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Talbot Davis

Top Five Tuesday – Top Five Unforgettable Drum Parts
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Top Five Tuesday – Top Five Unforgettable Drum Parts
April 14, 2015 at 3:22 am 0
This list won't have the hardest drum-driven songs.  Nor will it have the longest drum solos (sorry, those of you longing for Moby Dick by Led Zeppelin).  I doubt it will even include work by those drummers considered by the experts to be the "best." It's my blog, after all.  And my list.  So what are my five favorite songs with unforgettable drum arrangements?  I'm glad you asked. 1.  Paul Simon, The Obvious Child.  We did this with a drum line at Good Shepherd . . . because the cross really IS in the ballpark. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HKNAhAxMAk 2.  Fleetwood Mac, Tusk.  How could a song with USC's marching band not make this list? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umjYHLt56kg   3.  Led Zeppelin, Kashmir.  Of course Zeppelin made the list.  Just not with a ten minute drum solo; instead, an eight minute song with some muscular fills near the end.   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfR_HWMzgyc 4.  U2, Beautiful DayWhen the drums come in early on, it's a beautiful thing indeed. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=co6WMzDOh1o 5. John Mellencamp with Me'Shell Ndegeocello, Wild Night.  Can you imagine this one without the drums or the duet?  I bet Van Morrison is proud. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1aoywIHLqbs    
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Why I Hate Preacher Competition. And Why I Love It.
April 8, 2015 at 7:17 am 0
If you know me at all, you know I am extremely competitive. I suppose I can blame it on my tennis days.  Growing up I was consumed with the desire to be the #1 player for my age in Texas, and in order to do that, you have to beat all the other kids.  While some of them might be friends, ultimately all of them are competition.  And, after years of struggling with the yoke of being#2, I broke through when I was 17 and did in fact become #1 in the state for boys' 18-and-under.  I liked it enough that it happened again when I was 18. And so that same mentality all too often creeps into my thoughts about and relationships with other pastors, both within the United Methodist orbit and beyond it.  Who's got the most people?  Who has the cleverest sermons?  Who's the best dresser?  Who do the other clergy crowd around at Annual Conference? It's easy to deride such attitudes and the often unhealthy behavior patterns they produce. And yet . . . I don't want to land in such a simplistic place as I look at clergy relationships.  Because some benefits do emerge from paying attention to what others are doing in their position of leadership -- even if it stirs up the competitive spirit buried deep within. So here it is.  Why I Hate Preacher Competition.  And Why I Love It. Why I Hate Preacher Competition
  • Many times I lose.  Other churches become bigger.  Other preachers "feed" the souls of congregants better.  Other leaders receive more denominational recognition.
  • It makes me define the wrong enemy.  My true opponent in ministry is not the cool church in town or the big church in the denomination; it's Satan himself.
  • It makes me pursue the wrong goal.  If I set out to be "bigger than," "better than," or "cooler than" someone else, I overlook the ultimate goal of ministry: to bring glory to the God who brought salvation to me.
  • It's never enough.  Whatever competition (usually internal and unstated) I might win, there's always another pastor or church doing more, doing it better, and doing it bigger.  When constant comparison is a way of life, discontent becomes your state of being.
  • I focus on my performance for God rather than my position in Christ.
  Why I Love Preacher Competition
  • It lets you know what's possible.  In the early 90s, while I was pastoring in Monroe, NC, a phenomenon named Lenny Stadler was preaching at nearby Weddington United Methodist Church.  If I did not have an envy-tinted awareness that he was leading that church to grow by more than 100 people in attendance a year (!), I would not have known such a thing is even possible.  Now, of course, such growth is commonplace in many churches but in those days it was unheard of.
  • It motivates you to new levels of creativity and risk.  Churches rarely grow in effectiveness while remaining static in methods.  The more I know what other churches and leaders are doing to advance the kingdom, the better I am at taking those ideas, customizing them, and then bringing them home to help us invite all people into a living relationship with Jesus Christ.
  • Benchmarking is not the same as salivating.  We at Good Shepherd try to benchmark with other churches who are slightly ahead of our growth curve:  What did you have to do when you got to 1,000 per Sunday? we used to ask.  How can we get a higher percentage of people in LifeGroups? we now ask.  What does it look like to have a culture of generosity and leadership?  we will ask.
  • Confirms the ongoing connection between doctrine and growth.  Whether within our Methodist family or beyond it, I continue to see that churches who hold to ancient teaching regarding the divinity of Christ and the authority of Scripture are much more likely to grow large & have influence than do those congregations with radicalized theology.
  • At my age, I've got some experience to share.  I've preached long enough and Good Shepherd has accomplished enough that I have some morsels to share in helping younger pastors to hone their own ministry skills.  And over the last couple of years, I've found that to be a part of this calling I enjoy the most.
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Talk About A Three Day Weekend!
April 3, 2015 at 6:49 am 0
Easter 2015 One haunting remembrance of the crucifixion. Six exuberant celebrations of the resurrection. Best. News. Ever. Good Shepherd Holy Weekend 2015.   #4U
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Some Rules For The Road
April 2, 2015 at 3:03 am 0
Here are some general rules for life and ministry I find myself adopting as the years go by:
  • Devote Sunday night to hand-writing notes to first time guests.
  • The louder the internet clamor becomes on certain political & cultural issues, the less it needs my voice to join in.
  • People prefer feedback that is painfully honest to that which is glowingly deceptive.
  • Don't go more than two weeks without listening to Don Henley's The Boys Of Summer.
  • If I never play tennis again, I will always be as good as I used to be.
  • Our goal is for people to have a living relationship with Jesus Christ, not a personal attachment to a preacher.
  • People give you bad news in segments.  They give you good news all at once.
  • Even the cleverest tweets don't change anyone's mind.
  • Back, bicep, and leg on one day followed by chest, tricep, and shoulder the next.
  • Celebrate what your parents did right and understate what they did wrong . . . because one day, that's what you'll want your kids to do with you.
  • Spend the first 15 and last 5 minutes of each day disconnected from the internet and the media.  (Exception: The Daily 4U Prayer -- use technology for that and then disconnect so you may reconnect with your Father in heaven.)
  • Consensus within Scripture results in fidelity beyond it.
  • If you ever think you're too much of a "visionary leader" to visit shut-ins, you need to re-think your vision.  And your leadership.
  • One cliché that is true:  you can't outgive God.
  • Don't mix flavors of chocolate. Instead, just get a second helping of the same chocolate that tasted so good the first time.
  • Listen to and take notes on Andy Stanley sermons when you can.
  • Remind people that they didn't get into their predicament overnight and they likely won't get out of it overnight, either.
  • Treasure the blessing of having children with good senses of humor.
  • But pay more attention to your marriage than you do to your kids.
  • Instead of telling people you will pray for them, stop and pray.  Then and there.  That includes typing an email prayer in reply.  Which you are free to do with someone today.
 
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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Reflections From A John Mellencamp Concert
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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Reflections From A John Mellencamp Concert
March 31, 2015 at 3:04 am 0
So last Friday, Julie and I had second row seats at John Mellencamp's concert at Ovens Auditorium. We had seen him back in 1999 at Blockbuster, er Verizon, er PNC Music Pavilion in north Charlotte.  We thoroughly enjoyed that show and when we stumbled onto these extraordinary seats this year, we knew that proximity to the artist would add to the memories of the evening. We were so close, in fact, that I could smell the nicotine from Mellancamp's obligatory cigarette that he smoked mid-way through the show.  Other than that, the seats were a blast. And here are my Top Five Reflections from the show: JOHNMELLENCAMP_01_JPG 1. He has made a lot of great songs.  How's that for a "plain spoken" truth?  It's easy to overlook just how many good songs he has made from the early 80s until today.  On Friday night, for example, we heard "Small Town," "Little Pink Houses," "Jack & Diane," "Paper In Fire," "Cherry Bomb," "Human Wheels," "Longest Days,"  and my favorite, "The Authority Song."  He has so many good songs that some of his best known got left out:  "Peaceful World" and "Wild Night" were two of the three that I most wanted to hear but didn't (#3 is in #5 below).  He is also secure enough in his legacy to reinvent his biggest hits -- he performed Jack & Diane with no backing band behind; just Mellencamp, his acoustic guitar, and a story of . . . well, you know what the song is a story of. 2. He pretends he's half redneck and half male chauvinist, but he's really all poet.  In spite of gravelly image, Mellencamp has the ability to turn phrases matched by few in rock.  Among the best of the evening was from "Longest Days":  "life is short even on its longest days."  So it is. 3. He makes it seems like the violin and accordion have ALWAYS been staple instruments in a rock band. Take almost any song Mellencamp sings and SUBTRACT those two instruments, and it simply wouldn't be the same. violin accordion   4. People take photos with phones.  Even when the star of the show gave a single fingered peace sign to one would-be photographer, people -- most of whom were my age -- keep streaming forward to snap a picture.  Or better, a selfie with Mellencamp in the background.  I resisted the temptation.  5. I was probably the only person in the room who wanted fewer of his old hits and more of his new material.  His Cuttin Heads CD from 2001 is simply terrific -- highlighted by "Peaceful World" and "Crazy Island" -- and then his current Plain Spoken release is an unexpected delight.  I harbored a secret hope that he'd play the whole CD (this is called the Plain Spoken tour, after all), but instead he played only a couple of selections.  In contrast to Jack & Diane, I was the only one singing along to the new songs.  Oh well.  The best song from Plain Spoken that he didn't do is called Sometimes There's God, the kind of tune we could have used in church during 2014's The Shadow Of A Doubt series . . . but the album hadn't dropped yet.  (Did you notice how I just said "dropped" in referring to an album?)  Anyway, here's Sometimes There's God, and here's to hoping he plays it next time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOEeOHtIoLs
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