Many of you have asked me the best way to record demos.
To be honest, there are numerous options available. It all depends on what current gear you have and how detailed you want to be.
Worship Podcast & Blog
Many of you have asked me the best way to record demos.
To be honest, there are numerous options available. It all depends on what current gear you have and how detailed you want to be.
[This post is part of a brand new blog series, “Your Guide to Practicing the Essential Skills of a Worship Leader“. Check out the other posts here.]
If you’re alive, you probably want a mentor.
We long for someone to come alongside us, believe in us, and help us achieve our dreams. The problem is, we are waiting for them to come to us and don’t realize what we already have.
Soundchecks. In most churches they are either a cause for war or something that is missing entirely.
Nothing shows the maturity of a team more than their sound checks.
[This is part of a brand new blog series, “Your Guide to Practicing the Essential Skills of a Worship Leader“. Check out the other posts here.]
Why is it that some musicians excel while others flounder? How can some take lessons for 15 years and not be half as good as a young boy who’s only been playing for two?
Talent may have something to do with it, but it’s not completely to blame. It’s about a certain kind of practice.
My goal with this post is to cast vision about practice. It matters more than you know.
I don’t want to stereotype, but you may be a little too cynical.
How do I know this? Well, cynicism runs deep within the habits of worship leaders, musicians, and artists. We are constantly comparing ourselves, comparing our art.
I have to ask…are you too cynical for your own good?