05.30.09
Holiness By Grace, Part 3
In chapter 2 of Holiness By Grace,author Bryan Chapell explains how the bible teaches that we are united with Christ, we have died to sin and law and He lives in us. Our identity is no longer based upon our good deeds nor our sinful ones, our works of devoltion nor our shameful actions; rather our identity is found in Christ and all that is His is ours.
Whether I believed that my efforts were working to my merit or to my demerit is irrelevant. All of what characterized me on the basis of my doing and my being is dead. The implications are astounding and not a little alarming. If all of my doing and being count as nothing, then i am as good as dead. And that’s just the point!
…
The dead status of our failings enable us to acknowledge wrong without fearing that we will destroy God’s love for us by doing so.
…
The life of Christ exists where my identity established by my efforts has been extinguished…It means that God relates to me with the love and status with which he relates to his own Son.
…
How does faith in my union with Christ promote godliness? The answer is that our union with Christ allows us to have two confidences that are empowering mechanisms for godliness in the Christian life: 1) confidence that our status does not change and, 2) confidence that our ability does change.
05.21.09
Holiness by Grace, part 2
God’s heart is moved, not when we protest our innocence by pointing to our (inadequate) good works, nor when we promise that we will do better in the future. Though there is no reason for God to love us, yet he does. Until we recognize that there is no reason God will be moved to loves us other than the spiritual need we acknowledge, we have no good news to tell others or ourselves…Biblical faith is most evident not when we demand that God honor our flawed deeds, but when we trust that he will mercifully respond when we humbly and helplessly cry out, “Jesus, Master, have pity on us!
Those who cry out in desperation have more hope of moving God’s heart than any who would trophy their own righteousness before him…
To experience God’s grace, I must readily confess my own hopeless condition..it is my desperation that inclines God’s heart toward my own.
-Holiness By Grace, Bryan Chapell (pg. 27-28)
05.17.09
Stem Mixing (back to the really geeky stuff)
So, I’ve been thinking about stem mixing recently. In case you’re not familiar with the term here is a definition from Wikipedia:
Stem-mixing is a method of mixing audio material based on creating groups of audio tracks and processing them separately prior to combining them into a final master mix.
So essentially this has everything to do with how you route signal through the sound board to the outputs. Currently I don’t use stem mixes much, for several reasons.
1) The console I use (a Crest V12) has twelve VCA groups which I use to control the signals of multiple inputs together or as a ”group” (such as drums or strings). So I can control groups of signals but these groups don’t actually combine the signal and route it to a bus. Instead, they merely control the output of each signal (p.s., this is the key difference between a group and a VCA-group, for more of VCA Groups click here). Therefore the use of VCA’s can basically eliminate the use of traditional groups (or buses,or stems). And without stems, you won’t be doing any stem mixing.
2) Also the way our system is designed the main buses (L,C,R) feed the system processors that eventually get to the amps and then to the speakers and finally to the congregation. For a system that employees stem mixing, the mains are normally run off of a Matrix Send (because this is often where the stems are combined). So using groups (or stems) on the console and system I do would only serve to complicate the signal path and not have many practical advantages for the main mix (it does still have advantages for the distribution feeds).
3) The combination of #1 and #2 essentially mean a “cleaner” signal path. That is why VCA groups have become so popular (that and making post-fader aux-sends way easier when using large number of inputs). Because there are less summing-amps used the signal path remains as un-cluttered as possible when you simply go into the pre-amp, through the channel fader, and out the main bus (that’s very over-simplified, but it gets my point across). Some even might argue that slight phasing problems can dirty up your final signal when using buses (a problem that can be much worse on digital consoles because of processing time).
However, stem mixing has some great advantages too:
1) Groups can be processed together. Because the group is actually combining signal, that group of signals can now be sent somewhere and processed. So you can compress the entire drum set. Although that isn’t recommendable, except maybe as an effect to add to the uncompressed version–I believe that’s referred to as the New York trick in recording. Or all the choir microphones can be sent to a 31-band EQ to notch out the trouble frequencies causing feedback. This can be helpful if you are doing a more theatrical presentation using a few similar lav mics too.
2) Level disparities can be accounted for in distributed/aux mixes. Often in professional systems with lots of headroom for concert-level music, the signal on speaking voices (pastors, announcements) are relatively very soft. This can cause problems for distributed feeds for the Internet or cry rooms or video recording if these are originating from the main mix only. However, using stem mixing, a stem mix of the speaking voices can be sent at one level to the bus feeding the main house system, while feeding a stronger amount of that ’speaking voices’ stem to the distributed audio bus. This can be used much more effectively (and much better sounding) than a simple compressor across these outputs.
3) ‘Mix-minus’ mixes can be achieved with greater ease. A mix-minus stem is essentially the entire mix minus one particular element (or stem). Although a mix-minus system is a more technical and needed way to mix for many broadcast applications, it can also have many advantages in the sound reinforcement world. For example, if a pastor has to lead worship but can’t sing very well, the congregation might cover up his voice in the main sanctuary, but not in the nursery. So if we are using stem mixes, the stem that the pastor is on can be removed from the bus going to the nursery for the just the songs, essentially creating a kind of mix-minus feed.
4) The same groups or stems used in the stem mix can be convenient for sending to monitor mixes, either traditional or especially for all the new personal monitors system that might have limited channels. Sending stems instead of channels to the personal monitors can actually be key to simplifying the use of these personal monitors for band members.
Well, that’s a small run-down on Stem Mixing. I hope that is helpful.
05.15.09
Something not so technical…
So I plan on doing some reading this summer that’s not technical. I thought I’d post some poignant quotes as I go.
“To grasp fully the grace that daily restores our confidence in his love, we must keep our hands empty of any claim that God must bless us on the basis of our goodness. For if he loves us because of what is in our hands, then the day will come when we will believe that his affection has diminished because our works are small, or that his care has vanished because our deeds are wrong…
…
“When I face the reality of the inadequacy of my works to merit God’s favor, then I recognize that I must depend on his goodness and not on mine. At times this dependence is scary because it lifts control from me. But there is no other choice when I recognize the true character of my good works. According to Scripture even my best works are only “filthy rags” (Isa 64:6).”
–Holiness By Grace by Bryan Chapell (p.34)
05.09.09
I haven’t blogged in a while…
Well there are many reasons I haven’t been blogging recently, here are a few: (first a thought: I certainly don’t do all this well. Personally and professionally, I struggle daily to glorify the Lord–and fail often–which is the most important thing. SO this list isn’t to impress, but to inform. I live in a production world and here is some of what we’ve been producing in my world):
500 4-disc DVD sets (that’s 225 runs in our duplicator, 1500 prints for labels and case-inserts [I had a lot of help])
authoring 4 DVD’s for the above sets (everything from the encoding, to authroing the menus [one disc had six menus complete with "Play All" scripts],and even using flash slideshows and an html menu for our photo disc this year)
Editting two videos (one with interviews, the other a review video to music)
250 MP3-CD’s (for Graduation gifts from our Provost)
directing 3-camera recording shoots for 2 live events
Running lights, now for the second time (for our student talent show, Spring Sing)
lining up three different equipment rental packages from two companies
keeping track of the budget for all-of-the-above
Add to that running sound for the following special events: A Music Dept. concert at Forest Lawn – Hollywood Hills; Good Friday and three Easter services at church; a couple funerals at church; an on-campus Shai Linne worship night concert
Also, overseeing media for two more events at the College
And, helping Chorale record a small sampler CD for their Israel tour.
Finally, starting to prep for two Audio Training Seminars over the summer
And Lastly, starting today, running Saturday rehearsals for the Resolved Conference Band, Enfield.
Not to mention: meeting with three or four great guys weekly about our walks with the Lord, including a new friend in whom the Lord is just doing tremendous things. These guys are one big part of the encouragment the Lord gives me to keep going.
Geeky things I’ve learned along the way:
how to do Layered Menus in DVD Studio Pro
how to direct cameras (I’ve got a long way to go)
how to use an ION lighting console and run lights for a show,
how to make a slideshow data-DVD autoplay
Some very basic html programing [very, very basic]
Trying some different piano microphone techniques
how to better encode Dolby 2.0 files for our DVD’s
What’s left you ask? Well: a two-hour grad video to edit, then another DVD to author, then another 300 DVD’s to duplicate, label and package. Then: archiving files from this year, hundreds of Mp3’s to add meta-data to for a big summer project and making DVD’s of all the previous Master’s College Year End Shows.
I hope to post more often. Also this summer I’m planning on reading “Humility” by C.J. Mahaney and “Holiness by Grace” by Bryan Chapell; as well as finishing some other books I’ve started but not finished. And plenty of other geeky stuff.