January 08 2009
Why should I consider using loops in my worship service?
Tagged Under : Ableton, apple, loops, music
I deal a lot with worship loops on this site as you may have noticed. More and more worship leaders are becoming interested in using loops but many still don’t see the point, think it’s too complicated or a waste of time, or don’t understand why anyone would use instruments that aren’t live. All of those are valid questions and I’d like to attempt to answer them. The purpose is not to convince everyone that they should use loops but rather to explain the idea, concept so you can make a more informed judgment on whether you should consider it.
Move in Creativity
Worship leaders need to push themselves, stretch and reach creatively. You’ve been blessed with a musical gifting, you’ve been called to lead a body in that art, you serve a creative God who is deserving of all praise and you have been appointed to reach the lost. The culture around you is moving creatively, music is not stagnant, if you stand still you make yourself increasingly irrelevant to the culture around you and isolated in your church bubble. The tension between leading a congregation and staying relevant to culture musically and reaching the lost is intense and we shouldn’t ever shy away from it.
It’s a challenge and balancing act we probably won’t ever get right, but we have to seek God in it and not just rely on where we feel comfortable.
Raise the level of musical excellence
Loops help raise the level of musical excellence in at least a few ways.
1. Repetition in arrangement
Now this might be a reason many don’t consider loops due to the thought of playing a song with a set in stone arrangement. First off if you use Ableton to play your loops you aren’t set in stone on the arrangement, you are more set in moldable clay. Secondly if you come from an environment where there’s a lot of spontaneous elements like sermonettes and random prayers and such in the middle of your set then you’ll have a harder time programming loops, it’s not impossible but much more difficult.
Playing with a set arrangement makes your band much tighter and actually allows for more creativity within the parts because there’s less to worry about in the overall song arrangement. Musicians know when you’re moving from verse to chorus, what gets repeated and what doesn’t, so your band spends less time staring at the worship leader wondering where to go next. Additionally not only will your band spend less time staring at the worship leader but so will your congregation. They will know where the song is going without you singing intros to each section or waving your arms and can worship with much less band distraction.
2. Instrumental and Tonal Diversity
The church has been accused of many things, but being musically diverse is not one of them. A problem all bands will face is how do we make this song fresh, we’ve played it a lot, people are tired of hearing it played like this so how can we breath life into it. There are things you can do arrangement wise of course or changing the tempo and overall feel that may work, but that ignores the greatest tool you have. Introducing new tones, sounds and textures does a lot more for reviving songs than any arrangement change could do.
Introducing these new instruments and sounds not only helps songs individually but also prevents sets from becoming monotonous tonally which causes tired ears. Tired ears occur in the congregation and band when your set has no tonal or instrumental diversity. The same frequencies are being hit continually and eventually people’s ears stop hearing what you’re actually playing, in other words they unintentionally tune you out.
Spending time programming loops allows you so much room in experimentation and creativity. You have an avenue to add texture and layers to your songs that you’d never be able to do with your live band configuration.
3. Playability
Your loops will be mistake free, have perfect pitch and perfect time. I don’t care how much your band practices you’ll never accomplish all 3 of those. This assumes you actually take the time in your loop programming to insure they are mistake free, you’re playing the correct notes and you are quantized.
There is an added risk layer and learning curve for those who don’t regularly play to a click however. You may find a lot of your past mistakes are now being exposed with a click or that your harmony you always sing is actually flat now that you have some accompaniment in the loop. There is also risk of computer melt down, but that’s why we only recommend Macs here.
Feedback
I hope those loop skeptics out there at least consider what I have to say here. I’d love feedback from skeptics and supporters of loops on any pros of loops that I’ve either misrepresented or missed. In a follow up post I list the cons of loops and why some shouldn’t consider introducing them. Have you considered using loops? Why or why not?







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Hey Kyle, thanks for this post, its something that I’ve been thinking about more and more recently. I guess my main hesitation has to do with the whole spontaneous prophetic aspect. I also can see what your saying about it being useful for the congregation to know the ‘roadmap’ for a song but have you found any sense in which this might add to people not engaging since they’ve “been there, done that” exactly the same way last week.
How easy/difficult do you find it to break out of the song/set when us loops? The way I understand it if you felt the Spirit leading in a certain direction at the end of a song then it would be just like any other time. But what about if you had a song and as you were preparing for that week you felt it would be good to jump from the chorus of one song straight into another, could that work and could you modify/join loops?
Since you’ve done both is there anything you feel that you lose from using loops?
Sorry for the barrage of questions but its something that really intrigues me. I look forward to the next post on what you see as the cons.
Barrie: These are all great questions. In fact so good that they deserve their own posts. So I’ll answer these in subsequent posts. Thanks for the great questions.
Great article, and timely for me- I’ve got the mac, I’ve got ableton, and I’ve been wanting for a long time to incorporate loops into our sets. Now I need some help/resources to show me how to get started creating these babies. Any resources you’d recommend?
I haven’t used actual loops from a computer (yet) but I have used the loop station on my DL4 pedal to loop effects in the back ground. I played the piano part of Our God Reigns and then looped it. I little tricky and you have to be spot on with your tap dancing, but it can add a lot to the overall sound. It can get a little weird at times and I have to be sure and reign it in (we’re not quite yet the church that would prefer a Radio-Head-esque type worship experience!)
check out http://www.loopcommunity.com
free loop resource for worship leaders.
"Share a Loop, Take a Loop"