![]() ![]() ![]() Working carefully and deliberately in advance of the performance to get the console workflow and labeling completed is not only a regular part of the pro audio engineer routine for top touring ‘hot hands’ on the road, but it is a great practice for training new audio operators. Just as there are chords and fret positions and voicings that seem to more efficiently and effectively achieve our musical goals, there are ways of designing a console layout that can save engineers a lot of headaches when Sunday comes around. Thankfully, there are now a number of free tools available to help us all get better at performing our craft-and particularly for those on the worship arts team who are just getting started with audio mixing. Both tasks require practice to get comfortable and excel under pressure to make things sound great. In many ways, live audio engineers are performing this same mixture of the careful and deliberate musical creation and sight-reading on the fly. Similarly, sight-singing would be the term for a vocalist singing a completely new song at first sight. ![]() For those of you who may not be familiar with sight-reading, it is the performing of a musical piece from sheet music that the musician has not seen before. This was a totally different animal altogether, requiring mental and physical dexterity to execute well. ![]() On the other extreme, we’d burn through sight-reading a dozen charts in an hour during jazz big band rehearsal. There were times when I would spend hours composing just a few measures worth of music-yet there was something almost therapeutic in the careful crafting of effective chord progressions and tension and resolution. It always felt like I was hunting for a particular magic voicing that worked perfectly as a starting point to get me through to the most pleasing and effective closing chord. I loved breaking down 4-part Bach chorales and trying my hand at writing counterpoint and fugue. One of my favorite classes in college was Music Theory. Originally published in Worship Musician Magazine, August 2019. ![]()
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