A commentary on faith, art, adoption, current events, books, writing and living in the tension between the here and now and what is yet to come.
Friday, December 01, 2006
The next Flannery O'Connor?
I've been hearing about Sufjan Stevens for a while now, but recently became more intrigued because my nephews are fans (they even named their new puppy Sufjan). Being the out-of-touch aunt and uncle, David and I insisted that "Sufjan" is pronounced "Suf-jan", and later found out it's really pronounced "Sufian". Oh well. We're not as hip as we thought.
I recently read an article about "Sufian" in Books and Culture. and found out he's a Michigan native, went to the renowned Interlocken music school, and attended Hope College.
Here's an excerpt from the article:
"Stevens seems convinced that to own up to evangelicalism would amount to professional or artistic suicide, and he is probably right. Though Christian culture warriors are put off by his calculated ambiguity, fans and critics are captivated. The high praise he has garnered from The New York Times and Rolling Stone—let alone thousands of fans around the world—may be the direct result of Stevens' willingness to grapple, in a suitably cryptic fashion, with issues of faith. Indeed, the secular music press now views the spiritual component of his work as an asset, best summed up by the Village Voice, which called him "the Next Flannery [O'Connor]."
He definitely sounds iPod-worthy....
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2 comments:
you, a resident of illinois, still haven't listened to sufjan yet? (you should at least check out his song based on flannery o'connor's 'a good man is hard to find'.) I guess I'll just have to give you an album when eric, ben and I visit this summer.
p.s. I prefer to call him "suf-jan", too.
The Illinois album far surpasses the Michigan album.
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