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sufjan and death cab

Chris Ridgeway | 22 Sep 2005 | 10:24


So, I went to the Sufjan concert last Thursday night (awesome bad phone picture to right), and even though we’ve barely made it through week five of the semester, it was the best night of it. :)

It’s probably predictable with my personality that what I like best about concerts is the personal connection I feel to the artist. When I reflect on that, I always feel disappointment, because I know the connection I feel isn’t mutual: that’s how the stage works -> outward. But intimate identification via eyes, lyrics, unscheduled spontaneity… I tend to rate the experience not on the volume of the music, but of the exposed heart.

Ben Folds, for instance, was stunning – and even interactive and funny. But you got the feeling that he did this every night – the same jokes, the same routine.

That’s probably not fair. I imagine most artists do that.

Oh yeah, Sufjan. ;)

It’s just that: he pulled it off. Perhaps it’s partially do to his voice: he has it controlled to be soft and clear – in purposeful contrast to his sophisticated time signatures, dictionary lyrics, and multi-part melodic motifs. Even surrounded by his precision production, I felt, sitting on the house-right ledge in the Canopy Club, that he was giving us a fascinating and personal look at himself.

Between songs, Sufjan and his band jumped up and down like cheerleaders in orange and blue, executing planned cheers, but giggling as they did. It’s like the material still felt fresh to them – that they enjoyed it, even if the heat was getting to Sufjan later in the night as he wiped the sweat from his forehead between verses.

(Come Feel the) Illinoise is so fascinatingly crafted, it even gives long time musicians a chance to stop and absorb the scene. At times the eclectic layers make Radiohead look like a I-IV-V pop band. When the band launched into “The Tallest Man, the Broadest Shoulders” – Sufjan’s cheery electric guitar player clapped her hands above her head: *clap*… *clap clap* … *clap* … *clap clap*. She got instant participation from a fully invested crowd, but the time was so complicated, that most people couldn’t keep the clapping up when she returned to playing her guitar. It made me laugh at ourselves.

oh yeah, death cab. Ben me got tickets for Oct 13 at Foellinger. Nice.

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here’s to better blogging

Chris Ridgeway | 20 Sep 2005 | 02:32

Okay. It’s interesting how old the idea of blogging can seem to me, yet I still run into people (even my age), who don’t understand the word when I say it. Huh.

That aside, I still feel like I’m getting a handle on how to do this.

To that end, I’ve decided to have my blogs match my brain: split and confused at all times. I’ve re-purposed this blog to become my simple personal and ministry update area. News. Quick Thoughts. Pictures.

And I’ve added something new: tohaveminematch.blogspot.com

The “to have mine match” blog will carry the burden of my heavier abstractions on sin, grace, community, religiousity, and the escape from the evangelical church.

cool.

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Jumping into Katrina

Chris Ridgeway | 6 Sep 2005 | 04:14

We just spontaneously sent a crew of students down to assist with relief efforts in Baton Rouge. I wrote an announcement article for www.illinilife.org – check it out. This is really cool.

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Connections

  • Great Commision Ministries
  • Illini Life Christian Fellowship
  • Jesus Creed | Scot McKnight
  • JR Woodward
  • Life on the Vine
  • North Park Theological Seminary
  • The Ecclesia Network

Other Theo|Digital Thinkers

  • A.K.M. Adam
  • Read Schuchardt
  • Shane Hipps

Media Ecology

  • Marshall McLuhan
  • Media Ecology Association
  • Neil Postman
  • Walter Ong

Digital Culture

  • Facebook's Blog
  • Know Your Meme
  • Pew Internet
  • PreCentral
  • Seth Godin
  • TwitterFall

More

  • Clover Sites
  • Logos Bible Software Blog

Currently Reading

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theo|digital by Chris Ridgeway is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

About Me

Chris Ridgeway

Retro-identity idea:  define yourself by magazines.  Me?  Wired. Paste. Atlantic Monthly. Discipleship Journal. Or this:  For ten years I've worked as a leadership coach, spiritual director, and free agent missionary with Great Commission Ministries on its mission to reach the next generation—I currently serve as the national Staff Program Manager for GCM, helping train and equip church planters, campus missionaries , and other missional leaders.  My area of curiosity is the impact of an information society on Christian theology, especially a doctrine of scripture.  Does text messaging modify our view of the Trinity? Oh yeah, and I'm inexcusably addicted to breakfast diners.  New home base:  Orlando, FL. Home home:  Chicago-ish.

 

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