Thursday, May 22, 2008

Enough Already

Here's the way it work in our church. We get a song list, charts and mp3s in advance of the first rehearsal. There are also brief notes about each song (e.g. "we are playing this in C not Bb like the mp3...") . Each musician goes off and 'practices' (sometimes not) their part by themselves. We then get together on Tuesday nights for the first rehearsal and it's usually pretty rough. Thursday night we have another rehearsal in the sanctuary with the FOH sound guys and lights, video etc. this is where the tech team gets to go through the lighting, video and other cues. The music is getting better but there are a lot of moving parts that are coming together for the first time. Sunday morning we have our final rehearsal.

What I hope is evident is that there is little time for musicians to work on how their parts interact with each other. Its a lot to expect that the musicians will have yet another rehearsal to integrate their parts. What to do?

What I found to be a most bang for the buck option is for each musician to avoid the following traps when rehearsing:
  1. Spend more time listening to the mp3 - don't play what you think you hear. listen for YOUR part.
  2. Make notes on your chart about when to play and more importantly when NOT to play
  3. Avoid over-playing your part. this is the biggest problem with most worship bands. Everybody is banging away at a 10 on their instrument because this is how they have been rehearsing it (by themselves). Now that the band is together its not your job to carry the whole song.
  4. Pace your playing to ride the dynamics of the song. Sometimes the band pulls back, slows down, stops playing altogether.
  5. Practice the song to the mp3 as much as possible during the week or at least play to a metronome. One of the musical elements that needs the most improvement in most worship bands is their collective sense of rhythm. To be a rock and not to roll is a shame.

2 comments:

Ben and Alli said...

Great Post. I love how you are down to earth about everything. I think one main issue that kind of floats along with all of this advise is dedication. If a musician is truly dedicated to the cause of worship, no matter what their life may be like, they usually do these things naturally. They practice, they listen, and they strive to play "together" with the band.

P.S. In my mind, players usually don't bang away at 10...they play at 11. :)

Unknown said...

Good point Ben. Playing in a band is like a multi-way conversation. Most guys are not the greatest 'listeners' and being a good player in a band requires that we do more listening than talking.