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Tuesday
23Sep2008

Ten Years In Search Of Amazing Grace

I do everything the hard way because my dad told me I had to, and I’m an obedient son. He said, “Ed, you always have to do things the hard way.” I thought well, okay, if Dad says I have to, I guess I have to…

In my mid-twenties I started hanging out with a guy named Rick, a fantastic gospel/R&B player who was light years ahead of me as a musician. He knew ALL the chords, wrote arrangements and played several instruments. I hung on his every word and looked over his shoulder as much as I could. Before he started attending the same church as me, he played at a big, kinda-famous, predominantly black church that placed choir albums on the gospel charts and spawned a nationally-known act that signed with Motown. He was a hot keyboard player. I thought I was hot, until I met Rick. Okay, I still thought I could keep up. That is, until I tried to play Amazing Grace along with the guys at the black Pentecostal church.

A singer named Dave was trying to make a name for himself (other than ‘Dave’), and had scheduled a concert at the kinda-famous black church. Rick was running the band, and he invited me to sit in with those really hot players.  I struggled to keep up at rehearsal--there was precious little in the way of written music to look at, and everyone seemed to automatically know things I struggled to understand.  I felt like I'd missed a meeting.  Actually, I had--I'd missed about twenty years of meetings where these guys honed their chops onstage every Sunday. 

Somehow the concert had been advertised with the wrong date, and although we went ahead with it anyway, there was absolutely no audience other than a few family and friends.  We pressed on, it went okay, and as a closer we did Amazing Grace.  Rick started passing around solos--something I didn't know he was going to do.  Up to this point I'd always planned out all my solos, and I wasn't ready.  He pointed to John the guitar player, and John did a wonderful, soulful, bluesy, improvised 16 bars. 

I thought, "Shoot - I can handle this", but as I stumbled through, the guitar solo ringing in my ears, I realized I had nothing. My face burned, and if my Rhodes electric piano hadn’t been so heavy, I would have picked it up and run out the back of the church. Afterward a woman from the audience came up and threw her arms around the guitar player, telling him how inspired she was by his solo. This is the guitar player whose hand I had to hold during a recording session because he didn’t know any big chords.

I thought it was all about how much information I had, but I was wrong—it had to do with whether or not I could move people with my playing. I couldn't.  Afterward Rick said, “You gotta learn to play the blues.” I started at it.

Ten or twelve years later I played in a big Easter production, and at the end of the first act we darkened the stage, fogged it, and when the lights came up I was alone onstage with a keyboard, playing the intro to Amazing Grace. The spotlight hit Cort the sax player, and we started a slow, 6/8 gospel version of the song, building through three verses. The band joined on the second verse, and we brought the house down—in part because of my gospel piano style and the arrangement I’d cooked up. As the people applauded, I was surprised to find myself thinking of that failure from 10 years earlier. I could swear I heard God—my heavenly Dad—say, “Here ‘ya go Ed. A little something for the effort.”

Click to hear the recording (a studio version we did several years later)

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Reader Comments (5)

Ed - between crewing on Phantasm and watching the video every Easter for the past few years, I've experienced that performance of Amazing Grace at least two dozen times. It never fails to choke me up and remains my all time favorite arrangement of you yours.

September 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBoyink

Thanks, Mike. The style was mine, but Cort's solo was all Cort. I listened to several cuts last night, and at the risk of sounding like Gloria Gaither, "My, that was a time!".

September 24, 2008 | Registered CommenterEd Schief

Dude. You redeemed yourself with this. Gorgeous, and the sax playing was phenomenal. Excellent work. Powerful.

September 25, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterbeth

Thanks, Beth. Coming from a fellow musician, it means more. After that first year, Cort and I started getting asked to play this song a lot. Our church would ask for it, people would want it at their weddings, other churches wanted us to come and do it. Because I was working for the church, I couldn't go around to other churches, so I played a piano background into the sequencer on Cort's synth, and he lugged it around with him.

Eventually we got so sick of the song that we tried never to bring it up in public, lest we get yet another invitation. Then one of his students, an extremely talented middle school sax player, learned the song, started coming to our church (or was it the other way around?), and it started up all over again. That kid, Jon, grew up to be a monster sax player, and eventually became my intern. We played it about forty-eleventy billion times, and Cort thought it was hilarious - he was off the hook.

I have been utterly unable to shake that arrangement! Now I know how the Beatles felt when everyone wanted to know why they didn't get back together.

September 25, 2008 | Registered CommenterEd Schief

THX for the nice comments ED. I miss gign' with you and the guys and gals in GR. Very nice Blog by the way. Hope to see you again in the near future. I'm in the ATL at this time. Still doing the music thing extensively. As you know, I toured with EL off and on from 1986-1997 until he lost his contract with Warner Bros.

Do you remember Crosstowns in Kalamazoo, with the great recording engineer Brandon Wade? Well I bought his studio back in 93. The best musical investment I've ever made to date.

Rick

December 2, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRick Callier

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