i am an offering

Tuesday Training: Talking and Playing at the Same Time

Posted on April 1, 2008. Filed under: For Worship Leaders, Guitar, Piano & Keyboard, Training — Tags: , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 10:14 am

We’ve all been there. We’ve known how to sing for a long time and now we’ve just started learning how to play an instrument. We learn how to play that instrument and think, “Hey, I should try to sing and play at the same time.” The first few tries are….interesting. Eventually we get the hang of it. But then we reach another fork in our musical road: talking and playing at the same time.

It sounds easy doesn’t it? But the difference between singing and playing and talking and playing is that when you sing and play, the rhythm of your voice somewhat matches the rhythm your playing (hopefully :-). When you talk and play, however, the rhythm of your voice is completely different.

First of all, why would you even want to do this?

  • A simple vamp underneath prayer time gives a great amount of focus. You might want to be able to pray and play at the same time.
  • Often it’s good to pause in the middle of a song to remind or encourage people to think about the words. Instead of stopping the song in the middle and then restarting, you can vamp through the chorus or turn while you’re exhorting the people.
  • If you’re not an “up-front” worship leader and your “just” (I use that word very lightly, as all team members are super-important) a piano player or drummer or bass player, you might want to learn to pray while you play for your own personal worship times, or to be able to confess a creed or the Lord’s Prayer while you are playing. I remember one piano player telling me that she always lost where she was in the music when she tried to play and say the Lord’s Prayer at the same time! :-)

So, how can you develop this and move past this hurdle in your musical career?

  • Practice. I should see if I can count how many times I’ve typed that word on this site! Pick two chords to vamp and pray while you are practicing. Then when you’re comfortable with vamping two chords and talking, add another, then eventually get to a four-chord progression*.
  • Watch. Watch others do this. If you can get your hands on some of Paul Baloche’s live videos, he’s particularly good at this.
  • Know your music. If you’re planning on talking or praying in the middle of a song, know your music like crazy. Get to the point where you don’t even have to think about the next chord of the song, but that it comes naturally. You do this by…you guessed it…practicing! :-)
  • Plan with the band. It’s nice when one instrument is vamping and someone is playing or talking, but it’s even better when the whole band or team is vamping together. A bass player can play nice, non-distracting melodic lines underneath, and once your comfortable, the band can change dynamics with the mood of the prayer, praying along with the person praying on their instruments. Don’t just play, make your playing an extension of prayer.
  • Don’t do this publicly until your ready. Make sure to wait until you are completely confident in doing this until you do it during a public worship service. Start privately, then maybe try it out in your small group, then when you feel comfortable, go ahead and do it for the worship service.

If you practice and practice and practice and you just can’t seem to get the hang of talking and playing at the same time, let the band do the playing while you talk. Give the band a chord progression to play and make sure they know it well, then let them do that part while you focus on talking or praying.

*I will be doing some blogging on chord progressions sometime soon. We all know that vamping two chords gets pretty boring after a while!

Blog

Twitter

    flickr

    www.flickr.com

    Powered by WordPress