Music Monday 6.1.09

Dude, it's June. You need some music. Amazon has some new $5 album deals. Here are some of the best...

Stream or download the Dark Was the Night concert. If you don't have the album, Dark Was the Night (download, CD), you need it. It's really good.

Manchester Orchestra's album, Mean Everything to Nothing (download, CD), has been burning up my iPod. Still blowing me away, especially as they continue to put out videos for all the tracks.  Here's the just released "I Can Feel a Hot One"...

And I'll leave you with the consistently wonderful Grizzly Bear with new high quality videos up. Here's "Cheerleader." More videos at Stereogum.

Summerbia

3545514293_25c7662b47_b-199x300 I’m thinking a lot about summer lately. It was one of those wintershere in the Chicago burbs that made me long for summer. Well it’s May now. Summer is knocking and I’m running to the door, eager to embrace my long, lost friend.

As suburban Christians who are looking to love our neighbors summer offers us so many opportunities to connect with them. Summer is the time for cookouts and fairs and going to the park with the kids. The beer gardens are open at the local pub and the farmer’s market is in full swing. People will be taking walks in the neighborhood and going to the pool.

So summer is an ideal time to connect with new folks in your suburb as we enjoy the weather and the culture around us. Here are a few suggestions for your summer from the things my family is doing. I hope you will add your suggestions, stories of stuff you’ve done, and share your plans in the comment section.

Be a Participant

Get involved in the life of your suburb. Find a community calendar on your city’s website and put some stuff on the family calendar. We recently attended a very popular fair in downtown Woodstock. My son and I were in the Little League section of the Memorial Day parade and my daughter was in the middle school band. Molly and the other two kids were enjoying the parade with some local friends from school. Through events like these we’ve met new folks, made new friends, and supported the life of our suburb.

Be a Servant

I’m the dad to four great kids, ages 6-12. I made a commitment to try to be a servant when possible as they get involved in public activities. This works best for me with sports. I’ve coached just about every team they played on. Just last night I sat in on the Bittie Ball (“coach pitch” level) coaches meeting. Daniel (6) is on the Devil Rays this year (Satan’s team). So while I’m already an assistant coach for Little League and soccer, I’m now also the head coach for Bittie Ball. It’s going to be a busy summer, but I get to serve a bunch of great kids and their families by being a coach.  It forces me to learn their names and get to know them, and they want to know me too.

If you are going to serve as a coach or help out at the local school (as Molly does) or help with a summer play or whatever else, you need to do it with excellence. It’s frustrating to have someone in your family in a public activity only to find out the people in charge are incompetent. If you serve, do it well. Truly love your neighbor and consider them as more important than yourself. It not only makes folks love the experience, but it endears them to you.

Serving through various cultural activities also provides us the opportunity to serve our neighbors beyond these events. We often see former team members and/or their parents out in public or at their schools. I will always be “coach” to these kids. One thing we work hard at is trying to have at least one cookout a year for players and their parents. And that leads to another suggestion for your summer in suburbia…

Be Hospitable

For Memorial Day (last weekend) we had a cookout. It was mostly community friends we’ve connected to through local school involvement, but we also invited a church friend or two and a visiting couple from the previous week’s worship service. We had about 40 people there, some I knew well and others I met for the first time. It was a blast. Here are a few things you should do to make your cookout a hit.

- Introduce people. If you are bringing folks together who don’t already know each other, and you should, make sure you introduce them so they all feel comfortable.

- Have plenty of good food. We had too much food because we wanted to be generous. Nothing like a cookout where you feel underfed. And make it good food, please. I don’t want to come to your house if you are going to buy the hot dogs with the highest amount of rat hairs and bone chips. Not all hot dogs and hamburgers are created equal. Get quality stuff. And spice it up. We got burgers at Sam’s and then added a layer of Famous Dave’s burger seasoning. People raved about the burgers, though most of them didn’t know why. You want your neighbors happy.

- Let people bring something if they want to. Sometimes people feel obligated. Sometimes they really enjoy bringing something. Don’t presume on people and don’t ask them to bring something. But if they want to bring something it can be a good thing. It makes them feel like they’re a good neighbor too. For our Memorial Day most everyone insisted. Some brought a dish, or chips and soda. One family brought a ton of Edy’s ice cream they got for free in a contest. It added a super-charge to the cookout that none of us could probably afford otherwise.

- Have plenty to do. We had more games we didn’t use than we used. You are providing opportunities, not a schedule. We had kids playing baseball in the church field, jarts, football, a fire pit as it cooled off in the evening, lots of lawn chairs, sparklers for kids after dark. And think of the little things, too. We fogged the yard before people came to kill most of the mosquitoes and then we had several cans of Off available. We had sunscreen. We had music. We tried to cover all the bases, though we learned a few bases we didn’t cover as well as we will next time.

Make this summer a great one, one where you grow in your relationship with folks around you by participating in the life of your suburb, serving your neighbors rather than waiting for someone else to serve you, and firing up the grill to bring people together.

(originally posted at sub•text)

Music Monday 5.25.09

Serge_gainsbourg You need good music downloads. Reformissionary Recommends Serge Gainsbourg's Histoire de Melody Nelson (download, CD). This 1971 classic gets perfect score reviews from Pitchfork, Tiny Mix Tapes, PopMatters, and The Onion, as well as a 91/100 from Paste (all via). It's only $5.99 and it's a stunner. By the way, it's all in French. More on Gainsbourg. Translated lyrics here.

On my iPod: Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything to Nothing (download for $7.99, CD) is playing most of the time. Maybe the album of the year. Watch some Smoking Section videos at Rolling Stone. Lots of religious, church background in the music.

Go listen to the stream of the entire Dark Night of the Soul album (official website). This is a Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse album that may never actually get a release. At least at this point it's tied up with legal problems. I hope they figure it out because the album is spectacular. What makes it even more interesting is the involvement of David Lynch, who supplies a book of visuals. Here's a weird video intro...sorta...

Watch this great live performance of The Decemberists with "The Wanting Comes in Waves." Are you sure this is The Decemberists rocking out? Very cool...

And one for Memorial Day. If you haven't seen the Cactus Cuties sing the National Anthem, you are missing something very special...

Music Monday Addendum -- The Blues

BigBoy Over the past years I've learned to respect and enjoy very different kinds of music.  Right now I'm learning to love the blues.  The main reason the blues are making an impact on me are some downloads available from Amazon called The Best of the Blues.  At 75 tracks per volume and with these amazing prices I hope you will find some happiness in the blues...

Music Monday 5.18.09

3542324991_2b9c19ee93 We caught a great concert last night in DeKalb with Sam Lowry, Frontier Ruckus, and headlining William Elliot Whitmore. Sam Lowry was not my style. William Elliot Whitmore was really great. But Frontier Ruckus was the real star of the evening for me.

I had never heard of Frontier Ruckus (MySpace, Wikipedia) before, and I didn't make any effort to know the bands who were playing before Whitmore. But the minute they took the stage, even before they started their first song, I was excited. It was because I saw a trumpet, a musical saw and a banjo.  Add to that an acoustic guitar, bass, and drums and you get a rockin' out performance from a young, talented band.  After viewing some online videos it appears they were without Anna Burch last night on harmony vocals. 

3543130990_3ec8c099d4 As I'm writing this I'm listening to their album, The Orion Songbook (download, CD).  Sometimes hearing a good live band before hearing their CD leads to a letdown. But I'm really enjoying this one.

So I want to introduce you to Frontier Ruckus. Enjoy a few videos...

Save Paste

Paste Magazine is struggling financially as many magazines are. I think this one is worth saving. Click the picture to donate and receive 70+ songs including many live and rare recordings. A nice bonus. It wouldn't hurt to subscribe to Paste if you haven't already.

Story .. Chicago

A couple of months ago Ben Arment of Catalyst asked me an about a dozen other folks to meet at The Orchard in Aurora for a creative meeting to discuss his plans for a conference in Chicago (Aurora's beautiful Paramount Theater) simply called Story.  You need to check out the Story website. Pretty cool.

Story_screenshot

I don't want to say any more than the website says, but I'm pretty pumped about this conference.  Not only are there some great speakers for a conference like this, but the plans for how the conference will be put together and experienced are something to look forward to.  Plus, guys like Chris Seay and Don Miller will be there. Here are the details...

STORY is a first-of-its-kind experience for communicators of the Gospel- the greatest story ever told. It will be held on Wednesday, October 28 at the Paramount Theater in Aurora, Illinois. Speakers include Donald Miller, Nancy Beach, Dave Gibbons, Ed Young, Stacy Spencer, Chris Seay and Mike Foster. A day of workshops will follow on October 29 at nearby Orchard Valley Community Church, featuring illustrators, designers, scholars, authors and communications experts. Register for the conference and enter to win 2 free trips to the Kilns - CS Lewis' home in Oxford, England - at www.StoryChicago.com.

As a communicator of the gospel, I'm looking forward to Story.

Music Monday 5.11.09

Don't miss Steve Earle's new album, Townes, A Tribute to Townes Van Zandt. It's only $2.99 to download at Amazon today, and it's really good. Read more about Earle's relationship with Townes at Hear Ya.

I can't stop watching White Rabbits' new video for "Percussion Gun." It's really a simple video concept, but the execution is wonderful. I encourage you to watch in HD. The new album, It's Frightening, is out on May 19th.

New Grizzly Bear! Two songs on this video from their appearance on Jools Holland. Their new album, Veckatimest (CD), is out on May 26th.

The excellent Dark Was The Night compilation (CD, download) didn't end with a CD. They recently collected for a NYC concert. First, Bon Iver with "Flume" featuring My Brightest Diamond. Then a very cool, campy version of "This Land is Your Land" that's interrupted by Sharon Jones who takes it a whole new direction. It's fun, so enjoy!

Molly Update 5.4.09

3505515022_cdf255b44c Sorry it's been so long since I updated everyone on how Molly is doing. If you don't know about Molly's struggles with Chiari I Malformation, you can catch up here.

Molly's last major remaining issue post-second surgery has been sleep.  For several weeks after surgery she barely slept at all.  Her neurologist finally found a solution by prescribing a couple of medicines that helped get her sleep patterns in order.  It worked wonders.  But then several weeks ago Molly became increasingly sluggish during the day, to the point of laying in bed or on the couch for several hours each day, often multiple times a day.  One day she got the kids off to school and went back to bed after sleeping for more than 9 hours the night before. Our joy turned to great concern again.

At that point Molly was determined to get off medication.  Her neurologist made the statement more than once over the last couple of months that Molly may be on medication the rest of her life.  We didn't buy it and became frustrated.  At the very least we needed to test to see if she could sleep on her own.  Molly needed hope and wasn't hearing it. 

I'm pleased to say that a few weeks back, in the midst of her restless days, Molly was able to go completely off her daily medications.  Within a day or two of stopping the meds the sluggishness went away.  She regained a ton of energy and was still able to sleep at night.  It appears that what the meds did to fix her sleep pattern at first began to overcompensate and made her extremely tired.  She is now as active and energized as ever.

She still has nights where she just doesn't sleep well and sometimes will take an occasional sleeping pill the following night to recover.  But we are very pleased to say that Molly, generally speaking, is sleeping on her own and is off all daily medications.

Let me add that Mol had a recent sleep study, soon after stopping the medications. It revealed two important things. First, Molly nevergot to the deepest level of sleep. That might be a bigger deal but for the second thing.  Molly is at 88% efficiency in sleeping.  The neurologist was pretty happy with that. And that's in a hospital room with wires attached to her!  So hopefully the deeper, more restful sleep will eventually return. But for now the test seems to reveal that things are pretty darn good, and most mornings she feels pretty good.

Thanks again to all who continue to pray for Molly. I was blown away by the number of people I met for the first time at The Gospel Coalition who asked about Molly and said they were praying for her. My blog readers have all been such good friends to us, and we are grateful for you.

Music Monday 5.4.09

Music Want some free music?  Sure, no problem.  Here are a few great Daytrotter Sessions (3-5 songs each) from some great artists/bands: The Hold Steady, DM Stith, and Jessica Lea Mayfield. A list of all the free, downloadable Daytrotter Sessions. If you don't know about Daytrotter you will be shocked at all the goodness, so go get some!

We have to pay for most of our music, but we can rejoice that Amazon makes it easier to pay less. Here's a bunch of great albums to download for only $5 each. There are more at $5 than the ones listed here, but these are by far the best. I grabbed some, so should you.

Enjoy a couple of great new tracks from a collaboration between Burial and Four Tet. Stream them here. If you don't know Burial, the album Untrue is amazing.

DM Stith: "French film maker, Armel Hostiou, took this fragment of a pop song [Stith's "BMB"] and turned it into a deep, venomous, cavernous trip, like Lynch on downers, or Bergman on speed."  "BMB" is from Stith's very creative and dark Heavy Ghost, which is well worth owning. Love this video...

DM Stith - BMB from Asthmatic Kitty on Vimeo.

Bell Orchestre likes lightning, and I like their song "Stripes" (from As Seen Through Windows)...

TGC/BoB: Art & Culture in Christian Blogging

Bob I was asked a while back to speak at the Band of Bloggers event at The Gospel Coalition conference, which was this month in Chicago. I was happy to go and be one of the eight panel members discussing being "Servants and Stewards" through our blogs.  Each panelist was given 7 minutes to answer a particular question on blogging.  Mine was "What is the place for art and culture in Christian blogging?"  Here's a general outline/recap of my talk. It always comes out differently than I write it down, but should still be helpful. You can also view the handwritten notes from my Moleskine that I used for my talk (page 1, page 2 - page 2 is really my talk outline and page 1 quotes that I referred back to).

---

*As I stood to talk I took a shot at my friend and co-panelist, Justin Taylor, who has yet to spent $9 on a domain name, but still has one of the best read Christian blogs in the universe. Justin, seriously, buy a domain name. :)

Context

1. Art - Beauty -- mention I don't have the time to explain a theology of the arts; assume the audience assumes it (later quotes should be an encouragement to look further into the arts)

2. Blogs -- mention that because we have different kinds of blogs with different purposes (pastor blogs, church blogs, personal blogs, family blogs, resource blogs, etc). I will explain what I do on my personal/pastoral networking blog and let the audience determine how to best blog on art & culture on their blogs.

3. Christians in general -- mention the need to enjoy, support, and create the arts; our blogs are a good place for us to do that

Abraham Kuyper quote, found in Art for God's Sake by Philip Ryken -- "Like God himself, we have 'the possibility both to create something beautiful, and to delight in it.'" - and I add "...on your blog"

Use the quote for a two part outline, in reverse. As we delight in and create art (and blog on it), we encourage others to do the same.

1. To Delight

Someone who delights in the arts is called an arts patron (observer, supporter, advocate). Use the questions from and Tim Keller quote in "Are you a patron?"

Questions:

Have you attended an arts event or venue in the last six months?(live music concert, museum or gallery, play, dance performance, independent film, etc.)

Do you have a favorite art form that you particularly enjoy experiencing and learning about?

Do you occasionally attend different types of arts events/venues, besides your favorite?

Do you have a favorite artist or arts organization whose work you follow closely?

Do you ever spread the word about a particular arts event or artist?

Do you sometimes look through the Arts section in newspapers or magazines?

Have you financially supported an arts organization or artist (outside of purchasing tickets) in the last year?

Do you know an artist, are you involved in his/her life, and are you actively supporting his/her career?

- The more "yes" answers = the better patron. Where there is a "no" it's good to stretch ourselves.

Quote:

"Christians cannot abdicate the arts to secular society. We must consume, study, and participate in the arts if we are to have a seat at the table. Whether it has a religious theme or strikes us as irreligious, we must be patrons if we are to have an impact on how the world interprets and responds to the arts. We cannot be wary, we cannot be afraid, we cannot be self-righteous. Christians must look, listen, read, and experience the arts if we are to lead our culture to renewal." - Tim Keller (via)

*As I mentioned I was going to quote Keller I took a second to mention my Tim Keller Resources page.  Then I told the attenders that they received a Tim Keller book in their bags (each received 10 books as a part of attendance).  I told them Keller's new book is very short and titled Unfashionable, which includes a lengthy epilogue by Tullian Tchividjian. As you probably know, attenders did get Tullian's book which includes a 3 page forward by Keller. People laughed. [By the way, get Tullian's book. Like it a lot so far. He graciously signed my copy after.]

How I delight in the arts at Reformissionary...

Music Monday: I use my enjoyment of music to fuel a weekly post on music, CD's, music videos, concert experiences, etc.  Illustration: recently at the Brandi Carlile concert my wife, Molly, for the first time heard the background singers because she could see them.  It was a learning moment for her. Patronage increased her appreciation for and delight in music.  Now the CD sounds different to her. As we blog on these kinds of experiences we will encourage others to become a patron and delight as well.

National Poetry Month: Each April I blog on National Poetry Month with numerous poems, poet highlights, videos of poetry readings, etc.  We can take advantage of nationally recognized arts emphases to become patrons and to encourage patronage.

2. To Create

"The characteristic common to God and man is apparently that: the desire and the ability to make things up." - Dorothy Sayers in The Mind of the Maker

"The primal artistic act was God's creation of the universe out of chaos, shaping the formless into form; and every artist since, on a lesser scale, has sought to imitate him." - Perrine's Sound and Sense

How I blog on my creation of art at Reformissionary...

Phriday is for Photos: The last few years I have taken up photography. While I've been a little too infrequent in my Friday photographs lately, it's been a staple at Reformissionary for a long time. When I've slacked I've gotten notes from friends and readers mentioning they've missed it. Because I'm creating and blogging my art, my readers have been an encouragement to me to keep creating. And through blogging my photography I hope I've encouraged my readers to create themselves.  Actually I can say that I have talked to several readers who have taken up photography because (at least in part) they have enjoyed my Phriday is for Photos posts. [One Band of Bloggers attender talked to me after the event and said he just upgraded from a Nikon d50 to d90, to some degree because of my blog. I'm jealous.]

Conclusion: A quote by Luci Shaw from her chapter "Imagination, Beauty, and Creativity" in The Christian Imagination (Ed. Leland Ryken)

"We were each, in the image of our Creator, created to create, to call others back to beauty, and the truth about God's nature, to stop and cry to someone preoccupied or distracted with the superficial, 'Look!' or 'Listen!' when, in something beautiful and meaningful we hear a message from beyond us, and worship in holiness our creator who in his unlimited grace, calls us to become co-creators of beauty."

Select art/culture websites:

Select art/culture podcasts:

NPM09 - Music Monday Addendum

Andrew-bird2-thumb Andrew Bird is one of those musical artists that loves playing with language, and so is one of our great musical poets.  Here are the lyrics for "Measuring Cups" off his album, The Mysterious Production of Eggs (download/CD).

Measuring Cups by Andrew Bird

get out your measuring cups and we'll play a new game
come to the front of the class and we'll measure your brain
we'll give you a complex, and we'll give it a name

get out your measuring cups and we'll play a new game
can't have the cream when the crop and the cream are the same
liquid or gas no more than the glass will contain

when you talk about the hand of glory
a tale that's rather grim and gory
is it just another children's story that's been de-clawed?
when the tales of brothers Grimm and Gorey have been outlawed

i think they're gonna make you start over
you don't wanna start over
put your backpack on your shoulder
be the good little soldier
take your places now, cause we're all predisposed

measuring cups, play a new game
front of the class, measure your brain
give you a complex and we'll give it a name

when you talk about the hand of glory
a tale that's rather grim and gory
is it just another children's story that's been de-clawed?
when the tales of brothers Grimm and Gorey have been outlawed

so put your backpack on your shoulder
be the good little soldier
it's no different when you're older
you're predisposed
that's all for questions
now, the case is closed

NPM09: "For the Anniversary of My Death" by W.S. Merwin

A few days ago on NPR's Fresh Air Terry Gross interviewed Pulitzer Prize winning poet W.S. Merwin.  I liked the poems he read.  Here's one he didn't read.

For the Anniversary of My Death
by W. S. Merwin

Every year without knowing it I have passed the day
When the last fires will wave to me
And the silence will set out
Tireless traveler
Like the beam of a lightless star

Then I will no longer
Find myself in life as in a strange garment
Surprised at the earth
And the love of one woman
And the shamelessness of men
As today writing after three days of rain
Hearing the wren sing and the falling cease
And bowing not knowing to what

Poets Academy also has a fine collection of short videos where different poets talk about life and poetry, including this one from Merwin...

Music Monday 4.27.09

Downloads
Deep Dark Woods - several tracks for free
Sufjan Stevens' song for Sofia Coppola - free
Andrew Bird: Armchair Apocrypha - $1.99, on my best of '07 list
Great Lake Swimmers: Lost Channels - $2.99, great new album
Metric: Fantasies - $7.99, really enjoying this energetic new album
Radiohead: The Bends - $4.99! Amazing deal, amazing music.

I can't embed it, but you need to go watch Manchester Orchestra's new video for "Pride." These guys can rock it out, so crank it up! It's the fourth video off their brand new album, Mean Everything to Nothing ($7.99 download, CD).  I can embed this live performance of "My Friend Marcus"...

Finally, a fitting video to M83's wonderful retro 80's sound and their track "We Own the Sky"...

NPM09: "An Ember in the Dark" by L'Amour

I posted this during a previous National Poetry Month. As one of my favorite all-time poems I can't help but post it again.

Louis L'Amour was a famous writer offrontier/adventure novels.  "An Ember in the Dark" is found in his book of poetry, Smoke From This Altar

An Ember in the Dark by Louis L'Amour

Faintly, along the shadowed shores of night
I saw a wilderness of stars that flamed
And fluttered as they climbed or sank, and shamed
The crouching dark with shyly twinkling light;
I saw them there, odd fragments quaintly bright,
And wondered at their presence there unclaimed,
Then thought, perhaps, that they were dreams unnamed,
That faded slow, like hope's arrested flight.

Or vanished suddenly, like futile fears--
And some were old and worn like precious things
That youth preserves against encroaching years--
Some disappeared like songs that no man sings,
    But one remained--an ember in the dark--
    I crouched alone, and blew upon the spark

The Gospel Coalition

Looking forward to The Gospel Coalition conference this week. Most excited about Tuesday afternoon and evening with Keller, Piper, Ryken, and Driscoll. I'm speaking at the Band of Bloggers event on Wednesday. My topic is "What is the place for art and culture in Christian blogging?" I get like 7-8 minutes to answer that question, which is about 50 minutes less than I'm used to speaking.  Should be interesting.  I'll try to put some notes up here after. I'm sure my talk will be profound and life-changing.

If you are going to The Gospel Coalition and want to meet up, send me an email.