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デズモインズで開催されるアイオワ州フェアにローレンダイグルが登場!8月8日コンサート開催

8月 3, 2024 / nipponese

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at the⁢ Iowa State Fair on Aug. 8, 2024. (Jeremy Cowart)”/>

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‌ ‍ Christian singer Lauren Daigle will‌ perform at the ⁤Iowa State Fair on Aug. 8, 2024. (Jeremy Cowart)
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Christian music superstar‍ Lauren Daigle ⁤is⁢ returning now to the music scene with an undeniable enthusiasm for her current self-titled album and for being able to tour.⁣ But more than that, she’s diving back into music with a whole new perspective on her life and the place her ⁢career occupies within‍ it.

“I’ve got probably the healthiest relationship ⁢with my‍ career I’ve ever had, because it’s in balance,” Daigle said in ‌a recent phone interview. ​“When I leave to go out and see the world, I ⁤get ‍to leave with so much joy and ⁣so much passion because​ I know I’m going to get to come home and love on my family and … it feels very much in balance, but not just in balance as far as time is concerned, it feels very much in balance as far as ⁣passion is concerned and as far as joy is concerned.”

Getting to such‍ a healthy place has not been easy for Daigle. She is now 10 years‌ into‌ her music career and has come out of a period where she struggled mightily with anxiety and⁢ depression and faced serious uncertainty ​about how to go about ⁤a ‌career that ​became ‌all consuming as Daigle rocketed to the top of the ​Christian⁢ music world and seemed poised to cross over and⁢ gain a significant ‍audience in the mainstream music scene.

“I ⁤got to a ⁣place of rock bottom as I’d known it up until this point, lots of sheer depression, anxiety,” she said.

Shaken by ‌seeing the pandemic put her career on hold, and also upset over ⁣the political and social divisions that were emerging in ⁢society as a whole, the ‍upheaval came to a ⁢head⁢ when Daigle suffered a severe panic attack. ⁤At first, she was scared it was a health emergency, such as a​ heart attack, but a phone call to a doctor ⁤helped her understand what she ‌was experiencing and how to breathe as⁣ she battled her anxiety.

What also helped Daigle was having her mother, a best friend and her faith by her side, helping her as​ she rode out her fear and panic.

If you go

What: Lauren Daigle with special guest Blessing ‌Offor

When: 8 p.m. ​Thursday, Aug.⁢ 8, 2024

Where: Iowa State Fair, 3000 E. Grand Ave., Des Moines

Cost: $35 ‌to $65

Tickets: www.iowastatefair.org/entertainment/grandstand

Artist⁤ website: ⁣ www.laurendaigle.com/

“My mom and‍ my friend just sat with me​ throughout the whole thing. It lasted about seven hours, and was pretty intense,” Daigle said of ‌her panic attack. “They ​just encouraged​ me that everything was OK. So … even in the height of⁣ paranoia, even in ⁢the height of panic,​ God was still close and He showed me who He was through these people who just sat with me to support me and not judge ⁤for what was completely unraveling at​ the surface.”

It was a long road to recovery after that episode. Daigle’s family continued to provide⁢ support, as ‍she started counseling to try to regain her⁤ emotional footing. Daigle said it took her two⁤ and a half years to really ⁢feel like⁤ herself again.

“Yesterday I was sitting in church and I had this moment of ‘Oh my ⁤gosh, look how far I’ve been able to come,’” she‌ said. “I ‍was in ⁣counseling at ⁢this one moment, and ‌my counselor, who‌ doesn’t use this ⁣type of jargon, she just looked⁣ at me ‌and she said, ‘I want you to understand that what has happened to you in your life, like the place you were in (back) then versus the⁣ place you are in now is an actual miracle.’”

Daigle was still ‌far ⁢from feeling normal ⁢and having a handle on her future when‍ the time came for her ‌to begin work on her next album.

“My manager flew to my ⁢home and she was basically like, ‘OK, here’s the deal. What’s⁤ the​ verdict? Are you done⁣ with music for good? Or are​ you going to step back into this?’ Daigle said. “I was at that rock⁤ bottom of uncertainty. I know this is silly, but there was almost ⁤this moment of wondering, hey, is what‍ I’m doing really making a difference or is it all just (an illusion)?”

Daigle ⁣decided to move forward‍ with music. But she didn’t know what kind of album ⁢she wanted to make.

Daigle credits her co-writers (which included new collaborators Amy ‍Wadge, Lori McKenna, Jon ⁢Greene, Mike Elizondo (who also produced the album) and perhaps most notably, Natalie ​Hemby, who has co-writing credits on 10⁤ songs on‌ the full “Lauren Daigle” album) with essentially pulling ideas out of ⁣her that turned into‍ songs.

She said it⁤ forced her to ‍think ‌about what she wanted to say, and what God wanted to say.

“How⁣ do I do ⁢this ‍and ‍what kind of messages do I need to be bringing for such a time as‍ this, for this hour?” Daigle said. “How do I do that in a time when I feel like I don’t even feel like myself right now? It was really difficult. I’m not⁢ going to lie. It was really hard. But I think that’s actually why I love this record so much. It’s​ because I had to like grow with it, and kind of have growing ⁤pains with it and go through learning myself.”

The first phase of‌ the⁣ project arrived ⁢last May with a ‍10-song self-titled ​album, and in September, it was released ‍in complete form,​ with another 13 songs added from the same writing and recording sessions.

The sessions were obviously productive, but what’s even more impressive is that the “Lauren Daigle” album already represents her most ambitious, ⁤stylistically varied and accomplished work to date.

That’s no small statement for an artist who had already‌ reached ⁣rarefied air ‌with ‌her first two albums, which together produced three No. 1 Christian singles (including the Grammy winning, ⁢six-times-platinum song “You Say” from her third album, “Look Up Child”) that propelled her into the front ranks of the Christian music scene.

The “Lauren Daigle” album has so far produced ⁣a No. 1 Christian single in “Thank God I Do” ⁣and the 32-year-old native of Lafayette, Louisiana, said in working with her new​ collaborators, she gained a new perspective on how to craft melody‍ and make every note count and how to ​use story telling as a vehicle for examining the human condition.

The highly melodic pop balladry that was​ a cornerstone of the first​ two albums returns on songs like “Thank God I Do,” which⁤ touches on ‍Daigle’s mental health struggles, “To Know You” and “Don’t Believe Them.” But Daigle’s New Orleans musical roots shine more than ever on “These ‌are the Days,” a rousing⁣ track that features full horn and string arrangements and‌ gospel-ish ⁢backing vocals, while the brightly ‌hued “Kaleidoscope‍ Jesus” mixes ⁣a bit of New Orleans with classic Philly soul. “New” bounces along to a⁤ hip-hop cadence⁤ and a playful horn line, while “Waiting,” a string-accented midtempo tune, has​ shades of Beatles-esque pop⁤ and Motown.

Daigle is back on tour now, and is bringing a big production featuring a mix of songs from across ⁢her career. She will perform at 8 p.m. Aug. 8 at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines. Opening for her will be Blessing Offor.

“We are still bringing all the energy, all the fun. I think there⁢ is going to be 13⁤ of ​us on stage, 13 or 14 of us, which I’m really excited about. We have our horn ⁣section, which I love because ‍it brings ⁣that energy and the zeal and the iconic sounds of New Orleans,” Daigle said. “We’ve got‍ a background vocalist⁣ section, drums, bass, guitar, all the things. It’s‌ going to be really sweet.”

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