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Worship
10
Questions With: Darlene Zschech
Wendy Lee Nentwig
Contributing Writer
She's
been the worship pastor at Hillsong Australia for
18 years and has helmed some of the most popular
worship projects ever, not to mention penning the
popular worship anthem "Shout to the Lord."
But how has Darlene Zschech's success-not to mention
her role as a wife and mother and her childhood
spent in front of a microphone-impacted the woman
and worship leader she is today?
Listen
to audio clips from Darlene's solo album Kiss of
Heaven at Songs4Worship.com
You've been in the spotlight since you were 10,
singing with the best of the best in your native
Australia. How did that early emphasis on performance
impact the worship work you do now?
Darlene Zschech: It's been really good as far as
confidence and even understanding musicianship and
harmonies, [but] I grappled with the whole performance
issue when I first got saved when I was 15. I stopped
singing for a few years because I couldn't stop
doing what I was trained to do. Then one day the
Holy Spirit just nailed me and said, "you don't
need to perform for Me." That thing rears its
ugly head every now and again and it has to be put
to death. But that's life in Christ, learning how
to die so you can live.
You've
been the worship pastor at Hillsong Australia for
18 years now. How has your approach to worship leading
changed since the early days?
Zschech: It's changed so much. Just in confidence,
as far as what you're born to do, I think that takes
time to be confident in. Not having to explain everything,
not having to prove yourself. Now I know much clearer
who I am and that I first and foremost am a worshipper.
How
many songs would you say you write each year and
how do you fit that in between leading worship,
recording and producing?
Zschech: Are we talking good songs? I don't know,
maybe 50. Songwriting doesn't really fit; I'm just
doing it all the time. I'm working on a song at
the moment so it's in me, it's going around, so
it's always happening.
What
sparks a song idea for you?
Zschech: It probably gets sparked either reading
the Word or hearing a message or just hearing a
line. Sometimes even just seeing something in the
newspaper that would break your heart. It's just
something that causes passion and you go, "hey!"
It starts there.
You
and your husband, Mark, have three daughters. How
has being a mom impacted what you do?
Zschech: Oh, it's everything to me. Amy's 14, Chloe's
10 and Zoe just turned two, and they're just divine.
What it does is make sure what you're working on
is important enough-to your or in their eyes-to
be valuable enough to leave them. So it is always
that equation.
In
addition to writing, singing and recording, you're
also doing more producing. How has that come about?
Zschech: I started doing it because the producers
we were using would pull out the music, but they
couldn't pull out the heart of our church. I would
say, "I know that sounds like a great record,
but that's not what we're here to make. We're here
to make a statement of passion, of people giving
their lives away, and this doesn't sound like that."
So that's when I started to really get involved
in pulling a different kind of music out of worship
music. And over the years I've gotten more confident
at it and can hear it more easily. Well, actually,
I can find it more easily. I could always hear it,
I just couldn't find how to pull it out, but now
I can find it more easily, and it's something I
love to do.
Despite
your role as a modern worship pioneer, not everyone
in your family is a fan of modern worship, are they?
Zschech: About six months ago, it was my grandfather's
92nd birthday and he's like, "When are you
gonna do some nice songs, Dear?" They love
[the Hillsong music] because it's got their granddaughter
in it, but they've been waiting for me to sing "nice"
songs for a long time, something without a beat.
So I just went into the studio with a friend and
did10 hymns and put them on a CD and sent them up
to my pop for his birthday. And now it's like an
underground CD because I took it to our seniors
group and they all copied it for their friends.
Years
from now, what do you most want people to remember
about your contribution to the world of worship?
Zschech: I would love to be known as someone who
helped put value back into praise & worship.
I know I'm one of many, many, many who do this,
but I would love to be known as someone who helped.
You
are one of many, but you're also one of a handful
of women who've reached this level of success. Why
do you think that is?
Zschech: I really don't know. It bamboozles me.
But I am aware of the responsibility, possibly because
I know where I've come from. I'm just like anybody
else...and I try to communicate that when I'm leading
people, saying, "Hey, if I can do this, you
can do this." This is not for the extremely
gifted, talented or beautiful. Worship is inclusive
[and] I try and make it available to everybody.
If I make it too clever or too technically brilliant,
it excludes most of the people we're trying to serve.
There's
a lot of talk today about where we're veering off
course in terms of worship, but what do you think
we're doing right?
Zschech: Putting value on it again. I think God
must get so excited because it's been his heart
always and there were a couple generations where
worship was just plundered, we just didn't have
it. So I think over the next 10 years we're gonna
hear amazing Heaven music that is prophetic as far
as cutting edge, not being shaped by the trend,
but setting the trend. Because once you tap into
Heaven, it must. There will be the new Handel's
Messiah, the new works of worship like we've never
seen before.
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