Sunday Summary – Music: June 7, 2009

This past week was a BLAST! I had a GT (good time) all morning long – and I wasn’t even on stage. So that’s sayin’ somethin’!

First, some back story…

As we’ve looked at the summer as a whole, we realized that Andy’s not speaking here (or any of the campuses) for nearly 3 months, starting 2 weeks ago. He’ll be back in August.

(FYI – he’s enjoying some vacation time, as well as giving a bunch of the other communicators and speakers in our organization some opportunities to speak, along with a couple special guests).

So that leaves us with 2 things:

#1 – Shorter services (AKA time to fill…). Speakers other than Andy are alloted 35 minutes, and so that gives us an extra 5 minutes to either fill in content or get out a few minutes early – we’ll be doing some of both over the summer.

#2 – No Andy. Duh! It’s no secret that attendance dips a bit when it’s publicly known that he’s not speaking, so we’re going to do our best to help make the services this summer fantastic – at least as much as we can from a music and programming perspective.

So will we do a few more fun openers this summer? Oh, you betcha!

And we started this week with a great “Summer” song – Bryan Adams’ “Summer of ’69″.

Sam Tesh came and sang it for us – and dude, he’s amazing! He’s a great, charismatic performer with a voice perfect for Journey, Bryan Adams, Aerosmith, Bon Jovi – you get the picture. Oh, and all in the same keys as the originals! Yep – that’s high.

Oh, and giant kudos to our good buddy Steve Thomason, who, of course, covered the tones and solos to perfection. That boy has mastered the art of being faithful to the originals when it comes to classic rock. Love him!

Here’s Sam and the gang making the 80′s proud…

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We, spearheaded by Eddie, have a real passion for this summer for our bands, singers and worship leaders to HAVE FUN! To enjoy themselves on stage. To bring a smile and encouragement to the congregations and attenders. To embrace what they’re singing and playing and have a RGT (really good time).

And our prayer is that will help soften the hearts and let down the guard of the stoics and skeptics. And anyone bummed about no Andy ;)

WORSHIP:

Man, we kept the blood pumpin’ with worship, too!

God Is Alive

Glorious (off of Todd’s new CD)

Everlasting God

Yep – not one tune under 105 bpm’s. In review some thought it was a little much. I could see their point, but I think the majority didn’t mind it. I thought it worked, especially going into the funny Title Package for the current series.

So we’ve got a few more things up our sleeves for this summer – should be fun!

- – - – -

East Band – Eddie Kirkland, Rachael Gillis, Steve Thomason, Danny Grady, Scott Meeder, Richard Meeder, John Carrozza, Sam Tesh

West Band – Ryan Stuart, Rebecca Iraheta, Mike Hines, Matt Melton, Wayne Viar, Earl South, Keith Thomas

Sunday Summary – Music: November 2, 2008

OK, I can’t be too honest about this past week because I wasn’t there.

Jennie and I took the kids up to Nashville to visit my sister Ashley and brother-in-law Michael, plus my parents came down on their annual “Southern Swing” to visit their kiddos… LOTS of fun!

And we even skipped church altogether on Sunday morning. (Shh – don’t tell…)

BUT, meanwhile, back at the ranch, reports were good for what we did on Sunday.

Andy’s “Why Worry” series started here this week. He’s actually doing the messages live at Browns Bridge and taping them for the other two campuses.

We opened with John Legend‘s arrangement of Stevie Wonder‘s tune “Don’t You Worry ‘Bout A Thing” . The melody and tempo is a lot like Stevie’s original version, but the instrumentation and BGVs are pretty unique. Legend’s version is just piano, percussion and vocals – which we did – but we also added an upright bass.

The reaction was really positive – a nice departure from our usual rock and roll stuff.

Jamie Portee sang AND played piano, Steve Florzcykowski on upright bass, Monique Anderson, Ryan Stuart and Eddie Kirkland on BGVs, a handful of our drummers and players as percussionists, and a pretty thick percussion track. Legend’s version has a dad-gum percussion orchestra – something we were not going to adequately replicate live, so we needed some help.

For the percussion tracks, I used Pro Tools as the host DAW (Digital Audio Workstation) and used a combination of Stylus RMX, Reason 4 and Digidesign A.I.R.’s Xpand! as plugins / sound sources.

After that was worship, and Kristian Stanfill and Eddie Kirkland did a great job of capturing the engaging energy of the opener into worship.

WORSHIP:

Everlasting God (bumped up the tempo a few bpm’s and started with full band rockin’ Chorus chord progression. That helped increase the energy of this tune – one that is normally reserved for a “second, slower song” spot…)

Glory To God


Lift High

East Band (Worship) – Kristian Stanfill, Danny Howes, Jeremy Moyers, Ashley Appling, Brad Gage, Chris Arias, Dee Dee Maillian

West Band – Eddie Kirkland, Mike Hines, Ben Snider, Scott Meeder, Earl South, Mike Bielenberg, Ryan Stuart

So there you go. Sorry, no photos this week (unless you want pictures of us at Michael and Ashley’s house cheering on the Tennessee Titans – 8-0 baby!!!)

Sunday Summary – Music: August 3, 2008

So if you’ve been following a long for a while now, you know that I only book myself on stage about once a month, in order to adequately evaluate the services, especially since we deal with the two simultaneous auditoriums.

Well, somehow I ended up booking myself on stage 2 weeks in a row. Last week on East, and this week on West. And there’s no real problem with that, other than it changes one’s focus from evaluating the service (and more specifically the worship) as a whole, to focusing on one’s individual role and responsibility.

Basically, beware the staff music person that books themselves on stage every week.

The reasoning and analogies for that should be pretty obvious by now. After all, a good sports coach is not one of the players. He’s on the sidelines with a much broader view, able to orchestrate all the elements, and adjust as necessary.

But there’s also balance: I still need to book myself to play every once in a while so that I can:

- Use my skills, gifts and abilities for the benefit of the local church (thus the glory of God)

- Satisfy my needs as a musician by actually playing music!!

- Be reminded of and understand what our players and singers go through, so that I can better relate to them on a daily basis, and stick up for them when necessary. It’s so important to be their advocate – not the enemy.

- To occasionally get out of evaluation mode, and allow me, personally, a deeper time of worship. For me, it’s way easier to worship while on stage, rather than off stage: evaluating, judging, scrutinizing…

WORSHIP:

We had originally planned on doing 4 worship tunes this week, since we had some extra time in the service.

(NOTE: Yes, I know that sounds strange to some of you who normally do more music)

But after last week’s message by Louie, we got lots of angry email. We also sold nearly 500% more CD’s of the message! (Talk about polarizing!)

The decision was made by Andy that he was going to address Louie’s message and the angry emails, and so needed more time. So we cut the 4th song. Sure, we were sad, but what Andy had to say in those extra 4 minutes was priceless! Incredible! And after hearing it, we were totally cool with cutting the tune.

After the regular welcome and couple of announcements, Andy said he wanted to address some issues about Louie’s message. He first said that it was one of the most incredible Sundays and messages that this church had ever experienced. (How’s that for dousing a fire!)

He went on to talk about the email he’d received, and that it was mostly about the language that Louie had quoted when reading Ashley’s diary, and that most of the emails were from people that had younger kids with them in the service.

Andy then did the best “it’s my fault” I’ve heard in a while… He blamed himself for not casting the vision to the congregation that part of why this church exists is so that it can deal with the relevant issues of culture in a way that is actually relevant to the culture. We’re not “edgy” or try to be controversial. We just try to talk about stuff that is actually a real part of human life. And to do something just for the sake of being “cutting-edge” without being relevant to the service is just immature and silly, and we don’t do that.

He then mentioned that we have what we feel to be some of the best children’s programs in the country. And they’re meant for children. And the main adult worship service is NOT one of them!

Just as an adult would be bored and out of place in a children’s program, so too would a child be out of place in our worship service. It’s not that it’s inappropriate, it’s just not programmed for them. Plain and simple.

He went on to talk about how you view one of our services totally different once you finally have an unsaved friend or loved one attend with you. You view the entire experience, from parking lot to the service and back again, with a very different filter. And THAT’S what our goal is and the filter through which we program our Sunday morning experience.

He said that for some of you the service is too short, and that the music is too loud, and this and that. And that’s OK. But when you bring your friend for the first time, you want them to leave going “WOW. That’s not what I expected from a church, and I can’t wait to come back”.

And so the music will stay too loud for some of you, and you won’t agree with the way everything is done. But it’s done for a reason, and through a specific filter, and with a clear mission.

That’s about the gist of what he said.

So after we heard that, we were glad he did what he did and said what he said. And we agreed that he can request to cut a song to say stuff like that anytime ;)

And here’s my two cents as to how we program our Sunday Service: It’s not right, and it’s not wrong. It is, however, the end product of the Holy Spirit working through a group of very smart, very sensitive, and very maverick group of individuals that celebrate and repeat what we agree is good, do not repeat what we agree is not good, evaluate constantly and question everything – all through a specific filter and mission.


And I am thankful to God and honored to be a part of that group. I hope you find yourself in a similar group, full of people you admire, with opinions that may sometimes DIFFER from yours, but that you fully respect.

OK, OK, on to WORSHIP already…:

Salvation’s Chorus by Todd Fields

Everlasting God

We sped this one up to 110 bpm and let it really rock. It was real fun, and felt great!

Here I Am To Worship

An oldie, but a real goodie. We had the female BGV lead this one. A real nice touch.

By the way, familiar tunes like this one are especially effective if you ever want to “break in” or “try out” a newer worship leader.

———

East BandMichael Gleason, Mike Hines, Danny Howes, Chrystina Fincher, Ashley Appling, Pat Malone, Keith Thomas

West BandEddie Kirkland, Danny Grady, Ben Snider, Scott Meeder, Earl South, Jordan Watts, Me

——–

What got YOU excited about your church this week?

Sunday Summary – Music: June 08, 2008

Father’s Day…

Dudes – If you’ve got kids, you’ve GOT to get a copy of John Woodall’s sermon from this past week called “Fathering On Purpose”.

He outlines 3 key points to parenting: TEACH, MODEL, PRAY.

Oh wow, it was good.

We also had week 2 of our 3 week Spanish Service pilot series.

And, because lots of other stuff is going on in life today, here’s the Cliff’s Notes version of this past Sunday…

WORSHIP:

East – Mike Gleason

West English – Eddie Kirkland

West Spanish – Duane Nisly

Salvation Is Here

Everlasting God

From The Inside Out (our own custom 4:30 edit)

Great, familiar tunes – and again, reaching back a bit as to assist with the translation burden for the Spanish service. Hillsong has already translated their songs into Spanish, so we have been taking advantage of that, and slowly doing some North Point – based songs along the way.

From The Inside Out is still kind of new (we’ve only done it about 5 times), but the crowd has picked it up really quick! Very surprising… That Joel Houston – he writes some guuud tunes…

CLOSER:

The closer was certainly the high point of the day – at least musically. It was the perfect punctuation to John’s incredible message, and I’m really glad we did it:

Cinderella by Steven Curtis Chapman

Yeah, it’s a little dated, and has a bit of that “Butterfly Kisses” vibe – but GOSH!!

As a father of a little girl, I was a mess. All Tuesday afternoon while transcribing and programming the strings and tracks, I kept breaking into sobs. It was embarrassing.

And I was replacing the lyrics with: “And I will dance with my little Ella“.

Emotional torture… Good thing no one was around…

And then when we finally saw the silhouette video on Sunday morning, we were all a wreck. Mike Gleason, who sang the tune, opted to not view the video at all, just to be able to keep his composure during the performance.

He still hasn’t seen the video…

But I can’t rave enough at how great Mike was doing this tune. Sure, 4 or 5 of our other guys could have sung it as well, but he’s the only one who could deliver the song with such a convincing parental authority. He actually has raised 5 kids to adulthood, and so the performance was not only musically excellent, but from a place of authenticity.

Bottom line: message delivered, and not a dry eye in the house.

At least that’s what it looked like through the strange water that mysteriously filled my eyes…

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Okie Dokie – I’ve got to go give Ella a giant hug…

—–

East Band – Mike Gleason, Danny Howes, Brad Long, Scott Meeder, Earl South, Jared Hamilton, Rachel Gillis

West Band – Eddie Kirkland, Duane Nisly, Danny Grady, Jeremy Moyers, Ashley Appling, Brad Gage, Keith Thomas, Rebecca Iraheta

What touched YOU this week?

(P.S. – POD X3 Live count – 4)

Sunday Summary – Music: May 11, 2008

So not everything around here is perfect, and not everything that we do on Sunday morning is fantastic.

This past Sunday was one of those days.

Now worship was great, and one of our guys really lead me personally on a day that I did NOT feel like being at church.

But we did an parody song/rap as the opener which celebrated a certain demographic of volunteers that we’re gonna remember for a long time – and not necessarily in a good way.

And there are even mixed reactions among our own department. Some folks enjoyed it, while most felt quite the opposite. I think we may all, myself included, have turned a blind eye in the wake of our collective DRIVE recovery…

And that’s all I’m gonna say about that.

WORSHIP:

Happy Day

Blessed Be Your Name

Everlasting God

Now let me preface why I was not in a worshipping mood on Sunday. With the chaos of DRIVE and our regular Sunday stuff, I had been in this building for about 2,000 hours over the last 2 weeks, including playing a funeral of a friend and staff member on Friday. My kids barely recognized me when I saw them on Friday afternoon. Add to that my horrible May allergies, and that sums up the desperate need for some down time.

So, needless to say, the earlier 6:00 AM call time (due to no Wednesday rehearsal due to DRIVE) was a shock to the system.

You know what I’m talking about. I’m sure you’re been there. Maybe you’re there right now.

But I’ve been trying to find an appropriate piece of scripture to read over the guys and girls right before they go on stage. I’m also trying to continually remind them that the reason we rehearse so much is that so that playing the actual music becomes second nature, deep in their subconscious. That way our focus during the live worship set can be just that – worship. A purposeful choice they make to enter into worship to our Saviour – and not heads down in charts.

From chart to heart. Learn the music so it’s INSIDE your heart come Sunday morning. Only then will you as a Worship Leader or band member be free to worship and focus on Christ during the service – and be an example of a worshipper to the audience, thus leading them in worship.

But it all starts with a CHOICE to worship.

Ha! Looking back, the irony of the lyric of one of our worship tunes:

My heart will choose to say
Lord, blessed be Your name

Anyhoo – the verse I shared probably ended up being more for me, even though I was trying to tie it in with another one of that days songs…

Isaiah 40…

25 “To whom will you compare me?
Or who is my equal?” says the Holy One.

26 Lift your eyes and look to the heavens:
Who created all these?
He who brings out the starry host one by one,
and calls them each by name.
Because of his great power and mighty strength,
not one of them is missing.

27 Why do you say, O Jacob,
and complain, O Israel,
“My way is hidden from the LORD;
my cause is disregarded by my God”?

28 Do you not know?
Have you not heard?
The LORD is the everlasting God,
the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He will not grow tired or weary,
and his understanding no one can fathom.

29 He gives strength to the weary
and increases the power of the weak.

30 Even youths grow tired and weary,
and young men stumble and fall;

31 but those who hope in the LORD
will renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint.

So there you go. I’m glad He’s strong, ’cause I am still some tired!

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East Band – Danny Dukes, Brad Long, Danny Grady, Earl South, Scott Meeder, Chrystina Fincher, Jared Hamilton

West Band – Eddie Kirkland, Mike Hines, Daryl Lecroy, Ashley Appling, Brad Gage, Trammell Starks, Rachel Gillis




What lead YOU to worship this week?