|
Worship
Playing
Together: The 100% Rule
by Ed Kerr
(Excerpts
from the Worship Leader Workshop video and handbook)
One
helpful concept in learning to play together as
a worship band is "The 100% Rule." Think
of the rhythm section as a pie. If the band's final
sound is 100% of the contributions of the players,
then each player contributes only a portion of that
total. So if there are four of us, each of us gets
a quarter of the pie. If there are two of us, we
split it in half.
With
a song like "Lord, I Lift Your Name On High,"
which is so acoustic guitar oriented, the whole
song could be played with just an acoustic guitar.
But if you have a rhythm section, you'd need to
involve the other players so that they complement
what the guitarist is playing, while at the same
time, they build the arrangement as it progresses
throughout the song.
Now,
let's say you're in a band where your guitar player
doesn't have technical skill or is not comfortable
carrying the song with finger-picking. In that case,
the keyboard player might take a more acoustic approach.
The keyboardist would imitate that finger-picking
style and the guitarist could just strum the acoustic
guitar.
And,
since "Lord, I Lift Your Name on High"
consists of basically a G chord, a C chord, and
a D chord, most guitarists are going to be able
to comfortably strum it. So, the keyboardist and
guitarist can easily exchange roles. Just because
the recording of the song started with a guitar
doesn't mean that in your context you have to do
it that way.
If
you have more than one keyboardist, one of the keyboards
might play a pad sound that sounds like a string
section. The pad sound doesn't contribute any movement,
but is a backdrop to what the rest of the band is
doing. It fills in the sound beautifully and doesn't
draw away from the other more rhythmic sounds.
The
drummer may start with just a shaker or light percussion,
then move on to the whole kit as the song builds
in energy. And as far as the bass is concerned,
because he is in his own frequency range, his part
speaks clearly.
Now,
obviously at some point the singers are going to
join us. When the vocals come in, the players will
change some of what they're playing. If the players
maintain as much movement when the vocals come in,
the sound might get a little too busy.
Ideally
the music will be like a conversation. When the
singers are
making their statement, the band tries to back out
of the way and accompany the vocals. When the singers
finish a phrase, the band might choose to answer
a little bit on their instruments with the melodic
pattern.
You
may at times feel like your part is not conspicuous,
busy or virtuosic enough, especially if you're a
classically-trained piano player. But many times
what is called for is the discipline to know how
little to play. I don't mean that we ought to think
how little we can get away with, but rather what
is going to really work.
So
don't be disturbed if your individual contribution
on a particular song would not sound wonderful if
recorded on its own; that would only be the case
if your part were 100% of the sound. What makes
your part great in a band context is what it contributes
to the whole, so it allows the rest of the band's
contributions to be heard.
|