Monday, October 6, 2008

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Archive for May, 2008

May
31
Filed Under (Faith and Spirituality) by Jay on 05-31-2008

Love Wins!My wife and I have a Love Wins sticker on our car and people often ask us what it means. If you can spare 37 minutes, I’ll let Rob tell you: download the mp3 What Does the Cross Mean? Love Wins.

This “love wins” concept is a recurring theme in the messages delivered at Mars. Back in 2003, the church passed out ten thousand bumper stickers with those two simple words. We ordered some on the web and do our best to represent Christ and reveal God’s love to other people.

Which would you rather have on your car, the Jesus fish or Love Wins sticker?



May
31
Filed Under (Worship Confessionals) by Jay on 05-31-2008

So yeah, I’ve been trying to figure out why I couldn’t import the video from the Panasonic mini-dv recorder I borrowed from El Ben to do the WC for the young adult service that meets at Saint Simons Community Church.

Turns out that my MacBook requires a firewire cable, not the usb cable I’ve been ready to set ablaze thinking that it was bad. I’ll be heading over to Fred McKinnon’s favorite pit of hell, Circuit City, to pick up a firewire cable, methinks.

For those that followed my WC’s that I did for Family Life Church last year, please stay tuned for further adventures of Musicians Who Consume Too Much Red Bull.

Ever spent two days trying to solve a problem that didn’t really exist?



May
28
Filed Under (Faith and Spirituality, Music) by Jay on 05-28-2008

I not surprised that “Amazing Grace” has had such a presence in our culture in the past couple of years as it has to be one of the most moving, well written, and often played spiritual works. I’m greatly affected by Wintley Phipps’ performance in this video and it helps me understand the reason why this song connects all kinds and colors of people at their core.


Please view the vid and tell me what you think.

p.s. He also gives what I consider to be the best performance of “It Is Well With My Soul” that I have heard in my life. This dude can wail!



May
28
Filed Under (First Impressions) by Jay on 05-28-2008

Usher - Here I Stand

Pros:

  • This man can sing with the best of ‘em.
  • Some of the beats are DDR-ready.

Cons:

  • I won’t be working any of the songs into the praise and worship set list. If you take out the references to sex, you’re not left with much.
  • Some of the beats are DDR-ready.

Comments:

  • “Intro” must be from his audition for that Broadway play.
  • “Love In This Club” will give you some kind of infection.
  • “This Ain’t Sex” Okay, maybe it is.
  • “Trading Places” might be funny if Usher is the one that ends up pregnant this time.
  • “Moving Mountains” might be easier for Usher than writing an album about being faithful to only one woman.
  • “What’s Your Name” makes me want to reach for my Eurythmics album and rock “Sweet Dreams”
  • “Something Special” reminded me that I should have bought Al Green’s new album too. DJ’s, add this one to your wedding reception playlist.
  • “Love You Gently” contains very appropriate shout outs to Al and Marvin.
  • The “Best Thing” is Jay Z recognizing that (1) he can’t retire and (2) nobody wants him to.
  • “Before I Met You” I though monogamy was a Milton Bradley board game.
  • “His Mistakes” show up on the cover of People and Entertainment Weekly. Tough life.
  • “Appetite” for an Eastern vibe?
  • “What’s A Man To Do” if he’s still a fan of Big Love? Two words: Lorena Bobbitt.
  • “Lifetime” of being unable to make up his mind. Usher, are you bipolar on the faithfulness issue?
  • “Love In This Club, Part II” gives further evidence that “Lil Usher” is still doing the thinking. Brooke says Lil Wayne sounds like a muppet.
  • “Here I Stand” finding it very hard to believe that any woman would trust Usher. Listen to the whole album, girl. He’s cheatin’ on you.
  • “Will Work for Love” as long as you don’t mind me working it with everybody else, too. Hey, there’s enough Usher to go around, baby.

Have you given it a listen yet?



May
27
Filed Under (Music, Setup) by Jay on 05-27-2008

How many of us find joy and appreciation in going through sound check at church or a concert event? I can imagine very few, unless you use some type of personal system like an Aviom setup. For the past 17 years, I’ve felt less anxiety about going to the dentist than I have running through sound check. I discovered this past weekend that the problem wasn’t the process but the methodology that has driven me mad all these years.

The following information may seem very elementary for some of you, like I’m trying to teach you a better way to wipe your butt, however, our typical routine may appear to be very familiar to most.  I learned “The New Way” while watching Sonicflood set up.  Please feel free to let me know if I missed something, as I was taking notes while trying to not pester the front-of-house tech too much.

The Old Way:

Band shows up, band sets up, band gets mic’d for the board. Then each member of the band, say from stage left to stage right, asks each other member to play as they shout out to the sound tech whether they need less or more of that voice or instrument in their floor wedge or in-ear monitor (IEM). There is a constant need to restrain people from the talking or playing, especially the guitarists (voice of experience) as each person thinks that the sound check is a perfect time to warm up by playing Van Halen’s “Eruption.” The band then runs through a song together, with each member wanting to stop each time they want to make an adjustment to their mix.

As a result of having to travel left to right on the board for each musician, the sound tech is found dead from exhaustion. The singers have left the building and sit in a comfortable chair at Suckbucks drowning in caffeine and sugar while the musicians work through counseling for the public outburst caused by having to run their floor monitor lower than the level of the actual amplifier that they so reluctantly placed in the hall closet or isolation box.

In my experience with The Old Way, the person that is most satisfied with their mix is the one that was most aggressive with the sound tech.  Oftentimes, the monitor becomes tuned less for reference, as it is intended, but more closely resembles an album mix.  The worst case scenario is one in which the vocalists are forced to share a mix with the instrumentalists.  Don’t do that.  Ever.

Average time: 30 minutes

The New Way:

Band shows up, band sets up, band gets mic’d for the board. Each member of the band, after testing that their amp is live and then warming up their chops with the Volume pot in the off position, holds up one hand in a fist until the sound tech signals what is being tuned, one board channel at a time. The musician, keeping their hand in the air, either points up or down to signal a change needed in their wedge or IEM. A thumbs up would then be given to signal a good level.

The beauty of this method in my eyes is that it would then be hard for the musicians to get lost in their own noodling and forget to tune their setup. The hard part is being able to gauge where you want everything to sit in your mix when only one person is playing at a time. After running through a song, any final adjustments can then be made.

Average time: 7 minutes

Does anybody make use of the “arm in the air” method?