atop the Billboard Heatseekers chart, sold over 400,000 copies,
and landed two number one singles, "Extreme Days" and "Somebody's Watching
Me."
The DC born artist went on to win several Dove Awards, including Producer
of the Year, and two BMI honors as Christian Songwriter of the Year.
As a true artist, it's not his impressive sales heights or awards that
fire up his voice, but rather it's an unwavering quest to make songs
that connect and inspire all who hear them. Crafting the perfect songs
to match his vision, TobyMac ignites the first spark with Welcome to
Diverse City.
Accentuating his celebrated career with dc talk, TobyMac made his solo
bow in 2001 with the Grammy-nominated Momentum.
As the title implies, Diverse City is an album bursting with musical
flavors and nuances, and yet this stylistic blend finds unity through
faith as it's threaded through a melding urban rock and hip-hop frame.
Reaching into a world of different sounds and cultures, this album knits
it all together with a genuine artist's touch.
The disc marked a return to TobyMac's hip-hop roots, the very style
with which dc talk first emerged, and yet the rapper-singer once again
finds himself branching out from this base.
"I'm not on a mission to flex musical diversity as much as possible,
but I don't fear it," admits the emcee. "I don't fear where the music
is taking me. There's a blending going on as I drop it all in the pot
making what I call musical gumbo."
Building upon this throwback style, TobyMac infuses new life with raps,
hooks, and melodies that transform the party energy into a celebration
of races united as a single city on a shining hill.
Case in point, the title track recalls a time when disco rolled into
funk and groups like the Gap Band and Parliament rocked the perfect
party soundtracks. After moving feet with its retro revival touches,
the album trades in the dancing shoes for bangin' heads as "Slam" and
"Phenomenon" surge with rock guitars, explosive vocals, and anthem-like
choruses. Then, as a song that feels like summertime in a cup, "Gone"
uses a progressive west coast pop style to tell about a friend who gave
her disrespectful boyfriend the curbside-kick.
"My style is diversity, it always has been," says TobyMac, who co-produced
the album along with such notables as Chris Stevens, Paul Meany, Robert
Marvin, Mike Linney, Joe Baldridge, and Solomon Olds.
"It's about taking hip-hop and injecting pop melodies and guitars and
harmonicas and whatever else it takes to make the song fit the message
I'm trying to communicate."

In regards to the message, the new album reflects a shift in the way
he expresses ideas.
Whereas past albums tended to tackle issues in a more universal manner,
"Welcome to Diverse City" takes a closer look at specific
people, sometimes himself, problems, and situations as real life backdrops
to the lyrics.
This approach, which exudes a more personal touch, adds empathy to
a tale of loneliness ("Atmosphere"), urgency to a call for change ("Getaway
Car"), and humor to a frustrated confession of days short on time ("Gotta
Go"). The album's most personal song, "Burn For You," even tackles the
renewed life that TobyMac experienced after adopting twins two years
ago.
"In the past I dealt head-on with social issues, but I'm starting to
see that social issues come down to real lives," says TobyMac. "As you
dig into personal issues and find resolve in God, social issues will
begin to take care of themselves."
In 2002, TobyMac complemented his debut with the holiday single This
Christmas and the Momentum DVD, while Re:Mix Momentum, which delivered
three more Top 10 hits, followed in 2003.
That same year, Momentum lived up to its name as TobyMac topped CCM
Magazine's 25 Most Important Artists Shaping Christian Music Today and
placed fourth on their 25 Powerful People Who Have Made Christian Music
What It Is Today.
He also made the cut for Christian Radio Weekly's 50 Most Influential
People Today and was named one of the Top 50 Evangelical Leaders of
This Generation by Christianity Today.
During these past few years, TobyMac toured incessantly as a headliner
in addition to co-headlining with Kirk Franklin and sharing stages with
Third Day, among others. Showing everyone he's more than just "talk,"
TobyMac put his artistic vision and values back into action with Welcome
to Diverse City, another album living up to its title.
"People fashion a great city by holding tight the beauty of our differences
with the bonds of our unity," he concludes. "My new album invites people
to ponder how they relate to each other and to God and how He relates
to them, but at the same time, I know it's gonna drop a bomb that'll
make any listener feel the energy.
Millions of fans know TobyMac as part of the hugely successful Christian
rap/rock group DC Talk. Since going solo in 2001, Toby has had two top-selling
records, Momentum and Grammy-nominated Welcome to Diverse City. Now
Toby shares with 700 Club Producer Scott Ross about his latest effort,
a book called Under God.
People that made a difference are in Toby's latest project, a book
he co-wrote with former DC Talk member Michael Tait called Under God.
Toby's passions for a deeper relationship with God and racial reconciliation,
especially among Christians, drive the stories in this book - stories
that talk about Christians of all colors who made this country great.
"We can't just sweep it under the carpet. We have to, first of all,
put it out in the forefront and make it up for conversation. That's
what we want this book to do. We want dialogue to come out of this book.
We don't want just warm fuzzies to come out of this book."
Toby was asked does repentance fit into this book Toby Replied " I
think it's what the book is all about. I think for us to begin to move
forward, there has to be repentance for offenses that were made. The
very end of the book, it's like, actually my letter and Michael's letter
is as white Americans I believe we need to recognize the past. We need
to seek forgiveness for it. And Michael's like, 'As a Black American,
I believe we need to forgive.' That's repentance. But truly at the end
of the day, some of these stories were meant to just strictly inspire,
inspire people to say I'm proud of my nation."
Using unforgettable accounts of both famous and little-known Americans,
Under God tells the stories of men and women of faith who forged our
nation. Against these stories of light, the authors also examine the
dark side of America's legacy so that a new generation might seek God's
face and avoid repeating the sins of the past, for it is only under
God that there will truly be "liberty and justice for all."
The righteous will hold fast to everything they believe in. And if
it gets demolished, destroyed, whatever you say, I don't think you can
demolish or destroy it. I think if people could demolish or destroy
the values in God's Word, it would have been destroyed a long time ago.
Many leaders have tried to destroy God's Word, but believers find a
way to meet. They find a way to believe. They find a way to place their
faith in God, whatever the country is. They continue to believe.

TobyMac's records:
Welcome to Diverse City, 2004 (ForeFront)
Re: Mix Momentum, 2003 (ForeFront)
This Christmas, CD Single, 2002 (ForeFront)
Momentum, 2001 (ForeFront)
Visit Our TobyMac Store * Christian
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