Sunday, May 18, 2014

MTC Week #20 - Recording: Applying it to Life



May 18, 2014

The Tabernacle was like a second home this week as the choir members gathered Tuesday thru Saturday to record Handel's Messiah. From 6:30pm to 10:00pm each evening (and 9:45am to 5:00pm on Saturday), we took our places in the loft to create a work of art. Bro. Wilberg was directing the choir and orchestra, while Bro. Murphy was in the sound recording room listening to our sound through microphones and letting us know, continuously, what we needed to fix.



It's a taxing, exhausting, arduous process full of patience and hard work. Consider this: for every minute it takes to perform a piece, it takes about an hour to record. So with 17 chorus pieces, at anywhere from 90 sec to 7 min each, well, you can do the math. That all said, Bro. Wilberg reminded us often of how significant the project was and what a special/historical recording we'd end up with. One that would bless the lives of many people who would listen to it (and be inspired by it) for years and years to come.

Ryan Murphy and others in the sound booth

So...rather than take up space in this blog to write out exactly how the recording process works, I thought I'd liken it to life in general and lessons that can be learned to aid us in becoming more like our Savior.

A. Any worthwhile endeavor takes persistence and effort. Just as this CD would not create itself, and just as getting a really good take of a certain passage took numerous attempts, we've got to keep at at. Work hard and things will pay off.

B. It's important to routinely emphasize the positive. Bro. Wilberg and Bro. Murphy both, while certainly giving us plenty to correct and improve upon as we sang, would also tell us what we did well. "This is very, very good," they would say, or "Some great things are happening," or "Sopranos, you really nailed that section." Etc. I'm sure we could all do better in giving out compliments and praise (when warranted) along with giving out the criticism. 

C. Being kind and being nice are critical virtues. There were times during the recording process that choir members would say something or do something (accidentally bump someone, have to wait for others while exiting or entering the loft or row, complain, not follow instructions, keep singing the notes the wrong way, etc) to slightly annoy or frustrate. Such situations always end up better when both parties remember kindness. Life is the same way. 

D. To get good at something takes a lot of repetition. Is this not true? After the 12th take of a certain passage, we wouldn't even have to look at our music any more. Those notes, rhythms, dynamics, etc. had been integrated into our neural pathways and could be recalled at will. Whatever skill we're trying to obtain in life, whatever habit we're trying to develop, repetition is an important thing to keep in mind.

E. Perspective. If we had looked at this recording process minute by minute, we all would have gone crazy knowing just how many minutes we had left. Knowing the end goal and focusing on finding joy in the journey gives us the needed perspective. As I thought of this CD finally in the hands of listeners and the satisfaction and inspiration it would give them, those minutes didn't seen so long (OK..well, most of the time!)

F. Savor the little things. While recording, we often had to stand for long periods of time. Of course the feet would start to ache and the back would go from a good singer's stance to a slouch... Then Bro. Wilberg would say "Please have a seat." And oh, how good it felt to sit! There are little things every day to savor. Lots of blessings all around. It does us good to find them and be thankful for them.

G. We're all in this together (I think that phrase was already in my head with my wife and daughter just recently participating in a junior high production of High School Musical 2). Taking one page or passage of music at a time, we ALL had to play our part in order to make progress. None of us can really make much progress in life unless we have an interest, love, and respect for our fellowmen around us. Neal A. Maxwell once said "To withdraw into our private sanctuaries not only deprives others of our love, our talents, and our service, but it also deprives us of chances to serve, to love, and to be loved." And one more: "Everyone, in seeking the interest of his neighbor, seeks the larger interest. As a man blesses his neighbor, he also blesses himself, but the contrary is not always so. Let a person or a people persistently seek only their own interests, and there will finally come both a poverty of purse and a shrinking of soul."

There were other things I learned, but those are some main ones. 

I'm just grateful, again, to be part of this organization and to have the opportunities I've been given to sing in this capacity. What a blessing. And I must let my wife and kids know how grateful I am for their support. It's weeks like these when I'm gone so much that I appreciate even more all they do to keep the wheels of life turning.

One last thing I learned as I was signing on the Music & Spoken Word broadcast this morning: it's much less stressful to perform music to a worldwide audience if I have sung that music more than once :) (We all did our best today having been so tired from the week of recording)

Until next time, God be with YOU.

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