Much has been written about Natalie Bergman's debut solo album, Mercy, which she self-produced and released May 7 through Third Man Records. Described as "a psychedelic spin on vintage gospel-soul" (Brooklyn Vegan), it comprises twelve original songs that combine praises and intercessions to God with expressions of grief over the recent, sudden death of her dad in a car accident. It's excellent, and I wish I had time to write about it in more depth. Instead, let me just share four of the music videos Bergman created to coincide with the album, and commend to you the interviews she did with Aquarium Drunkard and Hero magazine, both in which she discusses her Christian faith, her visual and musical influences, and the impetus behind the album.

Natalie Bergman, Mercy

Chicago-bred and Los Angeles–based, Bergman formed a band with her brother Elliot after high school, the psych-pop duo Wild Belle; they eventually signed to Columbia Records, and have toured internationally.

In October 2019, when Wild Belle was getting ready to go onstage at Radio City Music Hall, the siblings learned that their father and stepmother had been killed by a drunk driver. To process her grief, Bergman retreated to the Benedictine Monastery of Christ in the Desert in New Mexico's Chama Valley in February 2020, where she spent time in silence and going to chapel, where the resident monks prayed the Divine Office seven times a day, starting at 4 a.m. The seeds for the album were planted there, as she talked to God and listened.

As evidenced by comments on social media, some people are incredulous that a singer of this status and level of artistry would choose to sing about Jesus in a nonironic way, from a place of genuine faith. Could contemporary Christian music really be this beautiful? Could a sung spirituality that straightforwardly proclaims things like "Jesus is our friend" and "Oh, I need you, Lord" really have a broad appeal, one that extends beyond churchgoers, as Bergman's music does?

Unwilling to take her new music at face value, some have even suggested that Bergman's videos are making fun of Christianity, or that she's using the name "Jesus" as some kind of metaphor. Bunk!

In addition to referring to Mercy as a gospel album, Bergman speaks openly, in secular media, about her love of "traditional praise music" and her desire to share "the good news" and her "testimony"—of hope in the midst of sorrow, of the companionship of Christ, of a Love that calls us home.

  • "I have my own poems that I want to sing about God and about my father . . . my own Psalms." [source]
  • "I'm a Christian fighting the good fight, and I want that to be the message. I want the message to be love and the goodness of the creator and why we were created." [source]
  • "I think that God has given me this platform to praise his name in a loving way. I would love this music to work through people and become a sort of healing agent for others." [source]
  • "I need my art and I need my faith. . . . Faith has become my greatest consolation, and it's really allowed me to see the light. I think that the relationship between music and faith go hand in hand—one needs the other." [source]

Because Mercy completely defies the expectations set by the contemporary Christian music industry, on the one hand, and alternative music on the other, it has confounded some listeners. Music podcaster John J. Thompson—rightfully, I think—sees the album as in line with the countercultural Christian music (sometimes referred to as "Jesus Music") of the 1970s, an association Bergman embraces.

I see Mercy as a gorgeous (and groovy!) example of moving through grief with hope, clinging unabashedly to God's promises and inviting others to do the same. Whereas doubt and cynicism seem to be the order of the day in US culture, Bergman demonstrates a trust in the Divine that is childlike but not childish, simple but not simplistic. She confronts the pain of loss while also consenting to the uplift that God brings. She sings praises in the valley, plays in puddles.

Not only do I love Bergman's sound; I dig her style too! You'll see what I mean in the music videos below.

Purchase Mercy on Bandcamp, or wherever else you get your music.

"Talk to the Lord"

This is my favorite song on the album, and the video is so enchanting! Bergman designed and made by hand her wardrobe as well as the set pieces. The blocks were inspired partly by Sister Corita Kent, a sixties pop artist and nun, and the banners were prompted by Bergman's memory of the liturgical banners her mother made for their church growing up.

Bergman also made the kite in the video, which she yokes to her back—a reference, I'm assuming, to Matthew 11:28–30, where Jesus says, "Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light."

In other video segments Bergman dances in the grass wearing a black leotard and a black cardboard cutout around her face with white stripes projecting outward like flower petals or rays of light. This recalls lines from the song: "He who makes the flowers face the sun / And all the creatures sing / He can make the heavens rain . . ." Her mourning is turned to dancing as she lets in the Light.

You can also watch Bergman perform "Talk to the Lord" with the Chicago Children's Choir as part of GRAMMY.com's Positive Vibes Only video series. What joy!

"Shine Your Light on Me"

This music video was filmed in 4:3 on television cameras from the 1960s, with an aesthetic inspired by a 1967 performance by Diana Ross and the Supremes. Bergman performs in a beehive hairdo and a vintage mirror dress that reflects the light ("light is the inherent message behind this music," she says), on a set that she designed and helped build.

The song includes contributions from Elsa Harris and the Larry Landfair Singers, whom Bergman previously sang with at her father's funeral.

"I Will Praise You"

This one has a reggae rhythm.

"Home at Last"

"Home at Last" was filmed in and around the historic Lincoln Avenue Methodist Church in the Montecito Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, a Carpenter Gothic and Queen Anne–style building from the turn of the century that is now part of the Heritage Square Museum. Footage of the band inside the sanctuary is intercut with shots of them relaxing in a green space, eating fruit and enjoying one another's company—a vision of paradise. They're all dressed in white, per Revelation 7.