Our Continuing Journey


Time For An Update

I haven’t updated my original pages in a long time. We have had a number of changes since the pages were first posted. Rather than trying to figure out how to keep them current, my plan is to occasionally update this page..



Personnel Changes!

We gained a piano player in early 2007. Danny is a professional musician. He has recorded albums. He has written and recorded the sound tracks for both secular and Christian movies. He has a wonderful gift and the church loves to listen to him play.

We also gained a new drummer in Israel, Danny’s son. Cody still fills in when he is needed. Cody loves to play – you can tell this just by watching him. As Israel’s talent became obvious, Cody stepped aside and allowed the new guy to take over. It couldn’t have been easy and none of us asked him to do it. That is maturity! I have often said I would do the same thing but I notice I haven’t yet.

Our original bass player Darryl stepped down in late 2007. He had been a soldier in a very intense spiritual battle for a number of years. The fatigue had finally taken its toll. Today he is seeking God’s will with another congregation. We miss him but know he will re-find his enthusiasm for ministry.

Now this is where our story takes another cool God turn. We were setting up for practice one evening when in walks Scott with his daughter’s bass under his arm. He said, “I noticed you guys haven’t had a bass player lately, and I was wondering if you mind if I practiced with you.” We didn’t even know he could play. Seems he had been sitting in the pew for years not using his gifting until the Pastor did a series on fruit. There were several baskets up front with varying amounts of fruit in them as a visual aid. One of them was empty. That empty basket is how Scott perceived his walk up until that point. He had a gift. We had a need. Coincidence? I don’t think so!

Scott wasn’t a bass player. He played guitar but figured he could adjust. He did. He came to us with a drive to put some enthusiasm into the music to get people moving. He has done an excellent job on bass but has also shared his dobro playing with the church. Occasionally he will bring one of his electrics to practice. One of them is a Gibson SG that his wife found at a yard sale for $100! He hasn’t played electric for the church yet but I am looking forward to the day.

We sort of lost our lead singer Chris in 2008. He still practices and sings with us on occasion. Most of the time, he is traveling around the countryside singing with a Southern Gospel group. This is definitely Chris’ calling. Though I personally don’t care much for that style of music, it is pure pleasure to watch him doing it. He stage presence is very strong. I have heard worship ministers refer to this as anointing.

Chris backing away allowed Rick to step up as lead singer. During practice, Rick is not only a lot of fun but very outgoing. Sunday morning he tends to get very quiet. I believe this opportunity is God’s way of drawing Rick out of himself. You can see his confidence grow week by week. One of his greatest strengths is his humility. When he thinks things aren’t going as they should he takes the responsibility himself, stops everything, and prays it through. Then we start again in the Lord’s strength. God has been so good to us.

We have added some new voices to the group as well. Donnie is a senior in High School as of this writing. He is the youngster of the bunch. With the exception of Israel who is in his early twenties, the rest of us are, well, a little more seasoned. We also now have Ellen who has a phenomenal voice, a great sense of timing, and an ear for harmony. She has just kind of grown into the position of pulling the other voices together.

Our sound personnel became unable to help out for various reasons. So Scott’s wife Tammy said she would do it every week. This has worked out very well. It is the first time in several years we have had anyone running the soundboard during practice. She is still learning the controls but does a great job.

Our current line up is: Kevin (me) - guitar, Scott - bass (and dobro), Nellie - trumpet, Danny - piano, Israel - drums. Singers – Rick, Linda, Mary, Ellen, Donnie, and sometimes Chris. Tammy runs the sound booth.



Some Techie Stuff We Have Learned:

I can’t hear!

Danny plays the acoustic piano. From the pews, an acoustic piano sounds nice. From the stage, an acoustic piano is very loud, especially if you are sitting next to it trying to hear yourself play an instrument. If we physically turn the piano a little to get it out of my ears it blasts the singers. We tried packing the back of the piano with insulation to quiet it down. We have a pick-up mounted to the soundboard so we figured we could turn him up as needed. Problem is this just didn’t work. Simply turning up the monitors doesn’t work either, as it makes the stage volume too loud, which is counter-productive. The louder the monitors the louder Danny perceives the piano needs to be played so he hits the keys harder. It is a vicious cycle.

I tried setting up a hot spot monitor with only guitar in it for my own use. I didn’t like the results as the tone was very tinny – annoyingly so. I started to look around for a better monitor when I realized it wasn’t necessary to spend more money. The solution was to take a little solid-state 15W Crate amplifier, I already owned, and cable it into the parallel output on my DI box. My set-up is Parker guitar > Digitech processor > DI > soundboard. The parallel signal is a separate lead off the DI into the amp. The volume on the amp only needs to be turned to about 2 to be heard by me.

This made an amazing difference. I am no longer begging the sound person to turn me up. The congregation is no longer begging the sound person to turn the guitar down. The stage volume isn’t out of control. Using the amp as a monitor hasn’t caused the congregation to have a perceived volume problem because the amp is very small and is pointed at me.

The only possible potential problem has been Scott sets his bass volume to blend with me based on what he hears mostly from my amp. It hasn’t seemed to cause any problems with the congregation. We just have to trust the sound person to balance the volumes in the house. Scott hasn’t complained but a small amp might be just the ticket to allow him to hear himself better as well.

The Dobro can’t be heard!

I mentioned Scott plays dobro. This has introduced a new set of problems as well. The instrument is an acoustic; therefore, it needs to be amplified to be heard. Putting a microphone near it caused enormous feedback problems. Scott tried using a pickup clipped on the resonator plate but it sounded tinny and noisy. The solution was simply – location, location, location. Our house speakers hang directly over the piano on the front edge of the stage. The monitors are in front of the stage but to the side of the piano. Scott simply sits on or near the piano bench and he is able to avoid having speakers blaring into the boom microphone. Now we can turn up the volume!

Too Many Experts!

When you have a praise band, you have to have enough sound system to power it. When you have a 24+ channel soundboard and all the amps, cables, and speakers that go with it there is the potential that a lot of people will tinker with it. When we installed the system, we had a professional do most of the work. When he was done, the sound was consistent throughout the sanctuary. There wasn’t a dead spot anywhere in the room. As time passed, people began to rewire and reroute things based on their opinion of what sounds good. Therefore, we began to have dead spots and over-volumed spots all around the room. The final straw came when the Pastor couldn’t move on the stage without feedback or stand at the podium without experiencing echoes.

Thankfully, we have had a couple people who did know what they were doing come and begin to put things back where they belong. The Pastor’s problems were caused by the sub-woofer being place at the back or the stage. Even though the wireless mike is not turned up in the sub, it was still feeding back. The dead spots were caused by the speakers being rewired and the equalizers being adjusted wrong. It was also discovered the tweeters were blown in the monitors. Some of the singers thought they just weren’t turned up in the monitor mix when in reality they couldn’t be heard because there was no speaker carrying the sound in their voice range. The tweeters became damaged by misuse. On the occasion when a singer used a backing track for a special, the sound person at the time would turn off the CD in the house speakers and turn up the monitors. The singer came through the house but the backing track was projected through the sanctuary by the monitors! An expensive lesson hopefully learned.

Well that pretty much brings everything up to date.

Copyright © 2008 by Kevin Sluder
All rights reserved


Links to some of my articles:

Praise Band A little bit about how we got started.

Our Continuing Journey latest updates.

Introducing praise music in an established church This has become more of a history lesson of our struggle and our mistakes

Blended Services Do Work! The experts were wrong - We finally figured out how to make it work!

Come Let Us Worship And Bow Down The problem of Idol worship in the church

Hymns Versus Praise Songs A humorous look

A Little Musician Humor Lighten up!

Guitars! Jesus wants me to have a new guitar?

Terrorism In The Church Take a stand against spiritual abuse.

Cool Links Some helpful resources


Guest Article:

Blended Worship - Good for the Body A wondeful article by Pastor of Music Ron Man