Tom writes:
It would be wrong of me to say I’ve only recently found the music of Sam Fender. As a regular listener to Absolute Radio, I’ve been hearing his music since he first broke onto the major music scene with “Dead Boys” in 2018. But I will admit that it’s only recently that I really started listening to his music. And the more I listen, the more I’m impressed and moved by what he writes and sings. This impact really hit as I listened to his most recent album, People Watching, for the first time.
As I listened through, I heard the expected voice of life growing up and living in the post-industrial North East of England. It is neither an accident nor a surprise that Fender’s songwriting themes bring frequent comparisons to Bruce Springsteen – blue-collar/working class reflections on life, loss and love. Then I reached “Little Bit Closer” and I almost had to pull over (I was driving at the time) so I could focus on what I was hearing. This was, it seemed to me, something new.
Fender’s work has always had a sense of compassionate ethics, but it has always seemed to me to be rooted in a general sense of humanism. He didn’t, unless I’d missed it (always possible, remember I was generally hearing but not properly listening), do faith. But not here! Here, God is put front and centre.
Of course, this is Sam Fender, so this is no evangelistic, worshipful celebration in the way of Rend Collective or similar. In fact, for much of the song, it feels like God and the Church – or at least the particular expressions of church that Fender appears to have encountered when younger – are on trial. Without entirely dismissing the purposes of the Church he nonetheless questions some of its behaviours as he, his family and friends have experienced it, challenges the theological positions and attitudes it takes, and compassionately sides with those that the Church has frequently damaged and cast aside. At one point he is clear he would rather burn in hell than abandon the friends and family he knows and loves.
He is also willing, in public, to ask the question, “What is God?” and to acknowledge that he himself is not a believer, while at the same time clearly yearning for something that speaks of a bigger picture and a greater meaning. In the end, he says, he finds that in love – and through love he seems to be drawn closer to that greater meaning.
As I heard Fender make these challenges, ask these questions, admit this need for something more, I found myself thinking he was a lot closer to answering the question “What is God?” than he might imagine, and thinking the Church might have greater success in helping people ask and answer that question if it openly listened to the challenges Fender lays down. The Church is called to share God’s love, yet too often we are frozen, mummified, too bound up in the need for certainty and success that we fail to simply walk alongside our neighbours, holding conversations, and enabling people to simply get a little bit closer to the God who loves us beyond our wildest imaginings.
Find out more about Sam Fender at https://www.samfender.com/



