Copious Notes
The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture
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Nov7
Review: David Crowder Band at Southland Christian Church
Filed under: Music, Religion, Reviews, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Church Music, Danyew, David Crowder Band, Seabird, Southland Christian ChurchNo Comments
David Crowder and drummer Jeremy Bush bring their church music to Southland Christian Church on Nov. 6, 2009. Photos by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.
NICHOLASVILLE — Yes, it was the Church Music Tour.
And yes, the guys in the David Crowder Band showed up dressed in their Sunday best.
And this sold-out concert did in fact take place in a church — Southland Christian Church, to be precise. But it was also Friday night, and that was the spirit Southland’s visitors from Waco, Texas, embraced the most.
Throughout its career, David Crowder’s group has made complete albums, and Church Music is no exception. The band’s October release is a thorough exploration of contemporary music styles put together in an arrangement that mirrors a mainline church service. But DCB doesn’t tour albums. It tours its hit-heavy catalog. Like his albums though, Crowder arranges those hits into a concert as satisfying as his studio efforts.
New quickly mixed with old Friday night as early selections included the Crowder classic and worship staple There is No One Like You and the disco-drenched selection Church Music - Dance (!). The latter was yet another chance for Crowder to show his love of gadgets, employing the T-Pain ap on his iPhone to achieve a vocoder effect several band members demonstrated — guitarist Mark Waldrop singing Sean Kingston’s Fire Burning and bassist Mike Dodson invoking the prototype Autotune song, Cher’s Believe. A few tunes later, Jack Parker had the banjo out for the regular Bluegrass barn burner I Saw the Light and I’ll Fly Away.
We’ve particularly gotten used to seeing that Bluegrass bit at the Ichthus Festival, but one of the coolest things about Friday night was Crowder’s close proximity to the audience, allowing for the exchange of several gifts including a McDonald’s toy pony and a bottle of Dr. Pepper that had indeed been shaken.
What Crowder gave back was a whole new way to think about church music.
The concert opened with like-minded artists Seabird and Danyew who gave brief, rousing opening sets. Seabird’s portion closed with the evocative, defiant anthem Cottonmouth (Jargon) and included a winning new single, Don’t You Know You’re Beautiful, from the Dec. 15 release Rocks into Rivers. Phil Danyew’s set energized the crowd for the headliner, in large part thanks to drummer Brandon Lozano’s tireless and nuanced work.
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Oct31
David Crowder’s master plan
Filed under: Music, Religion, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Church Music, Danyew, David Crowder Band, Seabird, Southland Christian ChurchNo CommentsFor David Crowder, there is a master plan.
That would seem to be a natural position for Crowder, one of the most popular Christian music purveyors of the past decade. But we’re not talking master plan in a cosmic, God is in control of all things sense. We’re talking about Crowder’s music. Specifically, we are talking about his albums, which have been custom-designed in title and content to follow a trajectory to … to … well, maybe we’d better let Crowder explain:
“I’m gonna geek out on you for a second,” Crowder says, when asked about the title of the David Crowder Band’s fifth studio album, Church Music. “We’re in a three-record cycle,” he said. “We have three records, and then a second set of three records that are sort of mirror images or reannunciations of the first three records. Before we got into all of this, we had an idea for a seven-record kind of thing.”
Crowder grants that there have been EPs and remix albums thrown in. But for the band’s studio albums, they are executing the master plan of seven albums.
“We’ve been sitting on this title, knowing that it was coming as the mirror of the second title in the first three,” Crowder continues, referring to the band’s 2003 release, Illuminate.
Within all of this geekiness are things like number games: The first three albums were four syllable titles and the second are all three, because four plus three equals seven.
Out of all that complexity, the band has created numerous hits that contemporary worshipers know by heart, including Foreverandever Etc. and Oh, Praise Him. And writing songs for people to sing is, at its essence, what the band is trying to do.
But the structure, Crowder says, keeps them engaged and gives them direction.
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Oct2
rctalk: David Crowder Band’s Church Music
Filed under: Music, Reviews, album review, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Church Music, Danyew, David Crowder Band, review, Seabird, Southland Christian Church1 CommentDavid Crowder*Band CHURCH MUSIC Intro from sixstepsrecords on Vimeo.
Review: David Crowder Band - Church Music
If this album were coming from any other artist, the title would rightfully lead you to believe this was a worship or hymns album.
But this is David Crowder Band, a group where nothing easily fits into a category.
The group comes across as very rootsy, but the music often sweeps over us with an electronic wash. Crowder has this idiosyncratic sense of humor, but his music and the message are delivered with incredible seriousness — he’s the artist who can take a stage with a keytar or Guitar Hero controller, joke about it, and by the chorus make you completely forget he’s playing a silly instrument.Church Music is neither a collection of old hymns or easily digestible choruses. It is, in the tradition of Crowder’s Collision albums, a complete experience. There are songs that will ride on their own, but it is an album that is best experienced as a complete package and will take you in some interesting places like late in the album when steer into Church Music - Dance, a song that could have been played in Studio 54 in its heyday, and the blistering rock of God Almighty, None Compares. The album makes a progression from contemplation to celebration, like a well-planned church service.
David Crowder Band has a lot of great hits like No One Like You and Foreverandever Etc. But complete packages like this count as the Crowdster’s most satisfying work. Just revel in the contradictions.
Wondering how Crowder will handle this album live? Well, you can find out when Crowder plays Southland Christian Church with Seabird and Danyew at 8 p.m. Nov. 6.
Two concerts that we mentioned in recent posts have been cancelled.
■ Derek Webb, whom we profiled in the last rc talk, will not play Lexington next week. The Dame, where he was scheduled to play, has closed, and he has not secured another venue. Webb’s publicist said he hopes to schedule a Lexington concert later.■ Starlit Platoon, which was scheduled to play South Elkhorn Baptist Church on Oct. 10 has broken up, so that show is scrubbed.
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Jun17
Kentucky musicians were a significant part of Ichthus 2009
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, Religion, Uncategorized, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Abe Parker, Allison Stafford, Amaris Blevins, Ascenxion Scout Competition, Centenary United Methodist, Disciple, Grant Ebright, Jonathan Mckeowen, Kevin Young, Landon Cunningham, Quest Community Church, Rookie, Shane Tracy Project, Southern Acres, Southland Christian Church, The Lee Roessler Band, Too Many DrummersNo Comments
Wilmore-based Rookie is Landon Cunningham, Abe Parker and Grant Ebright. Photos by Rich Copley | LexGo.
WILMORE — The trio Rookie did a lot of the right things when they started performing together.
They picked bandmates they liked hanging out with. They defined a sort of jazzy edge to their sound that they say makes them different from most other Christian rock acts. They jettisoned a meaningless name, Auburn, for one that said something: Rookie, they say, is a commentary on the clumsiness with which most people go about their faith.
And they got the director of the Ichthus Festival to come see their show.
OK, that last element isn’t necessarily part of the prescription for most bands. And a few years ago, it might not have yielded much.
But, while Ichthus’ calling card is still chart-topping international Christian bands such as Skillet and Family Force 5, Kentucky musicians have had a growing role in the festival, whether it’s competitors in the fest’s 3-year-old battle of the bands, local rockers invited to perform on secondary stages, area church leaders playing during late-afternoon worship sessions, or the occasional national artist who resides right here in the Bluegrass.
“My family got to come out,” Disciple frontman and Central Kentucky resident Kevin Young said of the band’s Thursday main-stage set. “That’s why I like Ichthus a lot, because I actually get to do this and my family is close by. My daughter is 81/2 months old, and yesterday was her first Disciple concert. I didn’t get to see her face, but my wife said she was kicking a lot, so apparently she liked the music.”
The biggest concentration of local talent was earlier that day on the worship stage where bands competed in the third annual Ascenxion Scout Competition. The first year of the competition, three bands were selected in an online competition to play Ichthus stages. The past two years, the competition’s finals have been live the opening morning of the festival, meaning even if they don’t advance, all the competitors can say they played Ichthus.
They included 16-year-old Radfordville resident Allison Stafford, who said when she saw Christian rocker’s BarlowGirl at Ichthus two years ago, “I decided I wanted to do that.”
Playing a festival like Ichthus gives local acts, as well as other less familiar bands, a chance for people to run across their music as opposed to concerts or club dates, where a lot of people who come are already familiar with the band.
“We got a really good crowd response,” Landon Cunningham, Rookie’s drummer, said the day after their Friday set on the Edge Stage. “It’s great that they are providing this kind of opportunity to local bands,” he added, noting some other area acts such as Wilmore’s Shane Tracy Project also got moments in the spotlight.
A few locals even got main-stage shots: The Lee Roessler Band, which won the Ascenxion Scout Competition, and Lexington’s Too Many Drummers, which got there via another competition.
But possibly the most prominent local musicians on the Ichthus stage this year were area worship leaders who led devotional times late each afternoon.
A group from Quest Community Church and then a worship “all-star team” — comprising musicians from churches such as Southland Christian, Centenary United Methodist and Southern Acres — took the stage in the evenings, where nationally known artists used to play.
“It’s different from church,” said Amaris Blevins, a singer at Southland who was part of the team. “It was a lot more people and a different energy from church.”
And while the worship all-star team isn’t looking for a recording contract the way bands might, the musicians did appreciate the opportunity.
“I like that they’re getting more locals involved,” Jonathan Mckeowen, a guitarist with the group, said. “It used to be kind of hard to get in here.”
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Jun12Comments Off
Friday night’s Icthus crowd was treated to worship with a distinctly Central Kentucky flavor.
Preceeding speaker Bob Lenz was a crew made up of worship leaders from several area congregations, organized by Southland Christian Church’s Mike Vandemark.
The group played approximately half a dozen worship classics, including Amaris Blevins doing a solid rendition of Christy Nockles’ Hosanna.
“It’s a lot of people,” said Blevins said of stepping on the main stage and looking out over the crowd. “It’s different from a Sunday morning because that’s one congregation, but this is all sorts of different congregations coming together.”
Guitarist Jonathan Mckeown, who plays guitar at Southland, said that when Vandemark mentioned the idea of the all-star worship team, “I said, we need to make that happen.”
He said that the group, which included members of Southland, Southern Acres and Centenary United Methodist, got together to practice two or three times and each member proposed three or four songs to present.
It was the second consecutive night of area worship teams leading the crowd from the main stage. A Quest Community Church group was on stage Thursday night.
“I like that they’re getting more locals involved,” Mckeowen said. “It used to be kind of hard to get in here.” -
May15
Putting their faith in American Idol
Filed under: American Idol, Music, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Adam Lambert, American Idol, Anyerin Drury, Aretha Franklin, Chris Sligh, Christian, Christopher Cool, Danny Gokey, Elvis Presley, Eyesuponus, Joanne Brokaw, Justin McCarty, Kris Allen, Lil Rounds, Mandisa, Matt Giraud, Michael Sarver, Michael W. Smith, Mike Vandemark, Phil Stacey, Quest Community Church, Scott MacIntyre, Southland Christian Church, Whitney Houston, worship leader1 Comment
Danny Gokey visited Faith Builders International in Milwaukee May 8. Photo by Carrie Antlfinger | AP.
This year’s American Idol finals offered the nation 13 singers from across the country with different strengths, looks, backgrounds and styles. But six of them had something in common, aside from wanting to be the next American Idol: They all had experience as church worship leaders.
That included two of the final three competitors in the eighth season of Idol, which wraps up Wednesday with a two-hour season finale.
Danny Gokey, 28, was praise and worship leader at two Faith Builders International locations in Wisconsin.

Kris Allen performs Kanye West's "Heartless" on "American Idol" May 12. Photo by Frank Micelotta | PictureGroup for FOX.
And Kris Allen, 23, has worked with praise and worship teams at two New Life churches in Arkansas.
Gokey was booted Wednesday night, so Allen is the one who is going on to compete in next week’s final against Adam Lambert, long considered the front runner in this year’s race. And that was fine by several Christian music observers.
“I see the worship leader in Danny, but Kris has more of the ability to be artistic,” said Joanne Brokaw, a Christian music writer who brought the preponderance of worship leaders in this year’s Idol field to light with a Feb. 27 post on her Beliefnet.com blog that asked, “Is this the season of the worship leader?”
Other artists in this year’s final group who have Christian music backgrounds were dueling pianist Matt Giraud, blind musician Scott MacIntyre, oil rigger Michael Sarver and Memphis mother Lil Rounds.
“The thing that really struck me was not just that they were Christians, but they were church worship leaders,” said Brokaw, who has since predicted Allen will win the finale, already being characterized by some as David vs. Goliath. “These are people who have actively been working within their churches as musicians.”
And that work can give a singer a leg up on the competition. Read the rest of this entry »
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Feb27
Third Day to headline Questapalooza 2009
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, Religion, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: American Idol, Danny Gokey, David Carr, Dove Awards, Ichthus Festival, Jon Weece, Kris Allen, Mac Powell, Mark Lee, Michael Sarver, Paula Stefanovich, Pete Hise, Quest Community Church, Questapalooza, Southland Christian Church, Tai Anderson, The Hoppers, Third Day2 CommentsFor its fourth editon, Quest Community Church’s Questapalooza has booked one of the monsters of Christian rock, Third Day.
The Georgia-based band will play the event Sept. 6 on the field adjacent to Quest’s complex behind Meijer on Reynolds Road. Ticket information has not been announced yet.
Third Day’s last major Central Kentucky appearance was at the Ichthus Festival in June 2007. Since then, the band has added another hit album, Revelation, to its catalog and parted ways with guitarist Brad Avery. The group now performs as a quartet: frontman Mac Powell, guitarist Mark Lee, bassist Tai Anderson and drummer David Carr.
Questapalooza has not announced other acts for the event, which has featured lineups of three bands, all playing full sets, as well as games, carnival rides, outdoor baptisms and a message from Pastor Pete Hise.
In related news: The Ichthus lineup, which we previewed Tuesday, will include Hise the evening of June 13 and Southland Christian Church pastor John Weece that afternoon in a sort of Lexington megachurch doubleheader.
And in a little extra Dove Awards news: Lexington’s own Paula Stefanovich is up for Southern Gospel Recorded song for writing Yaweh, a hit for The Hoppers.
Idol chatter: This is really interesting. Beliefnet’s Joanne Brokaw points out three of the six current American Idol finalists are church worship leaders: Danny Gokey, Michael Sarver and Kris Allen.









