"I am a 16-year-old girl who loves God and who stands up for "anticonformity"
says rock artist Krystal Meyers. "I've chosen to find my identity
in God instead of society. There are too many people doing what they
shouldn't, and I don't want to be like that. I don't want to bow down
to those pressures so I'm not going to."
With the bitter peer pressure to fit in, today's teenage girls must
laugh at the phrase "sweet sixteen," but Krystal is one 16-year-old
who isn't afraid to stand her ground. She's a rock vocalist, musician
and songwriter who stands up for her morals and refuses to walk the
lines she doesn't believe in just to follow the crowd. This conviction,
which is so prevalent in her personal life, echoes through her edgy
rock n' roll style and lyrics. Full of energy and punk attitude, Krystal
gives her peers an anthem to live by with her self-titled Essential
Records debut.
On the song "Anticonformity," which helps set the album's
overall tone, Krystal hammers out a confident vocal performance that's
heightened by searing lyrics that swipe at the status quo. "The
song is saying let God influence your decisions and set you apart because
He's got a plan for your life that's different from anybody else's,"
says Krystal. "I'm not telling people just to rebel against what
everyone else is doing. There really is Godly Rebellion and that's what
I want to get across!"
"The album's "anticonformity" themes tackle appearance
and overall social status," explains Krystal, "but it also
touches on everything from your relationship with God to your relationships
with a guy or your parents. I tend to write in a way that has a double
meaning, so you can take it in a different direction if that's how the
song speaks to you."
Krystal Meyers, who's lived in Franklin, Tenn. for the past ten years,
developed her "anticonformity" message as she watched school
friends give in to peer pressure, especially when it came to drugs. As
a public high school student, Krystal encountered the very same social
pressures, but her faith inspired her to hold her ground.
"They were the cool kids - the musicians, the skateboarders -
and they were really into drugs," recalls Krystal. "They'd
ask me if I wanted to light up after school, and I'd let them know I
don't do that stuff. I respected my relationship with God, my parents
and myself too much to do that. They knew I was a Christian, and they
accepted me for that. Even though our lifestyles were different, they
respected that I stood up for my values, and I know it made them rethink
theirs."
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