Archive for the ‘Worship’ Category

Profound Sounds

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

So, here I am in the middle of this monstrous creative music project…taking most of a year to write, arrange, orchestrate, rewrite, get help with charts, find an orchestrator, consult with people in several other countries, studios here and there, working with other musicians, professional and amateur…

Yet, in the past 2 weeks I have found the sounds of 3 grandchildren to be ultra-profound. A 9-month old granddaughter…shapes her mouth into a perfect “ooo” form, leans forward, and utters soft, innocent cooing sounds…a 2 year-old grandson who jumps up and down with a big smile, banging 2 empty plastic bottles together while I make up some song never to be remembered (and when the song is over, he actually wants more!!!)…a 2-week old granddaughter who cries loudly, even when I try to make up a soft, soothing lullaby. What creation of mine could possibly compare to the music of another generation being sounded?

Jubal, you should have been there…humbling in the best sense of the term.

To Africa and Back…Again!

Friday, June 18th, 2010

So, back to Africa I went…again. This is now the 3rd trip in the past 7 months, with 2 left to go! This trip was the expected set of very helpful and important meetings with some really nice people…people of all kinds! The centerpiece of the trip was 5 days in a studio in a small town outside of Cape Town…recording African percussion, high school aged singer, children singers, and adult men singers. It was a real parade…with other things in between as well. There is nothing quite like having real people do real music. It wasn’t all that polished and professional, but very real and wonderful. I wondered many times…”How did I get here…doing this?” My mother certainly never would have imagined that her bribery to get me to practice the piano would lead to places like that! (By the way, she should have bribed me more than she did!) Anyway, the project I’m working on is certainly a once-in-a-lifetime deal. Even with technical difficulties and the like, it is a real rush to be involved in this project. If you’re interested in the conference, the website again is: www.lausanne.org.  Check it out, and pray that I can actually get it done! It’s going to be a long summer of writing…lots of isolation!

Jubal, we were playing percussion on clay pots and all kinds of things that YOU probably never even thought about!

John Wooden and Worship Leadership

Friday, June 11th, 2010

If you’re a sports fan at all, you will have noticed that this past week John Wooden passed away. What may not be so readily apparently is any relationship between John Wooden and worship leadership. I saw many correlations! In fact, this was the last week of class for the quarter and I took copies of the diagram of Wooden’s Pyramid of Success…and some of Wooden’s many famous, insightful quotes, to class for discussion. The Pyramid of Success is a set of philsophies that Wooden taught and embedded in his UCLA basketball teams, but also had great application for success in business and other areas of life. As I read once again the words on Wooden’s building blocks of success, I was amazed at how many of them paralleled principles we have talked about in class as we worked our way through Oswald Sanders’ book, Spiritual Leadership. Things like integrity, character…and others. In a future blog I’ll make more specific references to Wooden’s quotes and principles that I think could be used for worship leadership success as well.

Jubal, you should have seen John Wooden’s basketball teams play. They were really good!

Mass Is Over…What Next?

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Well, the Jubilate! mass project is over…I think. I said it was over once before, but it was only just beginning then. Now it’s been recorded, performed again, so what’s next? It needs mixing and finalizing, I know that. It’s been a great adventure for me. If you want to have a CD of the work and keep track of other related happenings, keep checking the Brehm Center site…www.brehmcenter.com. I appreciate all of the interest that so many of you have shown toward me on this part of the journey. I’m so proud of the students who put so much effort into supporting, performing, recording, etc. They were remarkable the whole way!

Jubal, so the mass is complete for the moment, now on to Africa!

Hosanna Free Zone!

Monday, March 29th, 2010

So, on Saturday my daughter sent me a text saying that she had looked at the songs that would be sung in her church on Palm Sunday…and there were going to be NO Hosanna songs! I responded to her that I was sad about that, and I was certain that MY church would have some Hosanna songs. So, with anticipation I entered the worship space listening for every Hosanna that was said and/or sung. The children came in, waving little palm branch replicas…BUT, no one EVER said or sang Hosanna the whole time!

Should I be legalistic about this…is it a rule to say or sing Hosanna on Palm Sunday? I suppose not, but then again, you would still think that just maybe on Palm Sunday someone would be able to slip in at least ONE Hosanna for those of us who were trying to make our church look better than those churches that completely ignore the whole day! Maybe?

So, Jubal…any thoughts about that one? I was sure I had one up on my daughter and her church, but I guess not!

A Streaming Opportunity

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

On Friday, February 12, “Jubal” will be hosting a special session with Gordon and Gail MacDonald based on Gordon’s book, Ordering Your Private World. The session is being held from 1:30-3:00 pm, PST. You can login from the Brehm Center website at www.brehmcenter.com.

See you there!

YEA for Disneyland!

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009


Through a gracious invitation I attended the Candlelight Ceremony at Disneyland…yes, the home of Mickey and Minnie!  It was a grand event in the style and standard of excellence that you would expect from a Disney production…right down to the classy ushers.  The stage was well laid out and ready for the program…the lights were tested…mics in place…again, just as you would expect from Disneyland.  Jon Voight came to the lectern to serve as narrator.  His first words were something to the affect that secular society had turned Christmas into something it wasn’t.  Christmas is about Christ and His birth.  He proceeded throughout the program to read directly from the Gospel of Luke…the Christmas story.  It was intermixed with Christmas carols that were familiar to all.  The words “God, Jesus,” and “Christ” were mentioned liberally during the evening…perhaps more than some churches will do in their attempt to make the message of the season palatable to all!  In all of our “cultural sensitivity,” have we turned Christmas into something other than Christmas…and Disneyland has to do the world a favor by keeping that message pure and simple?  Maybe so…

 

So Jubal, you would have approved of the program.  Those herald trumpet players up on top of the Disneyland train station were blowing in the cold wind, but nailed every note!  You would have been impressed!

 

They ended the program with the reading of the James Allen Francis poem, One Solitary Life.  If you haven’t seen this, or it has been a long time, here is One Solitary Life.

 

One Solitary Life

He was born in an obscure village,
The child of a peasant woman.
He grew up in still another village,
Where he worked in a carpenter shop
Until he was thirty.

Then for three years
He was an itinerant preacher.
He never wrote a book.
He never held an office.
He never had a family or owned a house.
He didn’t go to college.
He never visited a big city.
He never traveled two hundred miles
From the place where he was born.
He did none of the things
One usually associates with greatness.
He had no credentials but himself.

He was only thirty-three
When the tide of public opinion turned against him.
His friends ran away.
He was turned over to his enemies.
And went through the mockery of a trial.

He was nailed to a cross
Between two thieves.
While he was dying,
His executioners gambled for his clothing,
The only property he had on Earth.
When he was dead,
He was laid in a borrowed grave
Through the pity of a friend.

Twenty centuries have come and gone,
And today he is the central figure
Of the human race,
And the leader of mankind’s progress.

All the armies that ever marched,
All the navies that ever sailed,
All the parliament that ever sat,
All the kings that ever reigned,
Put together have not affected
The life of man on Earth
As much as that

ONE SOLITARY LIFE!

To Advent or Not to Advent?

Monday, December 7th, 2009


I went to church yesterday with anticipation of celebrating the Advent season…since it was the 2nd Sunday of Advent.  Entering the church, I was immediately struck with the beautiful decorations…lights, Christmas trees, HUGE star hung at the back of the platform…yea, it’s Christmas!  The band came out and started to play…sounded good…then as we went from song to song to song…nothing about Advent, Christmas…nothing!  The songs would have worked just as well in July as they did on the 2nd Sunday of Advent!  I was disappointed.

 

I understand that there is no rule that any church must sing Advent songs on Dec. 6.  I do know that, BUT this is one of the great seasons of the church year.  We not only celebrate the 1st Advent…a Savior was born!  That’s a big deal!  We should give attention to that!  We also are in the preparation mode for the 2nd Advent - Christ’s return…or do we not really believe that?  Hmmm…?  I heard more real Christmas music outside of the church than inside this weekend.  Is that the right statement to make about our beliefs?  I hope not!

 

Jubal, I know you were around before even the first Advent, but don’t you think there should have been some indication for the reason for the season except for the nice lights and trees and star…?

To Africa and Back!

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009


After the Jubilate! mass I did probably an ill-advised thing by jumping into a 30 hour journey to South Africa!  I mean, I was at the airport literally less than 24 hours after the Chapel service where we did some portions of the mass, which was the morning after the full concert!  The big picture schedule dictated the timing, but it was weary on top of weary, for sure. 

 

So, why South Africa?  The Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization is holding a gathering of 4000-5000 people from all over the world at the Cape Town International Convention Center in October 2010.  Our Brehm Center group has been asked to participate in some areas of leadership for the conference, specifically in designing and producing the Opening and Closing Ceremonies.  This trip was an opportunity to meet many musicians who hopefully we can gather to assist in the project, and see the convention center facility.  What an overwhelming and exciting opportunity! 

 

If you’d like to know more about this gathering you can do that by looking at www.lausanne.org.

 

Jubal, the challenges don’t stop…this is a great way to impact the cause of Christ around the world.  Wish I could assign you some of the tasks I have ahead of me!  Where are you when I need you?

Jubal’s Been Quiet, But Busy…!

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Jubal has been pretty silent for a while, but not for lack of activity…or questions or thoughts, of course!

I’ve been writing a new work to be performed this coming fall…”Jubilate! An Ancient-Future Concert Mass.”  In looking at some of the standard mass lyrics, I find myself asking some questions.  Why is the “Sanctus” a combination of scriptures from Isaiah 6 and the Palm Sunday narrative?  There is no obvious reason they go together, but that’s the way it is.  Another question…why are all of the texts commonly in Latin, except for the “Kyrie,”which is in Greek?  I wonder who decided that?  Such life-changing questions, I know!

Anyway, if you’d like to attend the concert you can find more details at the following link.  It’s going to be pretty interesting!

Look on the right side under Upcoming Events at http://www.brehmcenter.com/

Jubal, you are getting kind of tired of writing little black dots on the black lines and white spaces, aren’t you?