Friday, December 26, 2008

Merry Christmas . . .


We had some "severe" weather in Birmingham around 7PM on Christmas Eve. I don't know if it was enough to get James going on ABC, but apparently there were tornado warnings and 60mph straight-line winds in Tuscaloosa - all heading to Birmingham.


My 7-year-old had one comment on the weather:

"Maybe God is mad because we keep celebrating Christmas in ways that we shouldn't . . . "

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Just in time for Christmas

I love Mark Long - he and I have a tremendous friendship, and he really puts me in the Christmas mood when i watch this video . . .

I'm thinking maybe a special for next year's Christmas spectacular. . .




Special thanks to Patrick Bush for allowing me to use his video . . .

Merry Christmas!

We'll start rehearsing NOW for next Christmas . . .

Saturday, December 20, 2008

The Presidential Suite . . . Are you kidding me?

My wife and I celebrated our 11th Anniversary this weekend (Dec 20th). We have stayed at the Peachtree Plaza almost every year for the last 11, including our wedding night. I'm a huge cheapskate, so I always book online, and attempt to get the lowest price. This year - the lowest price was accomplished by an advance pay, no refund reservation. $110.00/night. Not bad. I think the lowest we've ever paid was $96.

So, as I do every year, I call a couple nights before and talk with someone at the front desk and tell them that we're celebrating, and could they please put us up as high in the hotel as possible (70 floors). James said "of course" and that was that. When we checked in on Friday night, the girl at the desk said "Oh, we put you in a suite on the 70th floor." We're thinking - cool, we'll have a mini-fridge and a microwave in our regular room.

We got to the 70th floor, and had been booked into the presidential suite. Are you kidding me? It's two floors - with a spiral staircase inside. The whole thing is the size of 8 regular rooms. The bathroom itself was the size of a regular room. There was a grand piano in the dining room . . . We were WAY out of our league. I wore out my camera phone. it was funny too. As we left the house on Friday i thought - i don't need to take the camera. It's the same room we've stayed in for 10 years now . . .

HERE is a link to some pics that I took.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

These guys are friends of mine . . .

Go to this link and vote for my friends in Wild Sweet Orange . . .

Very cool video. VERY talented musicians - Chip (the drummer) is very creative and musical, and Taylor (electric guitarist with his guitar hiked up around his chest) is one of the best guitarists I know in real life.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Just for the record . . .

I started shaving my head before it was cool

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Just in time for this weekend . . .




This week, Drake had a reading assignment, as he does every week. This week's material was a reader's theatre about Christmas and the "true meaning" of Christmas. They (characters in the theatre) went through suggestions like ornaments, or eating, or presents, and then arrived at the "true meaning" which was family and friends.

Drake - after finishing his reading - had to write 3 to 5 complete sentences. Mandy was putting the other boys down to bed. I was at church. This is what she discovered after she came down from bath and bedtime.

The picture says this:
"It [the reader's theatre] reminds me of my family, and the joy of each and every Christmas we spent together. And the manger scene. It's not about the presents and decorations, it's all about Jesus and his birth. Every Christmas I think about how God had changed my life in the past year.






(SEE OTHER PICTURE FIRST)

Drake - after completing his assignment, wrote a letter to his teacher.

It says this:

"Dear Mrs. Young,"
Christmas is not about presents and decorations. It's about Jesus and his birthday. It has never been about presents and decorations and it will never be but, as you get older and hear people say that it's about presents or decorations or maybe feasts, tell them about the story of Jesus birth. And I thank God for you.

Love, Drake

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Ms. Mandy and Ms. Connie

Ms Mandy and Ms Connie are two HUGE resources at Oak Mountain that your kids need to be involved with.

My musical background includes (there's a reason for my laying this out - hang with me) plucking out notes from TV commercials when i was 3 on my fisher price piano, to begging my parents for 4 years to let me take piano. When i was 7 -they figured I might be serious, and so they signed me up. I grew up (until I was 12) in the midwest. When I was 10, we moved (for the 2nd time) back to Minneapolis, which is one of the coldest places on earth. The taxes in Minnesota are incredibly high, but they do take quite a bit of that money and pump it into the public school system.

When I was in 5th grade, part of my general music class was to study guitar. I can still remember playing my first G chord - which consisted of holding down string 1 on the 3rd fret, and only strumming the top 4 strings. I started playing trombone in 5th grade. In 6th grade, I started on trombone, but my band director (there were 3 different band directors in the middle school - one for each grade. Each grade had 2 different bands - a symphonic and concert band, plus 2 different jazz bands) announced that he needed tuba players - would anyone volunteer? I signed up. We had private lessons on our instruments, during the day - once/week. They would actually take us out of science, or math, or whatever - in order to have our 30 minute private lesson on our instrument. I played piano in jazz band. I moved in 7th grade to Atlanta. Marched in high school (sousaphone), played in symphonic band, all the while taking classical piano lessons, singing in the choir, playing bass guitar for a show choir, and singing in musicals. In college, I sat under Dr Black in the A Cappella choir - where I learned more about choir from watching him than I did in any conducting class i took, and finished a degree in classical piano performance.

i say all this because - my world was filled with musical influences, everywhere I looked. It wasn't one-tracked. Teachers were investing in me musically from all different angles, genres, and influences. My musical abilities now are merely a BY-PRODUCT of the surroundings and opportunities that I had when i was in grade school, high school and college.

So Ms Connie - who has been directing Alabama State Choirs for years, and Ms Mandy - who has been doing children's music since her early high school years, are two huge influences that your kids need to be involved with - they're investing in our kids here at the church, giving them yet one more opportunity to have that priceless musical exposure when they're young. Mandy is heading up our children's worship program. They meet every Sunday morning during the 10:45 Sunday school hour where they are dancing, singing, and learning about worship. THEN - every Sunday evening (during Kids' Quest) they meet from 4:30 to 5:30 where they work towards leading in worship at church, or a musical. Connie leads our Youth Choir - and is giving the kids invaluable opportunity to learn about reading music, balance, blend, teamwork. They meet every Wednesday from 5-6 (taking a break until the new year).

I get asked often - "can you teach my child how to play piano like you do on Sunday morning?" yes. Get them involved in every musical opportunity they have now, so one day they can improvise on chord charts . . . Don't make the mistake of limiting your exposure to different musical experiences because you think they won't/can't/shouldn't apply to what you may want to do down the road. I used to play the tuba . . .