Vocal Rehearsal?
- By Rick Muchow
- Published October 2, 2008
Rick Muchow
Rick Muchow is the Pastor of Worship at SaddlebackChurch. He has been serving faithfully at Saddleback for 21 years and oversees the Worship Arts ministry which consists of the Creative Arts, Technical Arts and Worship Leadership Teams at SaddlebackChurch. Rick also serves as one of 7 Elders which serve the ministry at Saddleback. Rick has recorded 11 albums and has 84 songs registered with CCLI. Encouraging Music publishes all of Rick’s music including sheet music and companion resources for the Worship Leader and congregations worldwide (www.encouragingmusic.com). Rick is the author of The Worship Answer Book published in 2006 by Thomas Nelson and is a Contributing Editor for Christianity Today’s Leadership Journal. Rick also writes a monthly column called “Ask Rick” which is published by several magazines including Worship Musician. His latest CD “More Than Music” is to be released June 23 2008. Rick founded the music and tech team with the Slogan “More Than Music- We’re a Family” and is tremendously proud of Saddleback’s Worship Arts staff and volunteers for their sincere dedication to Christ, love for each other, humble service and the fantastic results of their labor. Rick has been married to his beautiful wife Laura for 24 for years and they have 5 wonderful children: Brandon, Logan, Jordan, Megan and Nolan.
What are the benifits of a Vocal Rehearsal that is seperate from all other rehearsals?
This is what we do: We start our rehearsals promptly at 7pm, whether people are there or not. We sing a few worship songs to warm up and do vocal exercises for about 10 minutes. During those first warm up worship songs, I’m greeting people as they walk in: a smile or a “great to see you.” Our materials are all on a table by the door for folks to pick up on their way in. That’s our first 15 minutes: warm up.
Next, we walk through the agenda/goals for the night. This is the list of what we need to accomplish. This is where I teach the parts or remind people of the parts for each song. We’ll go through each song one at a time so the singers can record them (on their own personal recorders) for practice throughout the week. This lasts about 45 minutes.
At approximately 8pm, I stop teaching parts and shift to a devotional that lasts 10-15 minutes. Sometimes we pray here, most of the time we pray at the end in small prayer teams. Then we’ll sing again, but worship through the songs rather than examining the individual parts. By worship through them, I mean not “performing” the songs but using them as tools to worship. Let the songs soak into the hearts of your leaders.
Because we are rehearsing for 3 different services with 3 different orders of worship, at 8:30pm we separate into individual worship service teams. This gives the individual teams a chance to polish their sound, learn any songs specifically for their services and work through worship flow and segues. Some vocal teams will spend time with their band while others rehearse on their own. All of the teams will pray together for the services and personal concerns. Rehearsal concludes about 9:15pm.