Songs From Jacobs Well

Songs from Jacob's Well - Volume I & II

Songs from Jacob’s Well — Vol­ume I & II

Even the Dark­ness Will Not Be Dark to You”

Sub­ver­sive Sym­phonies and Time-Tested Folk Reme­dies Sure to Aid in the Top­pling of Evil Empires

Purchase on iTunes

Pur­chase the phys­i­cal CD

Illus­tra­tion by Saman­tha Lewis
Lay­out and Design by Nate Lewis
Hand Let­ter­ing by Jim Langford

Down­load the Song Charts


Praise for Mike Craw­ford and His Secret Siblings:

Two CDs full of cre­ative and tex­tured arrange­ments and solid lyrics, as sung at one of my favorite churches in the coun­try. The last track, “Words to Build a Life On” is like an anthem. I hope that thou­sands of churches around the coun­try will start singing this song.

~Brian D. McLaren

Upon hear­ing the open­ing seg­ment, thoughts and images and sen­sa­tions of what the music of the church could sound like were ani­mated. This is the most inspir­ing (“inspir­ing” seems too clichéd a word, how­ever it is exactly appro­pri­ate here) wor­ship music I’ve come across in a long time.

~David Crow­der

This album really raised the bar, in terms of both music and art design.

~Mike Hogan (David Crow­der Band)

Mike Craw­ford & The Secret Sib­lings burst forth in a pageant of extrav­a­gance that exper­i­ments with the bound­aries of what a wor­ship album can be. On head­phones, it’s Pink Floyd, Radio­head, and Steve Earle. It’s quite a remark­able accomplishment.

~Don Chaf­fer (Waterdeep)

Instead of bury­ing his quirky tastes to pos­si­bly please an imag­ined major­ity, and play­ing it safe by sound­ing like other wor­ship records, he has decided to write, record and wor­ship to the kind of music that moves him per­son­ally. As a result “Even the Dark­ness” is the most cre­ative and rel­e­vant wor­ship album I’ve ever heard.

~Lori Chaf­fer (Waterdeep)

Sun­day wor­ship at JW reveals some of what Emer­gent means by call­ing itself poste­van­gel­i­cal. The music is led, con­ven­tion­ally enough, by a rock band that plays loudly enough to shake the wooden pews. But this is not happy-clappy  “Jesus is my boyfriend” music. It’s much more edgy. The lyrics, many writ­ten by wor­ship min­is­ter Mike Craw­ford, lift up pain as well as praise: “Jesus full of grace, / the hum­ble you adore. / This world’s a hun­gry place, / with no jus­tice for the poor. / Jesus full of peace, / yet our hearts so full of war. / We take our prun­ing hooks / we beat them into swords.”

The songs are new, and the words are flashed up on a plasma screen by Pow­er­Point, but the lan­guage is as old as scrip­ture. Most songs, in fact, are para­phrases of scrip­ture. And as loud as the music is, the singing is louder. Andy Crouch of Chris­tian­ity Today, who is crit­i­cal of much of the Emer­gent move­ment, praises JW as “the best singing white church I’ve ever been to.”  JW’s effort to make music par­tic­i­pa­tory rather than performance-based struck a chord with Crouch, who also sig­naled his aware­ness that JW is rooted in its own par­tic­u­lar neigh­bor­hood and could not be eas­ily repli­cated else­where: “It made me want to move to Kansas City. Really.”

~The Chris­t­ian Century