Background
Matt Bronleewe was born on December 13, 1973, in Dallas, Texas, but as a young boy moved to central Kansas, Lorraine, with his family so his father could take on the family farm, where he was raised with his two younger sisters.
Matt Bronleewe was born on December 13, 1973, in Dallas, Texas, but as a young boy moved to central Kansas, Lorraine, with his family so his father could take on the family farm, where he was raised with his two younger sisters.
The family moved onto the farmstead a few years later and Matt lived there until he graduated from Quivira Heights High School in 1992. Bronleewe studied music at Greenville College in the town of Greenville, Illinois, where he met Dan Haseltine, Charlie Lowell and Stephen Mason. At this time, the group had not completed their studies.
Together the four of them formed the group Jars of Clay, named after a verse in the Bible. The group began performing around their college and later recorded their debut demo album Frail. Following the demo"s release, the group"s fame spread, and they were approached by Christian record label Essential Records to record a full length studio album.
Bronleewe decided to stay behind to finish school, while the rest of the band members decided to accept the recording offer.
Matt was married in August 1994 and lived for one year in Sterling, Illinois where he continued to work on his studies. In the summer of 1995, Matt was invited to reenter the world of music when another Greenville College student, Sarah Jahn invited him to play guitar for an independent Civil Defense she was recording, and later asked him to play guitar for her full-time.
Matt moved to Nashville, Tennessee, and played with Jahn as well as pursuing other avenues of song writing and record production. With this, Bronleewe worked with several musical artists, most notably producing the debut album by Plumb, for which Jars of Clay member Haseltine co-wrote the song "Concrete" with Bronleewe and Arbuckle (the lead singer of Plumb).
Following this successful release, Bronleewe collaborated with Christian singer-songwriter Chris Tomlin, with whom he was nominated for a 2003 Global Media Arts Dove Award.
Bronleewe continues to collaborate with various musicians in the American Christian music scene such as Michael West. Smith, Stephen Curtis Chapman, Kari Jobe, and Leeland. Outside of the Christian music genre, Bronleewe has worked with artists such as Australian Natalie Imbruglia, actress Hayden Panettiere, former Tonic frontman Emerson Hart and American Idol finalist Kimberley Locke. After building a name for himself in the music industry, Bronleewe turned to the literary world.
In August 2007, Bronleewe released his first book, Illuminated.
The thriller conspiracy novel has been likened to stories such as The Da Vinci Code and National Treasure. The book is the first in a five-part series published by Thomas Nelson Fiction.
House of Wolves, the second book in the series, was released August 12, 2008. Bronleewe also co-wrote "Foreign The Love Of God" with Rebecca Saint James.
The song appears on her 2000 release, Transform.
From 2005 to 2007, he blogged for the e-zine, Infuze Magazine, until the website closed in early 2008. In 2009, Bronleewe joined Dan Haseltine and Jeremy Bose to form a new band, The Hawk In Paris. The band released a seven song European Parliament, His+Hers, in 2011 filled with melancholy love songs reminiscent of 80"s synth-popular groups like Depeche Mode and Pet Shop Boys.
In 2012, The Hawk In Paris released a three-song European Parliament, Freaks.
Bronleewe had become known as a previous member of Jars of Clay as the group had rightly credited him as a co-songwriter for several songs from their album, which had gone platinum.