 

 Cathy Burton: A move to worship ministry
Tony Cummings spoke to Cathy Burton about her new focus
Many in Christian retail will be pleased to
see that Cathy Burton has been booked to
play at the trade retreat at High Leigh in
May. Ever since Cathy first emerged on the
scene in 1998 as lead singer of Blueberry this
most effecting of singers has been building a
loyal support base. As a powerful performer of
intimate, reflective songs based on her personal
experience, albums like Burn Out (2001),
Speed Your Love (2004) and Silvertown (2006)
have brought her critical acclaim and no small
audience response at events like Greenbelt and
Spring Harvest.
Her work in the mainstream with fellow singer/
songwriters Amy Wadge and Edwina Hayes, in
the group Hummingbird, likewise gained her rave
reviews. And Cathy’s contributions as a session
singer have enlivened many a worship album.
Now Cathy seems set to become a major Christian
retail seller with the release by Survivor Records,
on 22nd February, of the first full worship album
bearing the singer/songwriter’s name.
Her husband Paul, renowned for his work with
Spring Harvest, Vicky Beeching, Onehundredhours,
and numerous others, produced Source of Every
Hour. Said Cathy, “As well as Paul, Dan Wheeler
worked on the album with some initial input
from Julian Kindred, so it was a team effort.
It can be tricky working that closely with your
husband, but at the end of the day, we're a
team and we've learnt to work more and more
smoothly over the years.”
So what led Cathy to finally record a worship
album of her own? “It was a series of events
really. I think the catalyst and the real nudge
came when I attended Graham Kendrick's
Songwriters Consultation in November 2007.
I felt a real challenge in one of the seminars
that perhaps the reason that I hadn't really
applied myself to writing for Sunday morning
church was because I was scared of not writing
anything good enough, you could say a bit of
pride issue! So I came away a broken woman.
“Geraldine Latty was an amazing inspiration. I
met with her a couple of times to write and got in
the swing of things. Alongside that happening,
I've been at Grace Church, Chichester since
January 2006 and felt really inspired about
what church actually is! It was a church plant
at the time and Paul and I got stuck in. It was
an amazing time of growth and new things. I
lead worship and help lead the worship team
alongside the lovely Jo Petch and my husband
Paul. It's a real privilege and I love it. Having
young children I also meet up with church
mums in the week and we do life together!”
Cathy spoke about her song “Redeemer”.
“I wrote “Redeemer” in my living room. It was
a song that came out of reflecting on a few
Scriptures. At the time I felt pretty up and
down - mainly down. After my first baby, I was
borderline on postnatal depression. I wasn't at
the stage that some women have to cope with,
but nevertheless, it was a mind battle, dealing
with all sorts of crazy and disturbing thoughts.”
Cathy continued, “I'd been looking in my
Bible at a few verses and found the 1 Peter
5:6-11 bit about just casting our anxiety on
him because he cares for us. I ended uplooking at the cross references, which took me to
Psalm 40, 86 and 109. It took me on a real journey
and I just prayed out the song really - first verse,
into the chorus. Of course like with most songs, I
then crafted it, but that was its small beginning.”
Another standout track on Source of Every Hour
is “Refuge”. Cathy spoke about the trauma behind
that particular song. “In the middle of last year I
had a miscarriage. It was such a surprise as I'd
had two previous ones between my daughter and
son, so I thought it probably wouldn't happen
again. But it did! At the time I knew deep down
that the baby had died and the doctors were great
and agreed to give me a scan at nine weeks; the
baby had actually died at five weeks. I then had the
journey of waiting for nature to take its course.
Unfortunately this took a few weeks. Physically
and emotionally it was a real battle, but in that
trite way that we seem to say it, God was there.
I used to cycle my daughter to nursery on my
bike and the kiddies were in the bike trailer and
I was asking God how was I going to get through
another day with nothing happening with the
physical miscarriage - all the waiting was driving
me nuts. I just felt my heart say. ‘I'm going to walk
with Father God,’ and so I just sang it out on the
way home: ‘I will walk with you!’
“I remember having a little bit of time on my
own shortly afterwards and felt like I didn't really
know what to say to God. As I just sat there, the
whole ‘be still and know that I am God’ song and
Scripture came to mind. So I looked it up - it's
Psalm 46. What struck me is that after the line ‘Be
still and know that I am God’ it then says, ‘I will be
exalted among the nations, I will be exalted on the
earth.’ It was a real revelation to me in that as we
still ourselves and calm ourselves with whatever is
coming our way we can know he is God and he is
in fact exalted - high, elevated, bigger than all of it!
Yet he is still our refuge and our strength.”
Did Cathy approach the recording of her worship
album any differently to the way she handled the
recordings of her other projects? She responded,
“I think I let the boys get on with the production, I
spent a lot of time on the songs; I felt like that was
my contribution to the project. I can rarely tell if I've
written the song well enough; Paul is great at helping
me see that, especially when I think I've done it and
I'm nowhere near! As a whole though we approached
the sound in a way that we felt, although it's a
different genre to my previous work, it still needed
to sound like a ‘Cathy Burton’ album. I think they've
done a great job and when I got the master, I was so
pleased, it sounds full and fat, I think it sounds a little
different to what is out there.”
This year Cathy has been invited to lead worship
at Faithworks and Spring Harvest plus she is
undertaking the God Stories tour with Andrew
Wilson. Beyond that there may well be some major
changes in the Burton household. Said Cathy,
“Long term Paul and I are trying to work out what
we believe God's calling us to, which is serving with
MAF. So it's quite big changes afoot, if we've got
this right! I feel excited about it, a little scared, but
being part of a great church has really challenged
our perspective on life as a whole. We're just
pushing the doors and seeing what happens, but I
intend to keep writing on the journey.”
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