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Brandon Peoples, ‘Back Pew Baptist’

February 23, 2015 By Pete Bulanow

Brandon Peoples

Brandon Peoples

Brandon (keyboardist for Break The Fall) talks to us about his thoughts as a “Back Pew Baptist“, sitting in the rear of a church, helping with the tech program, watching, and thinking about why we’re doing a lot of the things we do in church.

This podcast all started with a thoughtful tweet (and my followup blog post / analysis called ‘Throw-away songs’):

Why does a third of the church leave during the last worship song? Do we have better places to be than before God?

— Brandon Peoples (@BrrrPeoples) October 5, 2014

Connect with Brandon on Twitter & Facebook.

Check out his Church (especially if you’re in Rayville, Missouri), his amazing band Break The Fall (Amazon, iTunes), and if you ever wanted to master Propellerheard Reason, check out his extensive Reason Tutorials.

God’s Great Dance Floor by Chris Tomlin (Amazon | iTunes).

Pete recommends: Value-Focused Thinking: A Path to Creative Decisionmaking

If you have something you’d like to share with the church on the Building Your Band Podcast, please contact me.

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Filed Under: Podcast Tagged With: Analysis, Church, Critique, Music, Season1, Worship, Worship Leader

Lyrics vs music

October 6, 2014 By Pete Bulanow

It’s very rare to find a complete package in a song, where the balance of words and music is more or less equal. Usually, when I listen to music, the words sung, that’s not what I’m listening to. That’s not what usually grabs me out of a song. ~Chris Thile

Our Engagement Day

Our Engagement Day

There is a wonderful story early in my relationship with my wife (when we were still dating). We were just getting to know each other, and I sent her a Nickel Creek album. Her first reaction to it (it’s bluegrass, in case you’re unfamiliar) was “Oh. He really doesn’t know what kind of music I like.” And then she kept listening, and the more she listened, she found herself overwhelmed and drawn in by the beauty of the lyrics and the music. She very much saw the lyrics as if I had sent a message to her through them.

Turns out, I’m not really much of a lyrics guy. Actually, I was quite unfamiliar with the lyrics on the album. Of course, I loved the vocals and the harmonies and the playing and the song writing and the music, and I may have picked up some small snippets of the lyrics, but I don’t really listen to lyrics when I listen to music. Of course my wife was shocked to find this out.

This begs the question: did I intend to send the message my wife received?

Framed another way: do the music and the lyrics carry the same meaning?

My answer is: in a good song they do. Recently, we discovered an interview in which Chris Thile talks about this very issue – about how hard he works to create a song that is the whole package. So I fully believe that I was telling my future wife all of those things, just using a different language.

I often hear song selections discussed in terms of lyrics. I guess that is OK. I don’t think songwriters think or speak this way (exclusively in terms of their lyrics). I think songwriters speak in terms of both what the lyrics and the music are saying.

But we owe it to the integrity of what we do to think in terms of both the lyrics and the music. To choose songs that are coherent, and songs that are balanced. Part of the wonder of music is that it can speak to truths beyond facts or rational thinking. It can appeal to things we know in our hearts to be true – that God is big, that we are small, that He loves us regardless, and that we can’t contain him within our minds.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Composition, Lyrics, Music, Songwriting

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