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Home > Articles > Leader of the Band
Leader of the Band
How to develop a worship team.


Topics:Changes in worship, Teams, Vision, Volunteer recruitment, Worship, Worship planning, Worship service, Worship style
Filters:Church staff, Pastor, Worship, Worship leader
Purpose:Worship
References:Psalm 150
Date Added:July 11, 2007

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Posted: December 02, 2008
Chad  (Guest)
I found this article very 'in the box' of a very certain type of church. Paying musicians? Only certain congregations are able to do so. Don't be directive? What kind of advise is that? Sometimes worship requires a change in body position, sometimes we need to encourage people in the moment during a song with words, to lift their voice, to respond in some way. Read the article 'showtime' in the leadership section of this site. Its not about performance, its about the heart of God and the interaction of the people with the Holy.


Posted: December 02, 2008
Melanie  (Guest)
Wow! I can't believe that it is standard for you guys to pay musicians for their service in the house of God... I find that concept totally beyond belief... it is an honor to serve in the house of God... the idea that I would need to be paid to be compliant and interested is an alien concept here in Australia...


Posted: January 22, 2008
Eric O'Loughlin  (Registered User)
This was very helpful, thanks!


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I came to the ministry from a background in radio—for many years I played the hits. Lo and behold, Rockin' Randy winds up pastoring and forming worship bands in two different Presbyterian churches. God has a sense of humor.

It would take an entire issue of Leadership to detail the lame-brained mistakes I have made. Here's a distillation of what I have learned about worship team development.

What sound are you after?

Don't start putting a team together until you have a vision and "feel" for the sort of service you are going to develop. The first time I attempted the worship team enterprise, I was in a large, very traditional Presbyterian church. Our vision was to gently move the church toward new ways of worshiping. We wanted more singing than in a typical service and a wider range of songs, not just hymns.

We wanted a montage of songs strung together for an experiential worship event, not with a rock beat, a smoother sound like the music of Mariah Carey or Michael Bolton. The team we assembled was very "soft rock," keyboard driven, and pretty inviting to traditional church goers.

Several years later, I found myself planting a church in the heart of the arts community, in the city that birthed Jimi Hendrix, Heart, Pearl Jam, and Nirvana. Seattle's rock isn't for wimps!

In this setting our vision was to be much more "edgy." We wanted a lot of beat, a lot of drive, and pretty high volume. We desired 15 to 20 minutes of non-stop singing that ranged from the nearly-frenetic to the sublime. We wanted to include hymns, choruses, and praise music delivered by a guitar-driven band.

Get a vision. You need a predominant sound. Are you pop, hard rock, alternative, folk, R&B? You pick. But do pick. You can't do it all.

Players: some assembly required

With patience, you can assemble a team. Unless you live in Hollywood or Nashville, though, you'll have to pay, but you can do well with a team of "stipended" musicians ($25-$100 per week). Many musicians subsist by piecing together small gigs. Playing for free can be next to impossible. And I find that people with artistic temperaments are much easier to direct when they are paid than when they are not.

Musicians emit some strange hormonal scent that only they can pick up from each other

Advertise for talent in church bulletins, local music magazines, or newspapers. Here's a typical ad:
Innovative Protestant church forming a worship team. Must read charts. Need guitar, bass, keys, drums, vocals. Experience is good, passion and willingness to be a team player is better. Call Randy @ ________.

Get applications and begin interviewing. I look for those who are spiritually open, will take direction, and can play by ear and transpose on the fly. A band member must be a quick study.

Tall order? You bet. It takes time to build a team like this, but these criteria are essential, as you'll see. Now you're probably saying, "How do I know where they're at spiritually?"