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I'm sure about the soprano, but I've never had the chance to play sax with a singer, though I did overdub one of my songs with me on alto sax in harmony a long time ago. It was... ok I guess. What would have made it good is if I could actually sing... lol.
The Baz Luhrmann is almost comical in its presentation. A person preaching over a cheesy rap beat. It's pretty profound... Maybe better just to read the essay though, so I don't laugh.
Yeah, when songs have a real, profound story behind it, they really take on a new dimension. The American Elegy is hauntingly beautiful. Maybe out of place to say this, but it have some resemblance in character to The first movement of Holst's First Suite in Eb with... thematic development. It has a recurring theme, but it's not a Chaconne obviously. But after the little identity crisis in my head, I'm amazed. Even standing alone, it's a strong fluent and atmospheric piece. And then the trumpet solo and the keychange after the crescendo. I melted. Every rise and fall was like a crashing wave smoothing back after a storm. Because maybe that's what the song was to Ticheli. A way to soothe the storm in his heart? I don't know. I'm not Ticheli.
I guess when there's a meaning in an event, it can really come out. Although, I rarely have enough that happens in my life for the song to really have any meaning. The only songs I wrote from actual events were after this girl rejected me, which was just a load of poetic sounding self pity, and the death of my grandfather, or a weird meditation on what clouds thought of us living in a seemingly pointless life... not too proud of my resume.
I guess to segue into the next part I'm really itching to talk about, Lyrics in Worship Songs. I guess worship songs are a more contemporary side of Church Worship services. Some don't sing, and some sing hymns, so it may not translate. But its all the same if God is glorified in the end.
But moving away from my brooding lyricism, I've been on to writing more worship-like songs lately, at the encouragement of my pastor. I started writing based on scripture, which instantly has much more meaning than anything I come up with, and it keeps me from writing something weird. I sometimes fall back into my questioning habits, so they're not full on worship songs, but more like a Contemporary Christian song with a more worshipful stance. But sometimes, worship songs can feel a bit impersonal, if you say the same words every Sunday without really taking in what it means. It can become Christian Jargon, just nice sounding things.
I guess in response to that, the song, "How He Loves" by John Mark McMillan is really a wake up call. It's not wishy washy at all, and is actually rather raw and unfamiliar lyrically, using bare images, and rougher ways of describing God's love for us. I first hear his recording of it, and I wasn't quite sure what to think. I was used to the sort of oversung Sunday worship "Nice-Feeling, glossed over "songs. So my Dad plays it in the car one saturday, since he was going to lead worship the next day. He wanted me to hear it. Well I thought it was definitely musically very well done, with a really strong Chorus, and very poetic lyrics. Half way through the song, I thought it felt a bit difficult to worship to. But towards the end of the song, he begins to cry in the recording. That really caught me off guard, and I was curious.
Well there was a reason for that apparently. My Dad explains that one day, he was praying at his Church, when his friend cries out in prayer, "If it would shake the youth of a nation, I will give my life today." That night, McMillan finds that his friend was killed in a car crash. The next morning, he writes a worship song about God's love. Well, when I describe an event like this in 3 sentences, it really loses impact, but still, try to imagine how this plays out.
I'm not exactly sure what I'm most amazed at. The raw emotion he conveys through the song, the strength of faith he has to praise God in the midst of tragedy. I don't know. But it shook up my conceptions of what a worship song was. We sang it the next day, and it was... well powerful. I didn't know what to say. But if you read the lyrics, it really makes sense, that God loves us in that bare open way, no reservations, no glossed over sayings. I guess I'm really inspired by this song.
EDIT: Oh right and here's a link to the song:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0luHiWwi08