Group member and producer of SUPERCHICK, Max Hsu gives a track-by-track rundown of the band's soon-to-be-released album
Over the years America's Superchick have reinvented their sound. Initially being perceived as purveyors of teen pop, their new album 'Rock What You Got' sees the sister-fronted band honing a "rock-o-tronic" sound - an electro-punk mash-up of slashing guitars, pulsing keyboards and grit-pop vocals. Here the band's founder and producer Max Hsu gives his thoughts about each song on Superchick's newie.
"Rock What You Got"
Once upon a time, there was
a duckling that looked a little different than everyone else. The
other ducklings made fun of it a lot. At puberty, that duckling got
teased about its high forehead. When that duckling grew up, it turned
out it wasn't a duck at all. It was Tyra Banks. We've all heard that
story. It's easier to believe we're ugly than to believe that we are
fearfully and wonderfully made. You have to fight the lie; no one
hands it to you. You have to shake off the insecurities and the
beliefs that hold you down. When I see people being who they were
created to be, they light up the world around them. You can be that
person. I can be that person. If there was hope for this ugly
duckling, there's hope for everyone. Be who you were meant to be.
"Alive"
I studied computer science in high
school. I had an uncle at IBM who helped to develop the microdrive. I
spent four years studying computer science and when I graduated I got
recruited at a big network solutions company. I was there for five
years until the tech collapse left us all without jobs. Now I'm doing
IT maintenance at a big box chain. Every day I get to work, fix the
same problems and play solitaire until 5.30 when my boss isn't
looking. Superchick
never existed. We didn't sell 700,000 records. I never met all the
amazing people that are my friends today. I didn't see 30,000 of them
jumping up and down at our show in New Zealand. I never wrote and
produced records. I never photographed covers for magazines and
albums. I never shot music videos. I never tried surfing, bought my
motorcycle or jumped out of a plane. I never met my wife. Well, that's
what would have happened if I'd done the "sensible" thing. But
everyone is born with a destiny. God gives us talents that he means us
to use. We are meant to live, while we're still alive.
"Hey Hey"
About 2600 years ago a Babylonian king
called Nebuchadnezzar conquered Jerusalem. The king made a huge golden
statue and decreed that all the people should bow down before it, or
be thrown into a blazing furnace. Three young men refused to bow down,
saying that it was against their beliefs. True to the king's word,
they were thrown into the fiery furnace - but they did not burn.
Seeing this with his own eyes, King Nebuchadnezzar called them out and
declared that no one should speak against the God of those three men.
Actual rebellion takes a lot more courage than appearing to be
rebellious.
"Hold"
The difficult thing about grief is that
we pass through it alone. Just as with physical pain, though my
friends may empathise with me, I have to pass the kidney stone by
myself. I can find comfort in their presence, but at some point they
have to go home and tend to their own lives. God, however, feels my
pain, never goes home and never lets go of my hand - even if I don't
reach out to him.
"Breathe"
The mother of my friend was diagnosed
with terminal cancer. I asked my friend how she was dealing with it,
and she cheerfully said "denial." When my own father had prostate
cancer years later, I came to understand the way your brain locks down
on the only outcome you can accept. Fortunately, my father came
through the surgery well and is cancer-free now. We've seen a lot of
hospitals in the last couple years as different family members have
fought with cancer, but this song is for anyone struggling to find
hope in the darkness - anyone so lost that they have to make up
reasons to live.
"So Beautiful"
When I listen to our finished
records, I don't hear what other people hear. I don't here the song or
the things we got right - I hear the things I didn't get right. I hear
the off notes, weak arrangements. Clumsy lyrics and parts that I wish
were better. Sometimes it's so bad it makes me cringe. I feel like I
went to the Olympics and I got silver. Silver's not bad, but when you
have gold standards it's still a failure. I listen to other people's
records and they sound so much better to me than anything I've ever
done. I think it's human tendency to focus on what we wish we could
fix rather than what we got right. So many people look in the mirror
and discount themselves. We see only the flaws. We have one ideal of
success and beauty and we criticise ourselves relentlessly if we don't
conform to that. We warp and twist ourselves to hide the ugly creature
we think we are. We believe that love must be earned because we
ourselves are not worthy of love. This robs us of who we are and who
we can be. We are fearfully and wonderfully made and God means for us
to shine light and joy into the world - not to creep fearfully and
timidly from place to place. Superchick was born out of that message and
it's a message we will keep repeating because the enemy does not sleep
and his insecurities still gnaw at our hearts. We will shout defiance
from the rooftops over and over until all have heard that God has
indeed made us all so beautiful.
"Cross The Line"
In Iron Man, Yinsen saves
fellow prisoner Tony Stark's life twice. The first time Tony is
brought in, wounded, Yinsen operates on him to save him. The second
time, Yinsen fights the guards, knowing it will cost him his life to
buy Tony enough time to complete the iron man suit. As Yinsen lies
dying, Tony says to him, "Thank you for saving my life," and Yinsen
replies, "Don't waste it." Moby wrote a letter to some of us who had
worked on a Christian dance album and rightfully took us to task for
being derivative and boring. He writes, "I want us to live and create
boldly. If Christ had not lived boldly, he would be known for his
ability with a hammer, not his willingness to be hammered to a cross."
If we truly believe that someone died on a cross to save us, do the
lives we live reflect that gift?
"One More"
If you want to do something, do it.
Then do one more past where you're comfortable. Repeat daily. In the
process, you will have not only learned or achieved what you set out
to do, but you will have also learned to be a fighter. Any positive
change you seek to make in your life, whether it's losing weight or
becoming an Olympian, will be an uphill battle that you will fight
every day with yourself. Our natural tendency is to lie down, to give
up and admit defeat to ourselves before we even take the first step.
but it is learning to always take that next step that will get us to
our dreams. If your dream is 100 steps away, how many did you take
today?
"Crawl"
One critic wrote the following about our
album, 'Beauty From Pain': "The songwriting seems more vapid, despite
the personalised approach, with most songs merely offering a message
of 'We all hurt, but hold on because it'll get better.'" I think this
critic missed the second half of the message: "Hold on, it will get
better. You are not alone, God is with you." This is not vapid; there
is a place below bottom where that is the only message that makes any
sense. A friend called me to let me know about his baby's birth, but
as he asked me to pray, he choked up, unable to get the words out to
tell me that his son was born with Down syndrome. I've watched mute
and helpless while friends have lost family members to cancer. I've
personally been to the dark place where suicide seems like the only
way out. In those times, when our hearts have broken and are
overflowing with grief, we don't need clever theology or smart
slogans. All we need is the fundamental core truth of it all.that God
has not left us - and though we may have lost hope and lost ourselves
and lost everything, he has not lost us.
"Stand In The Rain"
I never thought this song
would do well at radio because it had a very specific message about
finding the courage to face things you were running from. Initially,
it tested poorly and many stations wouldn't play it. A couple of brave
programme directors later and the phone started lighting up. It went
on to hold 10 weeks at number one. Recently, as I listened to the song
again, I realised people were writing themselves into the song and it
took on different meanings to different people. That's the amazing
thing about ministry - you do your best with what you can see and
sometimes God takes those humble efforts and uses them for much bigger
and better things.
i love this. i love every word of this. i write and i love to explain my songs because it makes it all the more better. and i dunno..you guys never dissapoint.