Church Music Musings....
Posted: Sun Sep 09, 2007 3:41 am
I know this is a "loaded topic" that can be approached from different angles. On the controversial end of things, there is the Traditional V. Contemporary church music styles which is a problem in many churches. Under "Traditional" are the old great hymns that have been around for one hundred or more years. Or if you happen to be from a southern culture; "Traditional" may mean "Southern Gospel."
Here in Ohio, Southern Gospel was the standard musical style till about 10 years ago in Pentecostal and most Baptist ("Bible-Believing") churches. This was due to a large migration of southerners to Ohio in the 1950's and 60's who "came up here" to work in factories (it surely beats those cruel coal mines)....
My Dad (passed on to the Lord) was from Kentucky and the church I grew up in was largely comprised of these migrants to Ohio. The denomination is "The Church of God of the Mountian Assembly" -- the Appalachian Mountains, that would be!
Dad married Mom, who is from "up here." I was born in Ohio too. I'd say about 1/3 of the parents of the "Ohio kids" in my age group (b. 1956) have an Appalachian ancestry. Around 2/3 of us have Appalachian parents (both parents coming from "down home" as they say).....
In any event, and it may be sad to say in a way, but the church I grew up in almost "split" over music styles. About 10 years ago the pastor, who was himself from "down home," introduced contemporary music to the church. He's about my age, in his mid-50's. He recently left the church to go into another ministry in another state. He told the church God was leading him there which I believe. However, had he stayed he would have probably been "elected out" as pastor because of opposition to contemporary music....
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Changing pace here: Though I rarely went to a church, I didn't go to any church regularly from about 1982-2005. I still don't go every week but have been going often to one Methodist church that has contemporary music -- exclusively. They do sing traditional hymns but it's put to modern "Christian Contemporary" music. They have an occasional "I'll Fly Away" (set to Third Day chord changes)....
Anyway, last nite I was visiting one of the worship leaders, my neighbor, the guitarist and singer for the church. He's 34 (I'm 51). I brought some Phil Keaggy CDs and one by Kerry Livgren, his first solo "album" after becoming a Christian and leaving Kansas (an early prog-rock band). My neighbor commented:
"This stuff is so OLD! I wonder what looks we would get if we played something like this in church? I bet their jaws would hit the floor!" (laughs).
So....in his church "contemporary" is the counterpart to my Mom's church's "southern gospel"... it's the new tradition....(is losing its "contemporary")....
And....I don't especially like contemporary Christian music! Of course, I don't have to listen to it in church because it is so loud it makes my ears ring (I wait outside in my truck till the singing is over...as soon as the booooming bass stops, I go in, lol). Not that it would make much difference in that: you can't hear anyone singing except the worship team! (I'd prefer to hear what we used to call "congregational singing"...when the congregation, you know, sings...and you can hear them...and yourself)!
Am I complaining? Yes, I suppose so. But I don't hold anything against these folks any more than I'm upset with my Mom because she thinks God has only annointed certain Appalachian chord changes and Scots-Irish singing....
I do like and enjoy singing some contemporary songs, don't get me wrong! But as a musician (guitarist) I find most contemporary Christian music "generic" and generally, bland and boring. The lyrics and song styles are often more like a love song than like, well, how can I put it? "Worshiping the God Who made the Universe" (???). Maybe I'm getting old (yes, ok, I am) but the music just doesn't move me. "We worship you Lord" is a common lyrical theme...Um, right, we know that! (I feel like I'm singing to myself or to us that this is now what we are doing)...Of course, I knew that! Perhaps God, He doesn't need a reminder that we are worshiping Him now, does He?
It's my age, I reckon. Not all of the songs are un-moving. Some are excellent, even. On the "faster" songs I don't know what it is. I feel like I'm at a youth rally or something.
Ideally, a church that had ALL styles of music would be the best, imo. You know, some real southern gospel (Statesmen Quartet, Blackwood Brothers, not just this new Bill Gaither stuff, lol)... some serious progressive rock...a country twanger... A Mighty Fortress Is Our GOD! ...an acapella "special" from somebody... Anything by Charles Wesley!!! ... a Crosby, Stills & Nash sounding something... a song for the little tiny baby young-young folks kids... one or two (tops) contemporary, haha... then the sermon.
Actually, I don't like more than about 3 songs...I want to hear the Bible!!!
AND NO ONE CLAPS...(this is a new thing in church since the 1980's), bless my heart! Clapping is for when yer entertained, imo, (I do it for performers at concerts I pay for...it lets them know you liked what they sang). Anyways....
Back in the day when someone sang a really moving "special" (solo) we said stuff like, "Praise the Lord" and might wind up in a real move of the Spirit. When the congregation was done singing, same thing...we didn't applaud ourselves!! We kept right along worshipping the Lord and didn't need to tell ourselves (or God) we are doing that now. "O HALLELUYAH!!!" (Clap, Clap, Wow, we did a great job: I just don't get this folks), lol
Nowadays, the annointing of the songs in worship....Well, it STOPS when everyone claps, sits down, and somebody asks would I please pass the pretzels, (thank you/yer welcome) -- while I'm still standing there with my eyes closed with hands raised and about to shout "GLORY TO GOD!"....(oooooops, better not now!!!!)......
Rick
Here in Ohio, Southern Gospel was the standard musical style till about 10 years ago in Pentecostal and most Baptist ("Bible-Believing") churches. This was due to a large migration of southerners to Ohio in the 1950's and 60's who "came up here" to work in factories (it surely beats those cruel coal mines)....
My Dad (passed on to the Lord) was from Kentucky and the church I grew up in was largely comprised of these migrants to Ohio. The denomination is "The Church of God of the Mountian Assembly" -- the Appalachian Mountains, that would be!
Dad married Mom, who is from "up here." I was born in Ohio too. I'd say about 1/3 of the parents of the "Ohio kids" in my age group (b. 1956) have an Appalachian ancestry. Around 2/3 of us have Appalachian parents (both parents coming from "down home" as they say).....
In any event, and it may be sad to say in a way, but the church I grew up in almost "split" over music styles. About 10 years ago the pastor, who was himself from "down home," introduced contemporary music to the church. He's about my age, in his mid-50's. He recently left the church to go into another ministry in another state. He told the church God was leading him there which I believe. However, had he stayed he would have probably been "elected out" as pastor because of opposition to contemporary music....
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Changing pace here: Though I rarely went to a church, I didn't go to any church regularly from about 1982-2005. I still don't go every week but have been going often to one Methodist church that has contemporary music -- exclusively. They do sing traditional hymns but it's put to modern "Christian Contemporary" music. They have an occasional "I'll Fly Away" (set to Third Day chord changes)....
Anyway, last nite I was visiting one of the worship leaders, my neighbor, the guitarist and singer for the church. He's 34 (I'm 51). I brought some Phil Keaggy CDs and one by Kerry Livgren, his first solo "album" after becoming a Christian and leaving Kansas (an early prog-rock band). My neighbor commented:
"This stuff is so OLD! I wonder what looks we would get if we played something like this in church? I bet their jaws would hit the floor!" (laughs).
So....in his church "contemporary" is the counterpart to my Mom's church's "southern gospel"... it's the new tradition....(is losing its "contemporary")....
And....I don't especially like contemporary Christian music! Of course, I don't have to listen to it in church because it is so loud it makes my ears ring (I wait outside in my truck till the singing is over...as soon as the booooming bass stops, I go in, lol). Not that it would make much difference in that: you can't hear anyone singing except the worship team! (I'd prefer to hear what we used to call "congregational singing"...when the congregation, you know, sings...and you can hear them...and yourself)!
Am I complaining? Yes, I suppose so. But I don't hold anything against these folks any more than I'm upset with my Mom because she thinks God has only annointed certain Appalachian chord changes and Scots-Irish singing....
I do like and enjoy singing some contemporary songs, don't get me wrong! But as a musician (guitarist) I find most contemporary Christian music "generic" and generally, bland and boring. The lyrics and song styles are often more like a love song than like, well, how can I put it? "Worshiping the God Who made the Universe" (???). Maybe I'm getting old (yes, ok, I am) but the music just doesn't move me. "We worship you Lord" is a common lyrical theme...Um, right, we know that! (I feel like I'm singing to myself or to us that this is now what we are doing)...Of course, I knew that! Perhaps God, He doesn't need a reminder that we are worshiping Him now, does He?
It's my age, I reckon. Not all of the songs are un-moving. Some are excellent, even. On the "faster" songs I don't know what it is. I feel like I'm at a youth rally or something.
Ideally, a church that had ALL styles of music would be the best, imo. You know, some real southern gospel (Statesmen Quartet, Blackwood Brothers, not just this new Bill Gaither stuff, lol)... some serious progressive rock...a country twanger... A Mighty Fortress Is Our GOD! ...an acapella "special" from somebody... Anything by Charles Wesley!!! ... a Crosby, Stills & Nash sounding something... a song for the little tiny baby young-young folks kids... one or two (tops) contemporary, haha... then the sermon.
Actually, I don't like more than about 3 songs...I want to hear the Bible!!!
AND NO ONE CLAPS...(this is a new thing in church since the 1980's), bless my heart! Clapping is for when yer entertained, imo, (I do it for performers at concerts I pay for...it lets them know you liked what they sang). Anyways....
Back in the day when someone sang a really moving "special" (solo) we said stuff like, "Praise the Lord" and might wind up in a real move of the Spirit. When the congregation was done singing, same thing...we didn't applaud ourselves!! We kept right along worshipping the Lord and didn't need to tell ourselves (or God) we are doing that now. "O HALLELUYAH!!!" (Clap, Clap, Wow, we did a great job: I just don't get this folks), lol
Nowadays, the annointing of the songs in worship....Well, it STOPS when everyone claps, sits down, and somebody asks would I please pass the pretzels, (thank you/yer welcome) -- while I'm still standing there with my eyes closed with hands raised and about to shout "GLORY TO GOD!"....(oooooops, better not now!!!!)......
Rick