Entries in ukulele (2)

Sunday
01Feb2009

Chasing Winter Away

I'm on a roll, playing instruments I don't normally bring onstage.  This week it was ukuleles for The Other Ed and me.  That was last night--today the temps rose up above freezing and the sun shone.  I choose to believe it was the ukes, convincing winter to put on it's sunglasses.  All I lacked was my Big Kahuna hawaiian shirt, which stays in the closet until the temps rise above freezing. 

First, The Other Ed (pictured below) and I did two songs with piano and guitar:

 

God of Wonders

Lord I Lift Your Name On High

It's always a challenge for me to do something new and different with these familiar songs, and I think I got a pretty good mood for God of Wonders--I played off the upper chord extensions a lot, hoping to make it kinda moody.  The Other Ed played his wife's Esteban classical.  With two really great guitar shops in our little town (both on the main shopping street downtown), I can't believe they ordered an Esteban guitar, but the painting on the front was kinda cool. 

We switched to ukes after that, both of us, and did

I'll Fly Away

Grace Greater Than Our Sin

The Other Ed actually threw me a little solo on the uke for I'll Fly Away, and I acquitted myself...moderately well with a little bluesy rambling.  He one-upped me though; he had a uke with a factory pickup.  All I got was an SM57.  This must not go unanswered. 

(This post is part of Fred McKinnon's Sunday Set Lists)

Sunday
12Oct2008

Ukulele Worship

The Other Ed emailed me this week and said, “I’d like to keep it really simple this Saturday night. Sunday morning we’re at capacity, but Saturday night is more like a prayer meeting, so let’s not even plug in. Bring your acoustic—and bring your ukulele.”

As we warmed up last night, a woman walked in and she looked…rough. Dressed nicely, clean hair, makeup, but very obviously hurting—face bloated, eyes reduced to slits. She found some friends (I later learned they’d invited her), and sort of clung to them. I wondered what her story was.


We opened with:

O Praise Him (Crowder)

Wholly Yours (Crowder)

Then we brought out the ukes and did “I Saw The Light”. The Other Ed tossed me a solo, and what I played made even me laugh. Sorry, no audio recording last night.

During the first three songs I watched the woman. She clung to her friends, and was in tears for most of the first two songs. After ‘I Saw The Light’ we started a time of spontaneous prayer/scripture reading, and she spoke up. In a loud, hoarse voice, she accused the church of being irrelevant and of historically abusing its power, and finally confessed through tears that she’d lost her ability to believe the Bible had anything to say to her. She talked like she’d grown up in church.

I tend to freeze up during this kind of thing. I pretended I thought we were still supposed to have our eyes closed so I could put a little distance between me and the tension. She was only ten feet away. Or did I feel tension no one else did? Thank God for The Other Ed, Dave the Pastor and many others who have seemingly unlimited patience, compassion and wisdom. Dave prayed for her, Ed led “More Love, More Power”, and she calmed down.

Ed told me to be ready for a little soloing during "More Love".   I'd been looking forward to it, playing some bluesy stuff over the minor changes, but…it started to feel really selfish and small to me, in light of the obvious condition of the woman in tears. I found myself praying that my guitar part might somehow move her, that God would somehow use it, but even that felt self-aggrandizing. I played it anyway (what was I going to do—turn to The Other Ed and say, “I don’t feel like it now, because that woman is still crying?”), and maybe I saw it for what it was—just a small part of the music.

More prayer, and we ended up with “Jesus Messiah” (Tomlin), while Dave served communion.

We do a classroom-style preaching time, with questions and comments encouraged. The woman spoke up often, sometimes inappropriately, but she was listening, and she obviously knew the Bible. She asked great questions, and gave great comments. Loud, but insightful. (There’s a good band name: Loud But Insightful) It finally dawned on me—she was under the influence.

During the sermon she sat a few rows over on the  right, half facing Molly and I, and I found myself sort of involuntarily turning in my seat so I wouldn’t have to look at her. The whole time I was acutely aware of her, wondering how everyone else felt, hoping she wouldn’t do something completely out of line, wondering how it should be handled. In the end, I felt humbled—by the importance of what goes on at church, and by others ability to handle something I probably would have botched. Her need was obvious, but--what about mine? For now, I think I’ll stick to just playing the guitar and piano.

Don't miss:

Happy Slappy Church

Dying Onstage

This post is a part of Fred McKinnon's 'Sunday Setlists' blog carnival.  This past week's posts: