Tag Archive - music

Practice, Participation and the Art of “Remixing” Church and Community

In class my adviser, Ryan Bolger, often tells a story about a pastor of a mega-church in Arizona. One day the pastor, while walking with his son across the campus of the church he built, said, “Son, this is all going to yours someday,” and his son took a step back and responded, “I don’t want anything to do with this kind of Christianity.” It was then that this pastor realized his church was rooted in a boomer culture phenomenon (and has since gone on to rethink their mission as a church). This “mission-station” approach is rooted in a different time and sensibility than that of our younger generations. Theirs is a do-it-yourself culture: sites like YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Wikipedia and open-source community-based software need community cooperation in order to work. These sites represent a rejection of powerful top-down hierarchies where the flow from producer to consumer maintains control, predictability and efficiently. Those influenced by the participatory culture, actively participate in creating where they see need and they do it with or without permission from those in power, they share information and welcome low levels of control, they are highly energetic and creative and they want to be active in shaping their future through a variety of grassroots means. (From the article, Remixing Faith in the 21st Century by Wess Daniels)

Recently I have been thinking a lot on two terms that author/consultant/professor Clay Shirky used in his book Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations. He discusses, among many other things:

  1. An “architecture of participation” (coined by Tim O’ Reilly)

  2. Communities of Practice

Both embody what I think are two important necessities for the Church. That we create an environment that allows for and encourages participation among everyone. Not just pastors, directors, paid staff, or those that we often single out as having special gifts. Rather it is a community that everyone brings something to the table. And that we foster a community environment that encourages practice, which allows for mistakes, failures, successes…everything that comes along with practicing.

Churches are often bad at these two things. We don’t allow for failure, and therefore we inhibit a participatory community.

That’s why you rarely see anyone up front during worship on Sundays unless it is the paid staff. That is the way that we minimize mistakes, which therefore limits total participation. It’s a vicious cycle which eventually leads us to being consumers of Church, the community and all that is offered.

I have great hope for the Church as I see many new communities and Churches embracing some of these values of participation and practice, while also moving away from being consumers of the Church and worship. Many are also moving away from top-down hierarchies that maintain command and control. I think these moves are a step in the right direction.

Wess Daniels has got an amazing post over at Barclay Press, Remixing Faith in the 21st Century. I leave you with another great quote from the article. Then go read it for yourself because it is well worth the time.

This past April Radiohead did another thing that sparked imaginations and challenged the preexisting structures of the music industry, yet again. They setup a website and invited people to remix one of their singles, “Nude.” Along with the invitation, they released the audio tracks containing the guitars, strings, drums, bass, and vocals through the iTunes music store. They invited people to participate in a contest to see who would make the best remix of their song, all the votes would be made by Radiohead fans (the winning remix received 38568 votes). By looking at remix culture, I think the church can learn something about how creativity and imagination interacts with existing ideas and structures and builds off those resources while also moving beyond them in new ways.

Let’s Talk About Music

The Habanero Hour Podcast: “It Won’t Change the World, But it Might Change The Way You Think of Christian Music”

I rarely talk about music because I don’t really feel like I have anything ever valuable to say about it, except, “That band was good” or “I love that song.” But that’s the extent you will get. No insight in the the songwriting, or musicianship, or the impact of the music upon the culture, etc. And there are people who do a great job of this.

For the last couple of years I have been reading my friend’s blog Colossians Three Sixteen. Brent and I went to college together and I knew he was always interested in music. He was always the guy with the huge CD collection. (For those of you who don’t know, a CD was something before the iPod…never mind). Almost every week Brent puts up a great post about music and through this he has turned me onto some artists that I never would have considred listening to, and he has helped me understand and appreciate more fully the depth of the music that he writes about and that I listen to.

All that to say, that it only makes sense that his love and passion for music, and writing about it, would be translated into a podcast. Brent and Mark Whiten have created the Habanero Hour. You have got to check it out. Here is what they say about the endeavor:

It won’t change the world, but it might change the way you think about “Christian” music. The Habañero Hour is a periodic music and interview podcast dedicated to exploring and challenging the idea of “Christian” music. All selections are played with explicit permission from the artists. We make no profit from the creative pursuits of others and make every effort to direct your attention to the artists’ own websites whenever possible.

They just completed Episode 1 which featured interviews with Steven Delopoulos and music from Doug Burr, Jeremy Casella, the Trees Community and some others. The featured artist for this episode is Steven Delopoulos, who is formerly of Burlap to Cashmere.

Please check it out, and let Brent and Mark know what you think. If you know of any artists that would make a good fit for their podcast then let them know.

“Grace gives life. Lift is art. Art is Grace.”

One of my student leaders, James Schoensiegel is a very talented musician, and he has recently been experimenting with the worship music, wanting to redefine it in some very different ways. He has been recording a more ambient sounding style of worship music that he describes this way.

This music is the culmination of a long struggle with faith and faithfulness, with immersing myself in the pains and joys of life, and with trying desperately to understand God. Regardless of your spiritual views, please pray and think about the vast needs and sufferings of people all over the globe while you listen to this music. Use it to transform your heart toward living a life full of grace.

James is an amazing young man and someone who has given his whole heart to serving those less fortunate in Los Angeles. He has really inspired our community to give back and to make service a part of who we are, and not just something we do. I know this music comes from a very, very deep place in his relationship with Christ and I hope you check it out.

Go to Art Is Grace to listen to some of his music.

The Cobalt Season

I have just begun to listen to this band even though I have seen their name around for a little while. Ryan and Holly Sharp are the design team of Sharp Seven who did the art and design work for Shane Claiborne’s new book, Jesus for President, which I just blogged about below.

This is one of those bands, and these are the artists that will make you think more thoughtfully and critically about your faith. I just love the integration of their work, their music, and how it all seems to flow into the rest of their life. I don’t know them personally except for some Facebook messages between Ryan Sharp and I….but I’m really impressed with them. And I’m jealous in some ways. I wish I was more imaginative and creative in my daily life and work.

Check out their blog Pressing On In The Dark and you can check out their music site from there, as well as their MySpace.

Are Five O’ Clock People Making A Comeback?