Beginning of The Becoming

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My water broke in a parking garage.

I was on a band trip.  About to play a really important show. The guys were unloading gear from the van, but I could feel the baby- heavy inside of me- and my water broke.

Ryan was frustrated. Really? We traveled all this way for a show and your water breaks before we get a chance to play? Can you just hold it in, Jen? The other guys were indifferent. They kept unloading gear like nothing had even happened. Like they didn’t notice I was standing in a puddle of water.

But they did notice, they just didn’t care. It was almost like- yeah, your water broke. But you live long enough lady and everyone has their water break. I’ve had mine break. 

They kept doing what they were doing and I was puzzled. Didn’t they see what was happening? Didn’t they understand? The baby is coming. 

In that moment, something happened in my heart that I had never experienced. I felt like I was in my own world. One laced with more beauty, excitement, hope, and anticipation than I had ever known before. I felt myself glowing. There was a deep joy oozing out of me that I had never known. I could feel it in my fingertips and my toes and deep in my belly.

No one else existed. Just us. I had never wanted to give birth so bad in my life.

Hours later I was at the hospital. Pushing. Sweating. In so much freaking pain that I think I was biting Ryan’s arm.

***

And then I woke up.

Covered in sweat. Heart pounding. Body sore. As if I had really been pushing. Ryan laying next to me, sound asleep. Annie down the hall.

I woke up in my quiet, peaceful home. I could hear the clock ticking in the living room. The hum of the air conditioner. The birds outside my window. It was dawn. And I was deeply aware that there was nothing in my belly.

I wasn’t in labor. I wasn’t even pregnant. And what was worse, the dream ended before I delivered. I didn’t even get to find out if it was a boy or a girl.

Tears began to steam down my face. I felt such loss and sorrow. What a cruel trick. Why did I have to wake up mid-labor? I laid there and desperately wanted to know if it was a boy or a girl.  Couldn’t I have that much?

Blue or pink. Football or ballet. Bloody knees or bloody drama. Why let a girl dream that kind of dream and not get to see the end?

Ryan woke up to my whimpers.

“What’s wrong baby? Are you ok?”

“I just almost had a baby. I mean like really almost had the baby in my dreams. I’m covered in sweat and my stomach hurts from pushing. And you didn’t want my water to break and the guys didn’t care. And I was in the hospital biting you and screaming in pain,” and then the tears really came, “I- I- I- didn’t even get to have the baby. I don’t even know if it was a boy or a girl,” I was sobbing. In a little ball in my bed- at 6:00 a.m.- mourning the baby I didn’t give birth to in my dreams.

This is how every man wants to be woken up in the morning.

“But Jen- you don’t even want to have another baby.”

“I know, I didn’t think I wanted another baby. But what if we are supposed to? I mean, what if the dream was a sign? I don’t know. It really seemed like I was having a baby...”

“Ryan- I was so happy in the dream. Something was beaming deep inside of me. There was this deep deep joy. I can’t explain it. But I’ve never felt anything like it before in my life. It made me want to have a million babies. I knew that what was happening was holy. Waking up and it not being real- not even knowing if I had the baby- whether it was a boy or girl- I don’t know. I feel heart broken.”

“It was just a dream Jen. It’s ok. We don’t need to decide whether we should have another baby at 6:00 a.m. after a bad dream. You should get up. Have coffee and read before Annie wakes up. Clear your head.”

This sounded like a good idea. But all I could think about was the fact that coffee is really bad for the baby. You know- the baby I wasn’t actually pregnant with.

***

This is about the time I would encourage most people to go see a therapist. Lord knows I’ve seen my share of them.

My soul was frazzled. Not just by the dream, but by the season in life that seemed to churn me up and spit me out three counties over, mangled, in a river I didn’t know.

So I decided to go talk to someone. I needed some serious soul therapy. Except this time, instead of seeing a therapist, I decided I wanted to see a spiritual director. My mom had been seeing a spiritual director for years and had always encouraged me to go, but I always turned her down, because- what the heck is a spiritual director?!? 

Sounded like some sort of voodoo doctor to me.

But for some reason, after the dream, I knew something deep was going on and I needed more than coping mechanisms that a therapist would teach me; I needed someone to help me examine my soul. So I called him.

A spiritual director, I have now come to understand, is not a voodoo doctor at all. Having a spiritual director is like having a guide. Someone who sits with you, listens to you, asks you questions and helps you to see how God has generally spoken to you in the past so that you can better understand how God might be speaking and moving within you in the present. Basically- a person that helps you define God’s voice and prompting in your life.

I’ve always felt a sense of nakedness when sitting with a counselor or therapist. Being with a spiritual director made me feel a little more naked than I ever imagined I could feel. You’re not just bearing your bad habits, family feuds, or strange voices in your head... you’re telling someone how the invisible, omni-present, creator of the universe talks to you. And that’s just weird.

“So,” he said, “What has God been speaking to you lately?”

I couldn’t think of anything. Not one single thing.

“How has he spoken to you in the past? Through music? Being outside? Reading scripture? When do you remember really hearing his voice or feeling God’s presence?”

Nothing. I had felt dry for so long, I was having a hard time remembering. And, I was basically convinced that God wasn’t talking to me anymore, anyways. I was in his access of evil.

“What are you dreaming about Jenny? At night. What have your dreams been about?”

***

“My dreams? Who told you I was dreaming? How did you know?”

I sat there, thumbing the coffee cup in my hand not wanting to tell him- not wanting to know what he might make of it. Not wanting to sound too crazy.

“I’ve been having crazy dreams. For a few weeks now. Nearly every night, I wake up midway through labor. Heartbroken that I have not had a baby. But I don’t want another baby. In the dream I am deliriously happy though. I cannot wait to give birth to this child.  And then?  Nothing. I wake up covered in sweat, with cramps in my stomach, as if I am contracting, and I realize I am not in labor at all. Nothing is coming out of my body. And I’m laying there with tears rolling down my face wondering why the baby I don’t want isn’t coming. I guess I am supposed to have another baby? Only- I really thought I was done.”

***

He let my words settle in the air. And we sat in silence.

"Jenny, has it ever occurred to you that God might be trying to talk to you in your dreams? That he might be giving you a name for this season in your life?"

"Here’s what I see. A girl who is going through major life changes. A girl who is transitioning from what always was into unchartered territory. A girl who, perhaps, must have a season of gestation- a season of waiting- while new things grow. Jenny, what if you are not supposed to have a baby at all? What if these dreams are there to show you that you are in labor? About to give birth to something new? And you wake up heartbroken because, in the dream, you don’t know how it ends yet. You want to see whether it’s a boy or a girl. But it’s not time yet. You are not ready to deliver yet. But you are pregnant. That’s the important part. You are pregnant with something new, and beautiful, and kicking and tossing and turning... you’re just not ready to give birth yet. Your water hasn't broken yet.

***

It was a moment where the words of truth are spoken and an explosion of life and clarity come rushing back into your soul after a long winter of silence.

***

We spent the next hour talking about what it was like to be nine months pregnant.

It was miserable as a matter of fact.

I was so fat I could barely feel my fingertips or my toes. I tossed and turned in my sleep. And with every movement Annie made in my belly, I was convinced that this must be the beginning of labor. I would wait, with nervous anticipation for the contractions to start. Hours later I would be disappointed and frustrated to find out that it was just gas.

Nine months pregnant is the longest waiting game ever.

And, it’s a lonesome waiting game. As much as your partner wants to be there for you, there are places he can’t be. He didn’t feel Annie’s fingers tickling the inside of him. He couldn’t feel her toes, wiggling around; her legs kicking, fighting for more space. He didn't feel the hiccups or know when she woke up and when she went to sleep. So he couldn't fully understand the rise and fall of my heart every time I thought my little person was coming.

Waiting games can be so lonely.

You can’t rush it. You can’t make it happen any sooner than it’s going to happen. You are convinced that the thing you want to happen so badly is going to happen any second. And yet the minutes tick by. The hours tick by. The days tick by. You busy yourself and try to not think about the thing that you so desperately want to see. You try and give it space. You try and live like you are not living in-between. Like you are not becoming. Because you are tired of becoming already! You are ready to be becomed!

You have endured a long season of complete change and you are so close to answers. You are so close to seeing the end, so close to giving birth to something new, so close to the next chapter of life...

and yet you are still, so friggin’ pregnant.

***

This is how I came to realize that I was in the in between.

This was the beginning ofthe becoming.

Needless to say- I spent months seeing so many pregnant things that it almost became funny. Outside my apartment window a bird made a nest and laid four eggs. This only became humorous after I had the lightbulb moment that I myself was nesting something in my soul. Annie and I went searching for other birds nest's because I found it rather strange that a bird would camp out by my bedroom window to have babies. We didn’t find a single nest in our whole apartment complex! And day after day- I would dream about being pregnant at night and wake up hoping the darn birds had hatched already; as if their hatching would be the gateway to mine. 

(Ryan was really worried the birds would hatch and then be eaten by a dog or thrown around by a neighbor kid. He would always say, “Jen, you know a lot of birds don’t make it after they’re born. I just want you to be prepared for that. If these birds die, that doesn’t mean you are going to give birth to something that dies too. It just means- well you know- birds die.”)

My world became inundated with writings, people, scripture, movies, even critters who were pregnant with new; but not yet laboring. As if God were out to prove some master lesson that all things must endure being nine-months-pregnant before laboring and giving birth to something new. 

My soul was nine months pregnant. My life was nine months pregnant. My future was nine months pregnant.

Waiting for labor to begin.

Waiting to give life to something new.

Waiting.

The Becoming

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5:49 a.m.

I am wide awake.

Keenly aware of the fact that I feel lost. Like driftwood. Churned up by the storms and spit out in a different county, mangled, in a river I’ve never known.

Truth is, it all hit at once.

I’ve walked through seasons of change, seasons of feeling lost before- but they were never so real or so deep as they are now.

5:55 a.m.

I am contemplating who I am. And how does that make any sense? And what am I to do with that? And who do I want to be? Not what do I want to do with my life- though it seems summing it up with a simple answer like that would make this process a lot easier- so not that. But who do I want to be? Who was I made to be? And do I have to be that? Or can I just kind of be that?  And who was that person anyways? I mean... the person I was made to be? Am I that person? Or a version of her? What’s left of her? Or is she being completely reinvented?

[I should insert here that I do not have multiple personalities. You know. Just in case you were starting to get concerned.]

These are the things you think you have figured out. You think you know yourself. And I suppose there are loads of well meaning people in the world who live simple lives never contemplating this stuff, never doing anything risky enough to feel lost, never sitting on the couch at 6:01 a.m. staring their demons in the face. But I am not that person.

I am a nearly 31 year old artist, wife and mom who feels like driftwood. Churned up by the storms and spit out in a different county, mangled, in a river I’ve never known.

Being all mangledy-bangledy is a good thing. At least that’s what preachers always say. Storms grow you up. Get rid of all the bad stuff in you. Refine you with their fire and hurricane-in-the-sky powers. You come out refined. And shinier. And stronger. And I agree, this can happen. But what of the in between time? Where you’re mangledy-bangledy.

Sometimes we skip that part. Instead, the image I often get is this: I walk into a trying season in my life as “Jenny” and I come out shortly there after on the other side as a smokin’ hot “Jenny 4.0” who has, somehow, become infinitely more beautiful, happy, mature, rich, and demon-free.

The In-Between

But what of the transformation period? Surely it does not simply occur because the season of hardship is behind you. So poof! Hardships have made you a more rich person.

It's messier than that. It’s a longer journey than the just enduring part. It’s the becoming part that leaves you stranded on the couch, morning after morning, 6:30 a.m. feeling keenly aware that you are in the in between. Not the girl I started out as- nor the better version- but somewhere in between. Trying to find my way home.

So that’s where I have been. Some of you have asked. And that‘s the only answer I can give.

I am in the in between. We are in the in between.

Not in a storm, but not the new shinier 4.0 version of myself either. Just somewhere in between... becoming. And the becoming process sucks. I don’t like change. And I don’t like living in the unknown. And I don’t like feeling so unsettled. Seems like by now I should have it all figured out. But I don’t.

And the truth is- I think that is exactly where I am supposed to be right now. Living in the unknown. The driftwood that’s been spit out three counties over- trying to get my bearings and wondering- what next?

With that being said...

I am working on a new album and writing songs that I’ve always wanted to write. Saying things I’ve always wanted to say. Writing with writers who are challenging me to go places I’ve never gone before with my music.

Ryan is no longer traveling with me. And that is the biggest of changes. He has taken a 8-5 job in Dallas that he loves- he was ready for something new- and yet he still believes in what I do and wants me to follow where it leads. Still, after 11 years of making music together and living side by side, 24 hours a day, traveling the world, there is a loneliness in doing what we have done together for so long, by myself.

We are trying to figure out what that looks like for Addison Road and what that means for our family. For now it means performing on weekends- taking Annie with me sometimes- or leaving her with her grandparents for the weekend so Ryan can recover from the work week. Sometimes Ryan will be with me, but mostly, he is getting used to his new world too- and apparently you working-world-folk live for the weekends. I don’t think Ryan or I had any concept of a “weekend” until the last five months.

We are realizing, that for most of the working world, scheduling a “date” night becomes one of the only ways to ensure that you have any amount of quality time together. Who knew? Who knew that weekends were for laundry, going to the park, and fixing things around the house? Who knew that cooking dinner every single night would almost make  eating undesirable? Who knew that getting your clothes starched at the cleaners- every week- could cost so much money (Did I mention that before Ryan took this new job, we didn’t even own an iron or ironing board? We have refused to buy a real board. We got a small fold up board that does absolutely no good. Still, it feels less domesticated and that makes us feel better about owning our very own iron.) Who knew that being a stay at home mom during the weeks would require so much energy, patience, wisdom, and mental stability- which I am severely lacking in?!?

These are the sorts of things you face in the in-between. In the becoming something new. One day you are ready to take on the new world. The next day you are begging for the old world. The next you are simply convinced that you were never convinced of anything in the world to begin with. It is a season marked by the unknown. Curiosity abounds. Excitement fights to shine through. Fear and self-doubt dominate. The kind of self-doubt that hits you over the head at the beginning of puberty, leaving you rattled and insecure and lost and overwhelmed with the possibilities of giving birth to a new person. A new version. If nothing else, the in between seasons are great reminders to hold life lightly. Hang on too tight- to your own version- and you are bound to be heartbroken.

Because there will, inevitably, always be a season of becoming.   

Aisle 7 and the Evil Spaghetti

My biggest break down during this season of in-between living was on Aisle 7 at Kroger.

I sat there staring at spaghetti. Some horrible 1980‘s Phil Collins song came on. I stared at the spaghetti longer. Harder. What do I cook for dinner? What do people cook for dinner? I had no idea. Being on tour for two years straight, I hadn’t cooked for my family. Not only had I not cooked, 99% of the time, I didn’t even have a choice over what I would eat. I showed up at a venue and the food was there. Breakfast. Lunch. Dinner. I didn’t do any of it. I had no idea what to cook for dinner. I didn’t even know where to begin. The spaghetti started calling me names. And before I knew it, all the spaghetti boxes were talking, hovering over me, telling me that I had failed- as a mom, a wife, a musician, a cook- you name it and the spaghetti was screaming it at me.

And right there, on Aisle 7, between noodles and tomato sauce I began to sob and grieve the becoming. The in between.

Like driftwood. Churned up by the storms and spit out in a different county, mangled, in a river I’d never known. I was in the eye of the storm.

God love the old lady who said, “Sweetie are you ok?”

“I just don’t even know what to cook for dinner. I don’t even know what to buy,” I said through sobs- massive sobs- on Aisle 7.

“Well, sweetie, you should just do take-out. Leave the buggy right here. Go get in your car. And do take-out. You do not need to cook a thing tonight. You just leave this buggy right here. It will take care of itself.”

“Ok. Ok. You’re right. Pizza will work won’t it? I just. I just don’t even know what to put on the noodles. You know? I just can’t believe this,” I left the basket in a daze, sobbing, shoulders shaking, Phil Collins singing something about love in the background.

Poor lady.

Sometimes you just need the permission to be broken down. To not know what to cook. To leave the buggy, full of perishables, right in the middle of Aisle 7. She was there to give me permission. Permission to be afraid. Permission to cry. Permission to feel lost. Permission to go home- let it fall like rain onto my pillow- and then rise, ready to start over again. And you do start over again. I am starting over again.

Inevitably, the hope and excitement of the unknown shines through the clouds. And eventually, the clouds roll away all together.

Me

So this is me. This is Ryan and I. This is us. We have weathered storms- and found ourselves in a season of complete change. To put a bow on it for you and wrap it up nicely would be to deny that we are walking through the much needed- albeit much dreaded season- of becoming. So I can’t do that. No cliche’ quotes or scripture verses about not worrying or about faith in God’s plan or the future... though it is there, the faith. It is there. But the truth is, we are still living in the uncertainty- and I hate it. I am working through my lostness, and no amount of faith takes away the fear and loneliness that accompanies drifting down a river, trying to find your way home... to your new home. Becoming something different and refined along the way.

A bit of holy fear and loneliness during the becoming is good for my soul- whether I like it or not.

This isn’t about Addison Road. I really believe the songs we are writing for the next Addison Road album are the best we’ve ever written. This isn’t about Ryan and his desire for a new career.  This is bigger than a job. Bigger than paychecks or talents and skills.

This is about going from storms- to mangledy bangledy- to coming out on the other side, bottom of the river- looking different than ever before.

This is the in between season. Of growing into my skin. Of redefining. Of growing up. Of becoming.

*Thank you to Paul Allen for encouraging me to write this blog. To Karen Briseno for enduring with me during the silent in-between. And for the rest of you who still come here to share life with me.*

Want to Meet me for Cupcakes?!?

I have neglected this space for 24 days now. And with good cause.

Today is Day 39 of 100+ degree temperatures here in Dallas, Texas.

My brain has literally melted and oozed outta my armpits. Every time I have a slight moment of intelligence or creativity it seems to melt straight out of my brain and drip right down the middle of my back into my unmentionables. It's awful y'all. And I mean awful.

***

I have never been more grateful to be sitting on a plane headed to Seattle. Thank God for Seattle. For good coffee. Good seafood. Good people. Beautiful scenery. And a perfect, heavenly, perpetual rainy season.

***

I have lots of updates, stories, and Annie pictures to share. But before that barrage of blogs, I want to ask you to please HELP the children and families in the Horn of Africa who are suffering from one of the worst draughts in recorded history.

CNN's medical correspondant, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, sent a first hand account from Somalia to the news outlet this morning, eerily titled, A Race to Save the Starving. He says this, "There is no way to dignify the description of death by starvation. It is neither quick nor painless. Not too long after the food is cut off, the body resorts to fuel reserves in the liver and fatty tissues. Once the fat is all gone, and the person is a skeleton of what he or she once was, the body searches for protein, and finds it in muscle tissue. Even the muscle of the heart is consumed, leaving someone drained and listless."

"There is no way to dignify the description of death by starvation."

These words stopped my heart. As a momma or daddy- how do you watch your baby go through this?

He goes on to talk about a six year old boy who has been walking with his dad for ten days, trying to make it to another country that has food and water. This little boy will not live past the end of this weekend. His little body can't process food or water any longer He is one little boy out of thousands and thousands whose bodies are literaly withering away. As a mom I can't help but think of Annie. And today- that image has made me angry and desperate.

Angry at the suffering and desperate to help.

Every humanitarian aide organization currently on the ground is saying the same thing. This is suffering at its worse.

***

Will you help? You can join me and World Concern- a non-profit, international humanitarian aide organization and donate right now. Anything helps. Everything helps.

Donate to Famine Relief by clicking here. Please indicate in the "comments" field that you are a blog reader.

World Concern works with the world's most poor communities- and 94% of every dollar they recieve goes directly to serve the poor. Charity Navigator has given World Concern their highest rating- 4 stars. They are also a charter member of the ECFA and a member of NCIF as well as partners with the ONE campaign. World Concern does timely, extensive, hands-on work with the world's most poor and vulnerable and I am so humbled to work alongside of them as we try to live out our faith in word and deed. Take a few minutes to look at their website and see how you can join us to help eradicate poverty.

***

If you live in Seattle, we are doing a free show tomorrow night (Thursday, August 11th) to raise money for those suffering in the Horn of Africa. Tickets are limited- but if you are a blog reader and plan on coming to the event and donating money- I'd love to say a special thank you and invite you to join me before the show for cupcakes! The concert is sponsored by World Concern and Spirit 105.3 and will be held at the SPIRIT Sound Stage (Schrimer Auditorium), 7:00 p.m. To reserve tickets for your friends and family, please visit the Spirit 105.3 website. Then, email me: [email protected] to let me know you are coming, donating, and would like to join me at 6:00 p.m. for cupcakes!

If you don't live in Seattle- check my show calander. If you donate to World Concern's famine relief drive- I will treat you to cupcakes in your own city! It's just that important. All you need to do is make a donation and email me with the show that you wil be attending!

I believe that by partnering together we can make a difference. Little. Big. Every penny counts. And I trust World Concern to use every penny to help save lives from starvation. So join me.

 

 

Everything you EVER wanted to know.

Part Two in a series attempting to answer people's questions about the music industry. Please note that I do not speak on behalf of my record label, Fair Trade Services (formerly INO records), nor do I have the ability to sum up a very vast, multi-billion dollar industry. I am only speaking from my first hand experiences and observations from eleven years in the industry myself.  

From Beth:  I would like to know about getting into the industry, starting with demo tapes, how to get labels to listen to them, and how to get started (of course with the understanding that this is in no way a "get rich quick or at all" type thing.)

Hey Beth! This is the question we "signed" artist's get asked the most! How do I get in the industry? I would say first and foremost, you have to rephrase that question into, "Why do I want to get into the industry?" Or put another way, "What can the industry do for me that I cannot already do for myself?"

When I was in high school in the late 90's I would pick up a copy of CCM magazine and read about young high school guys and girls who were magically discovered by record labels and got amazing record deals. But that was then. To my knowledge, that rarely happens anymore because record labels are- across the board- losing significant money. So in the past, record labels sought out young new talent, giving record deals to any number of newbies and waiting to see which ones they could "develop" and turn into a pop star or Christian icon. But this is no longer the case.

Today, there seems to be an emphasis from labels to come across someone who is already making their own music, performing regularly, and writing their own hit songs. Granted, there are the Justin Beibers and Carrie Underwood's of the world; super-naturally talented and gifted vocalists that labels will do anything to sign, create, and market. (And if that's you- I encourage you to put yourself out there. Audition for American Idol, America's Got talent, or sign up to be a part of Camp Electric where your voice will be heard by industry insiders in Nashville.)

If you have an insane talent, a cold-turkey deal might be easier to attain, but for the most part the industry has become less about creating new artists (turning a 16-year-old, unknown girl with a good voice into a signed label artist) and more about finding artists who are doing good things in their own right and coming alongside of them.

So, to answer your question I would ask you a question. What are you doing on your own? If you want to get into the industry- most industry insiders want to see you "bloom where you are planted." Perform as often as possible, with as many people as possible. Develop a strong social media presence- one of the absolute best things you can do to get recognized. Hone your song-writing skills. And then go out and perform some more!

Tricks of the Trade

When Addison Road started eleven years ago, my husband took the "fake it till you make it approach." He decided that he would do everything possible to make us look like a "real band" even though we were this crappy college band! Still, if you would have gotten one of our promo packets in the mail, you would have thought we were the next big thing! He had embellished folders made, business cards, head shots, recommendations from people who had us out to play at their home churches. Etc, etc. But the truth is, we weren't nearly as good as we looked on paper! Still, being professional goes a long way and it got us shows that we were way under-qualified for. If you are an artist looking to go somewhere- present yourself well. Have a well edited, short and sweet promo pack (both physical & digital). Take yourself seriously. Call yourself an artist. Seek out shows and book with confidence. Don't let on that you are way out of your league! You've heard the whole, "dress for success"... well I don't care if you dress in Portland flannel or New York hipster, but dress the part. There is much to be said for creating your niche- for creating your portfolio- for creating buzz about your music... even when you feel like you are an invisible speck in the music world. A professional, aggressive approach to developing your niche and presenting yourself well goes such a long way!

Demo's

Make sure your demo is actually good! There are nationally and internationally known bands who record their albums themselves- and they sound amazing. You don't have to have money to make a demo anymore. All you need is a moderately fluent MacBook user. Heck, I could record your demo and make it sound decent- and that's saying a lot! So, there is no excuse for bad demos!  Find someone with a home studio or a MacBook pro. Also, some churches have amazing digital boards and they can actually make a great recording straight from the board. So if you are at a church with advanced sound equipment, ask a tech volunteer if they would be willing to record you from the board.

Getting Someone to Listen to your Demo

Every artist is going to HATE me for saying this... but your best chance at getting someone in the industry to listen to your music is to hand your music off to an artist.

Odds are, if you mail in a demo it will never, ever, ever be listened to. Actually, a long time ago my husband interned for EMI while we were in college. His entire job was to listen to demo's. Just a college kid- who could care less and generally just made fun of everything he heard- was the guy who got the demos. Sending a demo in cold turkey is a waste of your time and your money. And- might actually work against you if you annoy the people at the label!

So how to get it into the label's hands? If it is a really good worship song that is currently successful at your church, network with other worship pastor friends and see if they would try your song at their church. Many big worship songs, like Indescribable and How He Loves, have started in local churches and spread like wildfire. That gets the attention of a label.

Go viral. Everything is viral. It's free. It's easy. And if your stuff is good... it spreads like wildfire too. Post your best song/performance on Youtube and then email the link out to as many people as you can. If you have the email address of someone at a label, publishing company, etc. include them on the email blast. Perhaps they might actually take a listen.

And then back to my first suggestion- hand it off to an artist. I will be honest- we hate this! But I think it's mostly because people pick bad times to do it. Don't hand off your CD at the merch table, while the artist is getting off stage and unwinding, or while they are on their way to the bathroom. This is super annoying :) Give the CD to a volunteer or promoter and ask that it be given to the band- or make plans to be a part of a pre-show meet and greet. Don't eat up any of their time trying to sell yourself, just a simple, "Thanks for being here. I enjoy your music. I'm an artist myself... if you get a chance I'd love for you to listen to my music."

Honest truth is- a lot of those Cd's end up in the trash. But there are some artists who listen. I am one of those that listens. And- if I hear something I really love (or if a local artist opens that I am really amazed by) I pass it on to my team in Nashville. Maybe nothing happens at all- but maybe it does. In my opinion this is at least a good shot. And because many artists turn into producers or own their own record labels (Toby Mac, David Crowder, Nathan Nockels, etc.) the artist's themselves often have a vested interest in discovering new talent as well.

Songwriting

If I were to encourage you to focus on one way to get into the music industry, I would say do whatever you can to become the best song writer you can be. Album sales are not what they were 10 years ago. Ten years ago Christian artist like Rebecca St. James, Stephen Curtis Chapman, Nicole Nordeman... they could sell a million records, no problem. But that is no longer the case. Albums don't sell. Hit songs sell. So album sales are incredibly low and single song downloads are incredibly high. Radio has followed suit by diminishing the amount of new songs they play each year. There are major market stations who will literally only drop ten new songs a year. Thus someone's comment that, "from listening to Christian radio you'd think there are only 6 artists." So if everything revolves around the song... the song has to be your focus. There is no longer room for plain ole' good singers who sing other people's songs. The industry is all about the song... and the heart of what you do as an artist is all about the song. So write the song.

Beth- and other aspiring artists- those are some of the basics.

On a personal note, if you were to ask me how to get started in the Christian music industry... I would give you a maddening answer with no concrete "next step."

I would simply say, fall in love with Jesus. Ask for God's eyes and God's heart for people. Dig into the words of scripture. And then continue to fall in love with Jesus and grow deeper roots into your faith.

There are plenty of singers. Plenty of bands. Plenty of music in this world. What the Christian music industry needs is not another guy or girl or band singing half-hearted, cheesy, quite frankly embarrassing lyrics with no depth about our faith. What our industry needs is excellent, artisitic musicians, with deep lyrics. People with something real to say. Authentic followers of Christ writing music that inspires, challenges, draws others into worship, and brings hope and beauty to the world. We need genuine artists with genuine love for Jesus. Not pop stars.

Fall in love with Jesus. Bloom where you are planted. Write songs and then write some more songs. Play shows. Go viral. Be professional. Make a good demo. Contact people to listen to the demo online. Hand it off to an artist. If you are truly gifted, put yourself in environments where people can hear you (camp electric, talent competitions). Play some more shows. Write some more music... And then keep living life-

you know,

so you have things to actually write about.

I have taken your questions and put them in thematic order. I will answer them over the next 5 weeks. So don't worry- if you asked something- it has not been lost on me. I will answer all the questions to the best of my ability! Thanks to Beth and so many others for putting your questions out there! I hope this series illuminates the in's and out's of our industry and answers some of your burning questions :) 

Pictures

hello friends!

I've missed you! I've been doing the camp thing. One week with Lifeway's FUGE camp in Glorieta, New Mexico. And this past week in the beautiful, but terribly dry, Glen Rose, TX with a bunch of crazy Texas kids!

(Side note: if you are headed to Glen Rose, TX anytime soon I highly recommend pie from Pie Peddlers. I would plan on eating at least three slices. In order: Everyberry. Buttermilk. Chocolate meringue. Pie Peddlers is located on the charming historic square and besides the absolutely to die for pies, the retired school teachers who whip up the creations from scratch and greet each customer at the door will make you delightfully happy. Next, head on over to Storiebook Cafe. Storie is the owner- and she's always there reading a book to children, chatting up the locals, or sliding on the wooden bookshelf ladder. She has basically created her own magical kingdom. I should know. I went there three days in a row! And finally, finish off your gluttonous day right. Hammonds BBQ. Just trust me.)

(side note to the side note: I am officially on a diet. I will not eat ribs and pie on the same day ever again. I promise.)

I've posted new pictures from my trips- you know, mostly of clouds and flowers and windmills and Annie- the normal random Jenny stuff! So if you are bored, feel free to browse and leave comments if you like what you see!

All you have to do is click here.

Or follow this link: http://www.flickr.com/photos/34136456@N08/

I have not forgotten about the music series; camps have just made it a bit hard to get my grown-up work done. So don't worry! I will answer every question that was submitted. Until then, enjoy the new pictures and the update on my homeless friend, Dexter.