Worship Musician July 2020 | Page 31

deliberately create… space… as one of their primary aims. I can feel that need in my core. I need room to just be present in. To reflect and meditate. To contemplate. To wait. So I can hear. So I can say something I don’t know how to say otherwise. And I tend to think that If I’m feeling that need, I should probably follow the impulse. Maybe you’re feeling it too. I guarantee you that many in our congregations are feeling it. We need to hear that space. If sacred music is a form of prayer, then prayer needs that breathing room. We don’t just speak, we listen. We don’t just sing, we get still, and we get a sense of the density and gravity of the moment. We become conscious of our breath and of life itself—biology and entropy and infinity, dancing together. And from the midst of that moment, something different happens. Something more. Whether in how we listen or how we express ourselves, we can communicate with a depth we cannot articulate with mere words. “Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words. And God, who searches the heart, knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.” (Romans 8:26, 27) If a service is full of words start to finish— without stillness, without reflection and room made to hear, I think we’re forgetting a crucial component of communion together. like an afterthought? Doesn’t it seem “tackedon”, since that’s technically what it is? And isn't there a special magic to songs written specifically to hold that space instrumentally? Do they not provide dynamics and a sense of pause and rest that we simply cannot touch upon otherwise? It’s one thing to let a song’s bridge play out seven times with singing and then a few more instrumentally. It’s another thing entirely to construct a song as though each chord change and each instrument had something to say all on its own. And to design that song so that the music isn’t just how we express what we know we’d like to express, but how we express the things we cannot express any other way. So my encouragement for this time is to deliberately write some… space. To leave some… room. The music itself has the power to glue us together in a sacred moment, and we can honor that. There is such freedom in that process. Such collaboration. Even naming an instrumental song is a delightful and refreshing experience compared to a song with words. You can name it by its tone and its spirit and its atmosphere, rather than by a phrase you kind of feel like you have to title it with. Chord progressions can exist without words on top of them. Lead lines can be played for a sense of melody or to enhance movement. Voices can be used as instruments. And we are blessed in our time with the technology to easily hold any sort of space we want to hold. Pads, loops, ambient swells, and textures of every variety abound. [This article continues my current “Making Room” series for songwriters. For further exploration within this stream, see the WM Mag May issue for “Making Room For Lament,” and the June issue for “Making Room for Questions.”] Sigur Ros Olafur Arnalds And yes, I know that any song can be arranged to hold the sort of space I’m talking about. You can take any song and add instrumental sections. Sure. And that’s a great thing to do. It’s just that I wonder: If that’s the extent of how we approach instrumental music, doesn’t it feel We just have to make room for them. In the rush and frenzy of all our hurried writing and arranging and planning, don’t forget to make room. Hillsong Young & Free Kevin MacDougall Worship leader, published and recorded songwriter, musician and podcast producer. [email protected] July 2020 Subscribe for Free... 31