Playing Hymns on the Drum Set

July 17th, 2013

All too often I hear drum set players use a simple rock beat for hymns. I would challenge drummers to think a little more creatively and improvise a part that is more stylistically appropiate. Someday I plan to upload some recordings of myself improvising to these old songs but for now, here is a place to start:

  • Try playing the melody on the drums. The drum you use should not be based on pitch, but rather on where the note is in the measure. Almost like you’re letting the melody influence that rock beat you’ve already been doing.
  • Listen to the pianist and imitate. Usually, the pianist will drive these traditional songs. Get ideas from there. If there is no pianist at your church, get with one from outside your church and jam for a while.
  • Play something different for every verse and make it match the lyrics. “Up from the grave he arose with a mighty triumph o’re his foes!” There are about 50 good things to do right there. A simple rock beat is not one of them.
  • Emphasize beats 1 and 3 when in 4/4. This style comes from a classical tradition and you should not be emphasizing 2 and 4 like you normally would. However, do NOT put the snare on 1 and 3 to do this…that just sounds bad. Be creative, you’ll get it.

That’s all for now. I’ll be sharing more on this topic soon.


Beckoning Beauty – Thoughts on Communication Technology

January 26th, 2013

What a wondrous age we live in: The iPod, iTunes, YouTube, Pandora, Rdio, Spotify, Facebook. Communication technology that is completely customizable to our own individual likings. Windows into the world that filter out everything that does not capture our interest. If we don’t like what we see or hear, we can delete it, turn it off, filter out similar content, and take control over what we perceive.

communication technology

We’re finally getting what every person who has ever lived dreamed of: a life of complete control. A life where if we don’t appreciate something, we change it. It used to be that only kings and the very wealthy could decide what art they wanted to enjoy, and even then they had to wait for it to arrive. Today, if we want to see a Monet or hear a Beethoven, we just search for it and it is ready and waiting for our enjoyment. If we change our minds halfway through, no one is offended when we leave our private concert hall or gallery. We just push stop and we are happy again.

communication technology

This mentality has begun to creep into the physical world too, but we’re getting used to it. Students sink into their communication technology kingdom during class. Friends text their digital subjects while spending time together in the uncontrollable physical world. Although employees may not own the world they’re being paid to occupy, they may continually visit a world they do own while on their shift. A father may not have control over his children, but if he lets his children build and rule their own worlds through communication technology, Daddy can get back to controlling his.

Some people may try to convince us that a personal and customizable life is not reality, but real life is generally determined by a conglomeration of experience. Digital life is real life in so far as it forms a part of this conglomeration. Digital life is not a different life, as many have tried to believe, it’s simply a different part of life–a powerful one that allows us to rule our own universe. No matter how much we attempt to separate the world we rule from the world in which we live, these two will always be intertwined.

But I’m outside of my field. I don’t understand the effects of the digital world on relationships and the like. I’m not a psychologist. I’m not a pastor or a priest. But I am an artist, and I’m very concerned about the consequences of digital life for people’s aesthetic wellness.

A sociologist’s (Sherry Turkle) views on the effects of communication technology.

See below for the rest of this essay.

Sunset

For the most part, our communication technology kingdoms are only one part of our lives. We still have to travel, eat, sleep, participate in funerals and weddings, work on our houses, cut our grass, and the like. All of these things take place in a world outside of our control. We can’t help that the roof got old, we got tired, or we got hungry. But something we have gained almost inherent control of is the art we consume. For example, if we want to enjoy a fine meal, we either have to cook, pay for it, or let ourselves be at the mercy of a host. But if we want to listen to fine music, the Chicago symphony orchestra is at our disposal for no charge. Is it any coincidence that film, music, photography, and video games are the most popular forms of art? Our aesthetic world (at least for our favorite two senses) is completely under our digital control. Is it a simple coincidence that our favorite art forms give us complete control over our aesthetic environment, or is our preference shaped by our desire to be in control of our universe?

To answer these questions, it is important to realize that beauty’s existence does not depend on our perception. A sunset is beautiful, not because our minds project beautiful feelings onto it, but because it imprints its own beauty on our minds. Unfortunately, we have come under the notion that “beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” Friends, that’s just not biblical. This notion implies that man’s projection of his own beauty onto God’s creation makes God’s work worth enjoying. However, the creation account makes it abundantly clear that the world was beautiful before man even existed. This becomes very evident when God says of his creation, “It is very good.” No matter how passionately our proud eyes try to project our own beauty onto the world we behold, the fact remains that beauty goes into our minds and not out from them.

communication technology

So then, how does complete control over our aesthetic environment affect our appreciation of beauty? Our aesthetic kingdoms are inclination amplifiers that cause us to gravitate even more strongly toward our hearts’ natural tendencies, but without accountability. They enable us to flippantly consume increasing amounts of what we enjoy without the bother of others’ insight. If beauty is defined by God, it is dangerous for us to gorge ourselves on object after object without another’s opinion about what we’re consuming. Ultimately, this leads to the most dangerous aesthetic wellness problem: letting ourselves consume only those aesthetic objects to which we are naturally inclined. The result is that we only consume art that aligns with our personal projections of beauty, while our projections slowly erode into aesthetic chaos. This is not God’s plan for our lives. God does not want us to beckon beauty and shape it with our minds; rather he wants our minds to be beckoned and shaped by beauty (Romans 12:1-8Philippians 4:8, II Corinthians 3:18).

Finally, how does the complete control of our environment affect our community? Art is a tool to bring people together, but our communication technology kingdoms create reasons to keep people apart. Beckoning beauty through communication technology replaces aesthetic participation in our community. If we no longer need other people in order to be fed aesthetically, we won’t attend artistic community events. If no one attends, no one will create. This problem is compounded in light of our diminishing appreciation of beauty. Eventually everyone prefers his own narrow and unique brand of beauty and this drives us apart aesthetically. It’s naive to think the aesthetic world isn’t part of the real world. Aesthetic disconnection is a problem as real as any other. When we drift apart aesthetically, we drift apart. Plain and simple.


The Gift of Emotion

January 25th, 2012

Emotion, as defined by dictionary.com, is “an affective state of consciousness in which joy, sorrow, fear, hate, or the like, is experienced, as distinguished from cognitive and volitional states of consciousness.” After reading this I had to look up the word “volitional”. Since it is the most important word in the definition, volition means “a choice or decision made by the will.” Emotion, then, is not a matter of will but of involuntary reaction.  You cannot control your emotions any more than you can avoid feeling physical sensations; they are the nervous system of the soul. We can (to an extent) manipulate the world around us to avoid or experience certain emotions as well as ignore them when we know that they are not aiding our current situation. But we cannot (by force of will) alter them or make them disappear.

An emotion comes when a certain situation occurs; we can decide how to respond to it whether that be to ignore the sensation or to choose one of several possible responses. For example, let’s say that a woman makes flirtatious advances on a man who is emotionally drawn to her. The woman’s behavior excites sensations in the man which cause emotional pleasure and promise even more of that same pleasure if the man’s will chooses to follow a certain course of action. The man cannot control the fact that he is attracted to her, nor can he control the fact that her behavior is making him more drawn to her. His emotion is a reaction to a stimulus and he cannot change what he feels any more than he can change a cool breeze on his face during a hot summer day. Being offered a desirable flirtatious encounter causes unavoidable emotional pleasure just as the smell of food excites the olfactory system. Feeling emotion is about as subject to the will as feeling wet when thrown into water.

Unlike physical sensation, our emotional response is completely based on what we know. If you feel a cool breeze on a hot summer day, you will feel the same physical pleasure whether or not you are aware of it. Your body was too hot, and now it is cooler; your nerves will give you this information no matter what. On the other hand, if a man is not aware that the woman he is attracted to is attempting a flirtation then he is incapable of feeling the emotional pleasure of her interest. The knowledge of the woman’s intention changes the man’s sensation. Likewise, if the woman has no intention of showing interest but the man thinks she is interested, the man’s emotional sensation will be based on the inaccuracy. Take this a step further (the uninterested woman feigning interest) and you will see that outright lies can create fabricated (yet authentic) emotion. But emotions rooted in falsehood (when truth is discovered) will eventually lead to the opposition emotion of an equal or greater intensity. If the man was delighted he will be disappointed, but if he was annoyed then he will be relieved. I hope we all agree that it would be better for the man to not have been lied to.

So then, in order to enjoy our emotions consistently, we must believe in things that actually exist. This may seem obvious, yet I have repeatedly heard a distressing argument (mostly from non-believers) that people should be allowed to live in their fabricated emotions in peace so long as they are happy. But when you base your beliefs/emotions on lies, in reality you aren’t actually standing on anything. As soon as reality reveals that your source of joy does not exist, your worldview will collapse and you’ll be in despair. If you then fabricate a new system of belief that is not consistent with reality, you have started a pattern that can only lead to endless depression.

When our emotions become stimulated by studying the things of God (truth in its general sense), we can be confident in our positive emotions. However, we also must understand that our emotions are fickle and will not always deliver pleasant sensations when consuming truth. We must remain confident that the truth with which we are filling our heads will guide our impulses towards things that are authentic and thus good for our souls; it is always better to have something that exists than to have something that you imagined whether or not the real thing is pleasant. So then, if we base our relationship with God on the emotional sensation we get from it and then pursue our emotions to wherever they happen to go when the sensation dissipates, we can be confident that our relationship with God is not based on reality and cannot bring lasting joy. You can see the health of your walk with Christ based on the effort that you put into your relationship with him when you’re not emotionally drawn to him. This shows that you have affection for Christ and not for your feelings; affection for your feelings is narcissism and therefore satanic idolatry (Isaiah 14). Being happy for the sake of being happy is a logical fallacy that evaporates into death. It’s best to forget about the emotion completely and focus on the object, thus viewing sensation as the indicator that it is rather than the source of life.

The beauty of emotion is not in where it guides us. Letting emotion govern our lives would be a like a sailor only going where the wind took him. No, the beauty of emotion is that it powerfully reinforces what our hearts, minds, and souls already know to be beautiful, true, and good. Emotion does not tell us what is good, but it is the part of ourselves that enjoys what is good. Unfortunately it also enjoys what is bad so we must guard our emotions with our objective faculties so that our emotions do not lead us into sin. When emotion comes out of building our relationship with God, it is a gift from God which he uses in our hearts to draw us towards himself. But the best part of the gift is that it is not always there. If the only reason we go to God is to have pleasant emotions, we are worshiping the gift rather than the Giver. Instead, this temporal gift sticks in our memories even when we are not feeling it. If the gift was always available, then it would be useless. Therefore, surges of excitement as a response to learning about God is God’s way of giving us positive reinforcement as we study Him so that we can become more motivated to continue our walk even when we don’t feel like it.

Consistently positive emotion emanates out of on an ever-growing wealth of accurate information about God and his creation under the condition that we accept and respond to this truth obediently. Jesus is the bread of life (John 6). Worship bread, enjoy satiety; never the other way around.


Art and Imagination

November 29th, 2010

This an essay that a good (anonymous) friend of mine wrote a while back.  It seems to tie some of the things that we’ve been discussing together and I’m exited about showing this to all of you.  Don’t forget to click the “like” button on the bottom!

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Art is a set of actions, rather than an object. When I see a painting, I see the actions someone has done with a set of given materials. Artistry is an act of creation. Thus, giving someone a cold glass of water in Christ’s name is a work of art. Witnessing and giving a sermon is a work of art. We believe that the Holy Spirit inspires us and brings new life, which in turn changes the way we act. In this way, spiritual fruit, the act, becomes art: we engage in the act of creation, imitating God in the beginning.

When we see the natural world, we see the creation of the Master Artist, even though both the natural realm and our perceptual faculties are filthy with sin. As disciples, one of the ways we grow is by fellowshipping (communicating) with other Spirit-indwelt believers.  This communication may take many forms, but it may be boiled down to action. A sermon, for example, is an action: it is art. The preacher engages in an action that involves communicating truth to the congregation.

Art, then, is a witness and a discipler, because it is a set of actions that communicates truth from a Spirit-indwelt believer to the world. This holds true for music, literature, paintings, sculpture, architecture, etc. All of these forms may be as didactic as any Western sermon (though most CCM today is not. As Grudem notes in his Systematic Theology, “[W]hen I began to select hymns that correspond to the great doctrines of the Christian faith, I realized that the great hymns of the church throughout history have a doctrinal richness and breadth that is still unequaled”). Art in this sense, can also do the work of systematic theology texts (and for many, it is more memorable.)

All of this hinges on the act of communicating, which invokes the concept of the metaphor. Because our feeble brains are not capable of comprehending God fully, we understand his characteristics are like unto other things, but always better (here the imagination is at work). So when David declares that “The Lord is my rock, and my fortress,” we obviously don’t believe that the Lord is actually a rock or a fortress, but our imagination allows us to make the jump from that metaphor to an understanding of the Lord really is like: stable and unmoved, like a fortress, only better. This is how the imagination is tied to worship. The imagination allows us to make attempts at seeing what cannot be seen from what we can see.

Art is a way of explaining these things because it welds the natural realm to transcendence. “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament showeth his handiwork. Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth forth knowledge. There is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard.” The ultimate tapestry reveals truth in a way that is not actual speech, but it is of course communication. Human art, then, is a way of imitating God and conveying his truth.

Art, then, can be a sermon. It can be a teacher, a discipler. Art is one of the best ways to awaken our minds to the worldly areas of our minds, since much art from the past was created by the greatest Christian thinkers of all time. When Dante came to Purgatory, the place of cleansing and preparation for Paradise, he noticed many souls staring at carvings in the stone walls. The carvings were works of art, many of them portraying Biblical scenes, and the point seems to be that art can be used by God as a purifier, a conveyor of truth and beauty. Dante, Dostoevsky, Caravaggio, and Bach are no less brilliant teachers in my mind than Grudem.

Beyond the teaching aspect, art can also be legitimately pleasurable. On this Calvin writes, “Has the Lord clothed the flowers with the great beauty that greets our eyes, the sweetness of the smell that is wafted upon our nostrils, and yet it will be unlawful for our eyes to be affected by that beauty, or our sense of smell by the sweetness of that odor…Did he not, in short, render many things attractive to us apart from their necessary use?” So apart from the necessaries, there is something about beauty that is good for us. One must ask, “Why, then, did God give us flowers? or pleasure at all?” I submit that we not only learn more about the beauty and the joy of the Lord, but it is an aesthetic experience that is wholly separate from knowledge and wisdom, and equally desirable.

One final point involves the skill necessary to complete certain pieces of art. When building the tabernacle, the Israelites selected only the finest craftsmen to complete the Lord’s house. This suggests that only the best will do for God, as in the first fruits. This is deeply connected with how David speaks of worshiping God in the “beauty of holiness.” To be holy is to be separate. There are many works of art that the layperson will never be able to imitate; these beautiful artworks (sets of actions) are beautiful because they are distinct and set apart. This suggests that true beauty is separate and transcendent, and that all beauty that we can ever see in art is merely a signifier, a pointer to true beauty: God.


Response to Joel: Tension and Resolution

October 4th, 2010

The following is a response that my friend, Joel, made to the new album, Purpose:

Caleb,

Acting contrary to your advice I listened to this CD twice in the same day (I think you said that one should not listen to a piece of music twice in the same waking period). I must say that some parts are beginning to grow on me, though I still think there is too much tension, without enough resolution. I am starting to see the intention in that tension though. Sin makes this world an unhappy place, and I think that your music communicates that very well. I also like that you ended with a recounting of God’s amazing grace. It really brings the whole thing together more than you realize when you first listen to it. I think I need to sleep on it.

Joel

Thanks for the thought provoking comment Joel.  It’s good to actually see some activity around here!  I’ve actually been having a lot of conversations on the issue of tension in my work, and I’d like to address it in length.  Thanks to Brad and pastor Tim in particular for challenging me to think about this.  It’s changing the way I compose, and I really mean that.

It’s fine to listen to a CD twice in one waking period so long as the amount of attentiveness you retain is comparable to your first listen.  Personally, I often begin to become apathetic if I listen to something twice in a row, but I’m sure it varies from person to person.  However, it’s a good general rule.  After all, I stole it from C.S. Lewis!

I’m really happy that you and others are hearing the last track in that way.  I was really worried that people wouldn’t get it, but once again you can’t predict and audience’s reaction.  Thank you for sharing that, it means a lot.

I’ve been reading a book the other Caleb gave me called “Theology, Music, and Time”, by Jeremy S. Begbie and I read a very interesting concept the other night at work.  Music is far more about the tension than the resolution, and when you’re writing about our life here on earth there is no resolution until death/resurrection/kingdom come.  There are small amounts of gratification throughout life, but for the most part we are in a state of perpetual transition until Christ completes his work (Always in Transition).  To make a CD about the Purpose of life implies no authentic resolution what-so-ever (pun fully intended to you theory nerds).  But because of the hope we have in Christ, there is a foreshadowing of the ultimate resolution that we can’t even imagine.  Therefore, he goes on to say that music in the church needs to be less gratifying and be written to convince believers to hope for real resolution rather than offer them some sort of transient emotional release; the same good feeling non-believers get from their “secular” concerts (Well, that’s not quite what he said but that’s what I got out of it).

Here are my own thoughts on the issue. Music consists of tension, but not all music consists of resolution.  You could almost think it similar to darkness being the absence of light, or evil being the absence of God. Resolution is the absence of tension.  Just as you do not need light to have darkness present and you do not need God to have evil present, so you do not need resolution to have tension in music.  Therefore, I would conclude that music is tension and not necessarily resolution.

Between reality never resolving and music being primarily tension, I believe that it is to the listener’s benefit emotionally and spiritually to listen to music that makes their heart ache so that they put their hope in Christ.  There is of course a profound place for music to make your heart sing, but it should be out of the hope and gratitude that starts from the heartache resulting from our condition.  Why else would the majority of scripture be about how desperate we are for salvation?  We don’t read the Bible because it makes us happy.  We read it because it gives us the deep joy that results from hope and gratitude in the authentic resolution of life.  There is no full resolution in life, but only a shadow of the glory that is to come.

Therefore, tension points to truth.  The small amounts of resolution you hear in my work is my own hope and joy leaking into the sound; I sincerely hope that these windows are real.

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