Worship Musician March 2019 | Page 43

know a lot personally and also musically. You get to hear them sing in all different kinds of settings and songs, their mic technique, stage presence, all of those things. I think sometimes we rush people to the stage too quickly. So, a clear path to the platform, not just audition and then stage, but with some sort of development process toward the stage. [Nicole] A lot of churches these days are portable, and I’ve talked to some that are in a situation where they don’t have a building they can meet in mid-week. So, it’s coming up with creative ways to figure out how you can do exactly what John was talking about. Maybe you don’t have an extra day available, maybe you’re in a portable type of campus, but set aside some time. Maybe in the sound check, where you can rotate that musician in? Get to know them, have a place where they are able to have some reps. It’s giving them those practical connection points, whether it’s relationally, developmentally, or whatever. Depending on what kind of leadership you already have in place, it can be really simple. At one point it’s like, “Hey, tell that bass player to show up”, even if you just have one person that’s interested. Going from one bassist to two bassists is a big deal. And I think it comes down to people wanting to be connected and wanting to find out where their place is in the body of Christ. I know there’s a lot of different types of churches out there with a lot of different types of locations, so it’s coming up with creative ways to do that. Taking it a step further, as Worship Pastors and Worship Leaders, just inviting people out for coffee, dinner or whatever, that’s Trevin Gates not developmental, but that’s a big deal too. music that we’re playing.” If you’re doing super [John] I think the final thing is, and Nicole [Chris] If your worship team is really interested intricate Brooklyn Tabernacle or a lot of Kirk touched on this, you have to have a lot of in growth, or your campuses wants more Franklin stuff, it’s harder to get deeper teams community. I think one of the things that plagues depth in each singer or player position, the because the barrier to entry is so high. Back musicians is that they can be introverted. Some complexity of music that you’re doing can really to that motto of ‘simple songs done well’, it’s of the most brilliant people I’ve ever met are put a cap on that. A lot of times we’ll have a lot easier for us to take someone that’s not kind of quirky, you know? I think we’ve got to people at conferences saying, “We’d really like a semi-pro musician and get them to a point push past some of those barriers, and there’s to increase our volunteer base but it’s really where they’re able to contribute to what we do no substitute for the feeling of belonging. The challenging because of the difficulty of the at a high level. feeling of belonging is one of the most powerful March 2019 Subscribe for Free... 43