Wednesday, May 7, 2008

The Beginning

It all started when pwarchive.com was asked to remove all its copyrighted praise and worship lyrics from their website. Although all of its content was still "preserved" and was still available through Google cache, there were larger issues at stake.
  • Copyrights and marketing surrounding praise and worship music today.
  • Church's "endorsement" and [legal/illegal] use of such material.
  • Musician's creative lyrical/musical work which results in "worship" songs, and his/her rightful claim and protection of that creative work/property.
  • The Christian popular culture/community's need/want/desire for such work [in worship gatherings].
These are difficult and sensitive topics to think about, discuss, or come to terms with. Nonetheless, this is the state of the world that we live in, and the nature of the "business". I looked around for answers and resources. There weren't much. I came across a book called "Selling Worship" by Pete Ward, and several websites featuring public domain hymns and worship songs.

Personally saddened at first, I stopped singing/using any copyrighted worship music in our worship service. Since 99.9% of all contemporary Christian worship music are copyrighted, I was left with the good old hymnal. We sang, Amazing Grace, Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing, It is Well With My Soul, and etc. I quickly came to terms with my (and our relatively young congregation's) limited familiarity with the hymns. And ironically, the hymns that we were familiar with were ones recently popularized by the musicians whose music we no longer sung due the copyright (rather my boycott of).

The boycott (my personal, which may or may not reflect the position of our church) lasted for about a good month and few weeks (we simply ran out of hymns that we knew!). At which point I double checked with our church administration about the current state of our CCLI account, which turned out that we had and were paying for, and went back to [legally] singing the ever so popular and familiar contemporary songs of worship.

I thought about different student organizations and small worship gatherings that may not have the luxury of church sponsored CCLI license. And the fact that when those students gather in their classrooms, project these copyrighted material, to sing and worship together, that there are forces at play such as copyright infringement, enforcement, licensing fees, and etc.

So here we are now. Something is definitely wrong with the state of affairs in worship music today. We cannot pinpoint it or blame anyone (or organization). Maybe it is combination of a lot of things. But one thing is certain. We need an alternative.

I have long been an advocate for Open Source Software (which requires a completely different blog to discuss). I am also very encouraged to see how well received Creative Commons license became, especially among the web community. It only made more and more sense that the alternative to commercially driven "worship" music should be Creative Commons licensed worship music.

It is my hope that this humble beginning can bear fruit, and that it may grow into a grassroots community movement in search for true worship. Worship that does not seek compensation. Worship not measured by record labels, album sales, and dollars. But genuine and authentic worship that springs from the community, resonates amongst us, and overflows to all those around us.

http://ccworshiparchive.googlepages.com/

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great idea! I'll try and throw some songs up when I get chance.

Neal Locke said...

Amen, Hallelujah, and THANK YOU for doing this -- I don't feel so incredibly alone anymore (actually, I was never quite that -- looks like you found Tim, too).

How do I add songs to the Google page? I've got several lead sheets I can throw up right now, and recordings will follow as soon as I can.

I've been a worship leader for many years now, but will be leaving this position to start seminary in a few months -- now that I won't be leading every Sunday, I'd like to do more to get something like this off the ground. Let me know what I can do to help.

This may be just the right inspiration for me to start writing more worship songs, too!

ccworshiparchive said...

Tim, Neal,

Thanks a lot for your interest and support!

We are currently utilizing Google's Page Creator (free service) to publish our website.

Eventually we wish to move to a real domain name (ccworshiparchive.org) and a hosting service, in order to create a user/community content management website -- i.e. wikipedia.

However, until then, you can share your work with us by:

1. Publish your work (lyrics/chords/records) in a public space (blog, facebook, myspace ... etc) and let us know where to find it.

2. Simply email us your work at ccworshiparchive@gmail.com

Anonymous said...

Here is one to get you going:
Jesus now Lives

Get ccHost from the Creative Commons site - it is what ccMixter runs on. I have it running on a test install and it is designed specifically for sharing CC works.

I was trying out this concept myself a while back, but have not got round to finishing it off.

I had installed CCHost here for the very same purpose you are trying to do here. But hadn't got round to buying the domain! Give it a go, but remember this is only a test site. I had put it on hold waiting for version 5 of CCHost.

Or build something with Drupal or WordPress. I'm surprised you are still building pages from scratch!

Anyway, if you would like help, I'd be willing to help make this work.

Thnurg said...

Thanks for this resource. I have added it to the list of unencumbered resources over at http://christiansagainstcopyright.org

Since you appear to have similar views to my own feel free to pop over to the site, join the debate and see if there is anything you can do to help.

Blessings,

Phil.

jared said...

Is this still active?

I have been working on something similar and came across CCWA by chance.