Thursday, May 31, 2007

Musicians Stage Jazz Funeral for Batiste

Musicians Stage Jazz Funeral for Batiste

The Associated Press
Saturday, May 12, 2007; 6:09 PM

NEW ORLEANS -- A white and black-clad band led a hearse carrying the body of clarinetist Alvin Batiste and hundreds of mourners attached themselves to the jazz funeral Saturday for one of the city's most revered musicians.

In the morning, crowds lined up to pay homage to the jazz pioneer, whose body was laid out in Gallier Hall, an elegant Greek Revival building in the heart of the financial district.

A jazz procession complete with grand marshals twirling umbrellas then poured into the street, where traffic backed up for blocks.

Batiste, who toured with Ray Charles and Cannonball Adderley, recorded with Branford Marsalis and taught pianist Henry Butler, died May 6 of an apparent heart attack, hours before he was to perform with Harry Connick Jr. and Marsalis at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. Though his age was not precisely known, festival officials said he was born in New Orleans in 1932.

Batiste was considered one of the founders of the modern jazz scene in the city. A longtime teacher at Southern University in Baton Rouge, he created the Batiste Jazz Institute _ one of the first programs of its kind in the nation _ and taught jazz at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts.

Although Batiste toured with Charles in 1958, he remained largely unknown until he recorded with Clarinet Summit in the 1980s. The quartet also included John Carter, David Murray, and Jimmy Hamilton.

Marsalis' record label released Batiste's latest CD, "Marsalis Music Honors Alvin Batiste," just a few weeks ago. Marsalis also played on the album.

Jennifer Jones leads a traditional jazz funeral procession for New Orleans jazz musician Alvin Batiste in New Orleans, Saturday, May 12, 2007. Batiste, toured with Ray Charles, recorded with Branford Marsalis, and taught pianist Henry Butler jazz. He died May 6, 2007 of a heart attack only hours before he was scheduled to play at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. (AP Photo/Bill Haber) (Bill Haber - AP)
Jennifer Jones leads a traditional jazz funeral procession for New Orleans jazz musician Alvin Batiste in New Orleans, Saturday, May 12, 2007.  Batiste, toured with Ray Charles,recorded with Branford Marsalis, and taught pianist Henry Butler jazz. He died May 6, 2007 of a heart attack only hours before he was scheduled to play at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. (AP Photo/Bill Haber)

Pastors to Write Holy Spirit Book from Baptist View

Pastors to Write Holy Spirit Book from Baptist View

By

Audrey Barrick
Christian Post Reporter
Fri, May. 25 2007 05:21 PM ETA couple of pastors in the Southern Baptist Convention plan to write a book to document the works of the Holy Spirit from a Baptist view.

"As I have participated in the debate between cessationists/semi-cessationists [who believe that all/some of the gifts of the Holy Spirit ceased with the early church] and continualists [who believe that all spiritual gifts have continually operated in church history], I have run into the argument that God is not performing miraculous signs and wonders today in the same way that He did in biblical times," Cross wrote in a recent e-mail to Oklahoma pastor Wade Burleson.

“It has been said,” Cross added later on his blog, DownshoreDrift.com, “that if we took the Holy Spirit out of many of our churches today, 90 percent of what we do would be left unchanged.

“That might be an exaggeration,” he wrote, “but it does speak to the fact that so much of what we do in our Christian lives are only the things that we do in our own power."

But Cross is convinced God wants to work in powerful ways and believes the works of the Holy Spirit are occurring today and even within the Southern Baptist Convention, where the majority of believers do not believe in or accept charismatic practices, and now wants to document them.

"I am wondering if a book or journal article on this continual miraculous work of the Holy Spirit among Southern Baptists in the areas of healings, miracles, divine intervention, guidance, and other Biblical manifestations would not be helpful to the body of Christ?" asked Cross in his letter to Burleson.

And it just isn't about speaking in tongues, the Alabama pastor pointed out. That is just one minor gift. The bigger issue for Cross is: "Does my life and ministry require God's power, or am I able to handle everything inmy own strength?"

Cross was one of the attendants of last month’s conference on the Holy Spirit at Cornerstone Baptist Church, which addressed charismatic, continualist, semi-cessationist, and cessationist viewpoints of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. The conference was hosted by McKissic to "educate people on the person of the Holy Spirit" amid debates within the Southern Baptist Convention over the subject.

Dr. Jimmy Draper, former president of LifeWay Christian Resources, says there's great confusion surrounding the doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit with some viewing it as a subsequent work of grace and others associating it with the gift of tongues, he said in a column featured on Baptist Press. But Draper says one thing is very clear today: "We need the Holy Spirit!"

"We need it and we need to understand it," he stated.

Cross is looking to collect some of the stories and Holy Spirit experiences of Southern Baptists around the world while protecting the identity of those who submit their stories.

The purpose of the book is not to "prove" something to the International Mission Board of Trustees, he clarified. IMB trustees currently bar missionary candidates who practice speaking in tongues and private prayer languages, although early this month, the trustees agreed to provide more flexibility by changing the "policies" to "guidelines."

“[T]he rest of us need to know what God is doing in people's lives as He continues to work miraculously to bring glory to Himself,” Cross stated.

“I really feel that these stories need to be told.”

Baptist Megachurch Prepares for Female Senior Pastor

Baptist Megachurch Prepares for Female Senior Pastor

By

Audrey Barrick
Christian Post Reporter
Wed, May. 30 2007 11:53 AM ET
A Baptist megachurch in Decatur, Ga., is preparing to take the rare step of calling a female pastor to lead its congregation.

First Baptist Church Decatur and its 2,696 members have been without a pastor for about a year. The search committee sought out to find a pastor young enough and mature enough to appeal to both young and old congregants, a dynamic speaker, and passionate and warm leader with a vision for the future of the church. On Sunday, the committee presented the Rev. Julie Pennington-Russell to the church.

The Decatur congregation reportedly reacted positively to the announcement of Pennington-Russell, who is scheduled to preach on June 17 when congregants plan to officially issue a call for her to become senior pastor of the church.

If Pennington-Russell is elected, FBC Decatur would be the largest woman-led Southern Baptist church, reported Pam Durso, a Baptist historian who serves as an officer with Baptist Women in Ministry, according to Associated Baptist Press. First Baptist is affiliated with Cooperative Baptist Fellowship – a moderate splinter group of the Southern Baptist Convention – but still maintains ties with the SBC.

"Calling Julie was definitely not about 'making a statement,'" one church leader told ABP. "Our committee and the deacon council really felt the leadership of the Holy Spirit as we navigated this decision-making process. And to have our entire congregation – minus five or six folks who are not happy about this – stand at the close of the service yesterday (Sunday) and applaud our committee was overwhelming to us."

The SBC's current confession of faith – The Baptist Faith and Message – limits the role of women from the pastorate. It states: "While both men and women are gifted for service in the church, the office of pastor is limited to men as qualified by Scripture."

Pennington-Russell has led Nineteenth Avenue Baptist Church in San Francisco in 1984-1992 and Calvary Baptist Church in Waco, Texas, since 1998 as pastor. She was faced by some protests during her leadership at the two churches, but accounts at Calvary have testified of growth while she was pastor, according to ABP.

"She is a good role model for any minister, male or female," stated one comment from an outside six-person panel knowledgeable in Baptist life today, according to First Baptist Church.

"This is a significant moment in the life of FBC Decatur. Julie is a perfect fit," said another comment by the panel.

The search committee studied some 64 candidates and devoted nearly 800 hours to find a successor to former head pastor Gary Parker. At the end of the process, the committee's selection was unanimous and it was "pleased" and "excited" to present Pennington-Russell to the congregation.

Christians Worldwide Unite on Prayer Day for Revival, Divine Intervention

Christians Worldwide Unite on Prayer Day for Revival, Divine Intervention

By

Jennifer Riley
Christian Post Reporter
Wed, May. 30 2007 02:28 PM ET
Organizers of seventh annual Global Day of Prayer say hundreds of millions of Christians in over 200 nations participated this past weekend in the collective prayer event on Pentecost Sunday.
Enlarge this Image
china global day of prayer
(Photo: AP /Chiang Ying-ying)
Taiwanese Christian gather to sing choral in the global day of prayer, Sunday, May 27, 2007, in Taipei, Taiwan

From the top of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to a broadcasted arena in downtown Dallas to packed churches in South Korea, Christians worldwide united to pray for global revival of the faith and intervention from God in global problems such as war, terrorism, poverty, natural disasters among other pressing issues.

“Prayer is that phenomenon that’s hard to explain,” said the Rev. Michael Jones of Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist Church in St. Louis, Mo., ahead of the GDOP gathering.

“It’s out of our hands. God intervenes, and things happen,” Jones told St. Louis’ North Side Journal. The Baptist pastor served as one of the coordinating board members of the St. Louis event.

GDOP began as a small gathering in a stadium in Cape Town, South Africa in 2000. It blossomed into 45,000 Christians meeting in a rugby stadium in Cape Town a year later.

Now more than 200 million people participate in over 200 countries, GDOP organizers report.

One of the featured events this year was the team that climbed to the top of Africa’s highest mountain, Mount Kilimanjaro, reaching the summit on Pentecost Sunday. GDOP founder Graham Power and 47 others made the trip where they planted a cross and prayed for repentance and revival on the summit, according to Charisma News.

Detailed statistics for this year’s Global Day of Prayer are still being assembled. But while GDOP organizers told The Christian Post that it currently is “absolutely impossible” to report how many people participated since only a tenth of the feedback from registered events have been received, they said they can safely say that hundreds of millions joined the annual prayer event.

Music Stardom Muddling Christian Girls' Faith

Music Stardom Muddling Christian Girls' Faith

By

Kevin Jackson
Christian Post Reporter
Wed, May. 30 2007 06:03 PM ETOver the past months, the faith of women celebrities in the secular music scene has been becoming more of an issue, coming from a variety of sources including friends, family, and the media.
Enlarge this Image
Lindsay Lohan accident
(Photo: AP / Jeff Christensen, file)
Actress Lindsay Lohan appears on stage during a taping of MTV's 'Total Request Live' show in this May 8, 2007, file photo in New York. Lohan 'admitted herself to an intensive medical rehabilitation facility' on Monday, May 28, 2007 according to a statement released by her publicist, Leslie Sloane Zelnick. According to her father, she just needs God back in her life.

The most recent example involved an accident with actor/singer Lindsay Lohan in Beverly Hills, Calif., leading to her arrest on charges of driving under the influence with possible cocaine on the scene.

Her father, Michael Lohan, responded to the incident with a plea towards God.

"When Lindsay puts God back in her life, things will turn around," explained the star’s dad in an interview with the Ledger. "Until then, I'll just keep praying."

It is not just Lohan’s faith that has been coming up, however, but several pop celebrities are being challenged. The question that many are asking is whether or not they are still a Christian.

In most cases, the problem is not a complete absence in belief in God. It seems that most celebrities are keeping their faith, just on a more personal and private level. Yet at the same time, they are taking on the values of the pop culture that surrounds them.

The result is a muddled belief that borders on religion but could not be completely be characterized as Christian.

Pop princess Britney Spears has littered the tabloids throughout this year, mostly in a negative way. She has had to deal with a second divorce, constant media slander, and even checked into a clinic to try to get her bearings straight.

But in the beginning, Spears initially entered the music scene as a pretty devout Christian. She was raised as a Southern Baptist in her home state of Mississippi, part of the Bible Belt, and began her fame with that as a foundation.

It seems through all the controversy that has happened, much of that background is still a part of her. Hollywood.tv reported her with the word “PUSH” tattooed onto her hand some weeks ago. The acronym stands for “pray until something happens” and is normally printed on necklaces and bands sold at Christian shops.

She also wrote a note on her official website in mid-May thanking all her fans for all their prayers.
"I am so blessed that you care enough about me to be concerned and will continue to live in this brighter state with all of you by my side during this trying time," said the songstress. "We are all the lights of the world and we all need to continually inspire others and look to the higher power. You are all in my prayers. Godspeed."
Ironically, this was written on top of a picture of her posing topless with her arms folded across her chest.

Another one of the many affected female singers is the generally wholesome Jessica Simpson.

The blonde Christian had actually intended to begin her profession in the late 90s in the Christian music scene, but later went into secular singing where she became a huge hit.

She too has had her share of controversies including a divorce with her former husband and singer Nick Lachey as well as serious criticism from a Christian group calling itself “The Resistance” after her scantily clad music video "These Boots are Made for Walking."

"It didn't really surprise me because I grew up with a lot of that backlash,” responded Simpson after the criticism. “That's why I didn't end up going into the Christian music industry. I think that if they're really good Christians the judgment wouldn't be there."

The list of stars with Christian roots goes on, and it is clear that the culture has a significant impact on their faith.

Most of the artists end up with a mix of Christian and secular ideals, which make it difficult for the girls to know their identity during their yearsof fame. Their mindset seems to shift often while inside the entertainment industry.

It is unclear where each of the pop idols will end up in the future, but it is a signal for upcoming Christian artists on what pitfalls to be wary of, if they are even possible to avoid.

Christian Phenom Claims 'American Idol' Crown

Christian Phenom Claims 'American Idol' Crown

By

Kevin Jackson
Christian Post Reporter
Thu, May. 24 2007 07:52 AM ET
Jordin Sparks, the 17-year-old Christian phenom from Glendale, Ariz., became the youngest “American Idol” champion following Wednesday night’s live results finale, showing that America preferred the “singer” more than the “entertainer.”
Enlarge this Image
Jordin Spark American Idol
(Photo: AP / Kevork Djansezian)
Jordin Sparks reacts to being announced the winner of American Idol as other finalists congratulate her during the finale of American Idol at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 23, 2007.

"I can't thank you [enough] for keeping me around and thank you so much for everything," explained the ecstatic Arizona teen after the vote was revealed.

Sparks and fellow “Idol” finalist Blake Lewis, 25, were both described by judges as having fairly even shots of winning, during the live two-hour climax. They had argued that Sparks was the stronger singer while Lewis was the better entertainer.

“What I love about this show is that it's American Idol: Search for the Next Superstar. It is a singing competition bar-none,” commented judge Randy Jackson, who seemed to favor Sparks this season, after her final performance of “This is My Now” Tuesday. “You were the best singer tonight. You deserve it all baby! That was fire right here! That's what it's all about! You are what it's about.”

Following her strong performances on Tuesday night, Sparks was given a slight edge by the judges over her Washington competitor. Each contestant performed three songs: onethey previously performed; one they had never performed; and a song chosen through “American Idol's” songwriting competition called "This is My Now."

Although Sparks started out the night a bit shaky, the GMA favorite began to pick up some steam as she moved into her second song of the night. All three judges praised her rendition of “A Broken Wing,” which she had performed earlier in the season during the Top 7 performance.

“I still believe you're probably the most talented 17-year-old singer I've ever seen,” commended Jackson. “I mean age ain't really got nothing to do with it. You've got to know tonight…You can blow. That was flawless. That was unbelievable. I think better than the original."

The Arizona teen seemed to seal her victory with her final performance, even swaying the “Idol’s” most frank judge, Simon Cowell.

"Jordin, last week, I'm going to be honest with you, I didn't think you were good enough to make the finals,” critiqued the British music mogul. “And I want to say to you publicly now, I was wrong. Because this is, in case we forget sometimes, it is a singing competition and you just wiped the floor with Blake on that song."

Cowell added that his thoughts Tuesday night — and likely those of many viewers — would be with arguably the best "American Idol" contestant yet to miss out on the finale, Melinda Doolittle.

"I'm pleased for the two of them," Cowell said of Sparks and Lewis. "They're nice kids. But I would have liked to have seen one of them up against the big singer."

Doolittle, like Sparks, had been followed the entire season and backed by the GMA and was consistently among the top vote-getters. Her vote-off last week came as a shock to many.

“Idol” ruled TV ratings throughout its entire season, making it clearly the most popular show in America this year.

A record 74 million votes were cast for this season’s finale.

The sixth season’s final show was littered with performances from some of the nation’s most recognizable stars, including Gwen Stefani, Green Day, Bette Midler, and Tony Bennett. All of the previous “Idol” champions, with the exception of Fantasia Barrino, graced the stages for their own presentations as well.

Report: Religious Books Had a 'Difficult Year'

Report: Religious Books Had a 'Difficult Year'

By

Kevin Jackson
Christian Post Reporter
Wed, May. 30 2007 08:39 AM ET
The Association of American Publishers (AAP), the national trade association of the U.S. book publishing industry, recently released its annual estimate of total book sales in the United States, and according to its findings, religious books had a “difficult year.”

The report, which reveals sales from 2006, marked a sharp 10.2 percent drop in religious books sales compared to the previous twelve months. The trend was one of the biggest decreases among all the book categories reported on by AAP.

According to AAP, the drop is not critical, however, since “compound growth is still strong at 7.5 percent per year.”

Coincidently alongside the sag in sales of religious books has been a rapid interest in atheist books over the past months. Books that had not sold that well in the past are now beginning to turn into purchases.

According to some critics, people in the United States are starting to resent the role religion has played in society.

"There is something like a change in the Zeitgeist," explained Christopher Hitchens, author of God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, in the Associated Press. "There are a lot of people, in this country in particular, who are fed up with endless lectures by bogus clerics and endless bullying."

Some Christians, however, say they see the rise in atheist literature as only a reaction to the rise of religious influence. Christianity is gaining more strength, with several victories gained throughout the year.

Examples include the growth of homeschooling and private Christian schools, limits put upon stem-cell research, and a ban on partial-birth abortions that occurred recently in the Supreme Court.

"It sort of dawned on the secular establishment that they might lose here," explained the Rev. Douglas Wilson, author of Letter from a Christian Citizen, in a debate on ChristianityToday.com. "All of this is happening precisely because there's a significant force that they have to deal with."

With the growth in the number of anti-religion books being sold, more are expected to come out on the market.

The report from AAP calculates its sales numbers by compiling data from the Bureau of the Census as well as sales data from “81 publishers inclusive of all major book publishing media market holders.” AAP estimated that U.S. publishers had net sales of $24.2 billion in 2006.

Religious books data were compiled in cooperation with statistics received from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) – an international non-profit trade organization of 260 member companies worldwide that “promotes excellence” among Christian publishers.

Bebe & Cece Winans Reunite for New Album after 13 Years

Bebe & Cece Winans Reunite for New Album after 13 Years

By

Kevin Jackson
Christian Post Reporter
Wed, May. 30 2007 05:07 PM ET
The groundbreaking gospel duo BeBe & CeCe Winans has announced that they will be reuniting for a new album after 13 years of solo careers.
Enlarge this Image
CeCe BeBe Winans Melinda Doolittle
(Photo: AP / Kevork Djansezian)
Melinda Doolittle hugs CeCe Winans after she performed 'Hold Up The Light,' during the finale of American Idol at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 23, 2007. CeCe has announced a reunion album with her brother BeBe (left) which plans to hit stores in the fall.

The multi-award winning brother-sister twosome, whose real names are Benjamin and Priscilla Winans, have plans to release their newest album in the upcoming fall to the delight of many gospel fans.

Since their split to pursue solo careers, they have only recorded twice together with the songs “What a Child” and “Tonight Tonight.”

"I'm very excited that the time has finally come for Bebe and I to reunite and encourage the world with uplifting, soul-changing music," expressed CeCe in Top40-Charts.com.

BeBe & CeCe Winans have made much history since they first began in 1982. They were the first African-Americans to receive a high amount of airplay on Contemporary Christian Music stations and were only the second black group to receive a Dove Award.

They have had much crossover success, scoring a couple of No. 1 singles in the R&B genre as well as being the first gospel artists to have a No. 1 record on Billboard charts with their 1988 release Heaven.

The two have racked up an impressive number of awards including five Grammys, eight Dove Awards, and over a dozen Stellar Awards as well as three gold and one platinum albums.

The two plan on building off their booming past.

"I'm so grateful of Bebe & Cece's past accomplishments,” added BeBe. “But I'm so excited about coming back together and blazing new trails of hope into the hearts of people all around the world."

Besides their time together, the two have gone onto successful solo careers. BeBe released many winning solo projects, did some work as a producer, and also appeared on stage and in film. CeCe, among other things, has gone on to release seven gold and platinum albums.

The two were most recently seen reunited with Melinda Doolittle, their former backup singer, in the “American Idol” finale last Wednesday when they performed “Hold Up the Light.”

The two are also part of a huge family from Detroit who are all gospel singers. They were the seventh and eighth Winans children in birth order.

More information regarding the CD will be released in the upcoming months.

Botswana: 'Artists Against Aids' Say It Loud And Clear

Botswana: 'Artists Against Aids' Say It Loud And Clear


Chippa Legodimo

On Saturday South African disco king Dan Tshanda put his guitar and piano aside, away from the studio microphones and took time to share his views on HIV and AIDS. He was among "Artists against AIDS" who converged on River Walk mall on Saturday to spread the gospel of safe sex, good care and tolerance.

But unlike the other artistes who churned out hits to the masses, the man popularly known as the 'Hit Machine', was only there as a motivational speaker, to talk about the problem of HIV and AIDS. "I love Batswana very much and I know they also love me and would not like to see anything getting between us and if we are not careful AIDS will separate us. But you and I can prevent that by making sure we only engage in safe sex."

 

The 45-year-old reminded the audience that he has always tried, through his music, to educate and warn people about the dangers of AIDS.

"It is not the first time I have touched on this issue. There is an album I produced for Matshikos some years back called Watch Out. The title track is a warning to all my fans to guard against contracting this deadly disease which has made our lives miserable," Tshanda said.

Tshanda also encouraged people to test for HIV so they would make informed choices and get help if necessary. He was scheduled to test in public on Saturday, but the test was postponed. He then pledged P5, 000 to those who would test with him on that day and more than 20 people registered.

"I have tested before and I know my status but I am challenging you now to test with me again. There is no reason for us to get scared because testing and knowing your status is the only way forward and the good thing is that you do not have to disclose your status to everybody you meet," he said.

Nosy Road, which has been missing from action for quite a long time returned at River Walk with a bang, giving rock'n roll fans a rousing performance. Another big giant at the event was Soccer Moruakgomo.

Tshanda and his Dalom family, which includes, Patricia Majalisa, Don B, Sabelo, Dalom Kids and Matshikos will be in the country next week end for the launch of Splash latest offering Springbok.

On Friday, the groups will entertain their legion of fans in Molapowabojang and proceed to Karibu Tena at the Tlokweng border gate for another show.

It will be the first time for Splash to officially launch their album in Botswana despite the fact that they enjoy massive support here. Tshanda explained that this was due to public demand.

"Because a lot of musicians launch their albums here people have been persisting that we do the same. For me to stage a show is expensive but I respect my fans who have supported me all these years, which is why we decided to do it. However, I am not sure if we will be able to do it everytime we release an album because I have so many groups under my stable," he said.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Stay in your Lane

 

 

Stay in your Lane

 

 

 

Your Windshield Size

Look at the size of your Windshield

 

Look at the size of your Windshield

 

Now...Look at the size of your rear view mirror

 

 

Look at the size of your rear view mirror

 

 

The size of your rear view mirror pales in comparison to the size of your windshield size.

 

Your past looms smaller than your Future....

 

 

The view from your rear view mirror

Rear View Mirror

 

"Objects in the rear view mirror are closer than they appear", is a warning that often appears on rear-view mirrors in cars and refers to the optical distortion that drivers need to take into account in order to drive safely.

 

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

One day God sent an Email LOL

One day God sent an angel to earth to really find out how things were really going.
 
The angel came back and said "Not too good. 
 
95% of all of your children are really misbehaving badly. 
 
And only 5% are really truly righteous souls.
 
So, in this electronic age, God decided to send an email to all those who were truly righteous souls on the right path......
 
Know what the email said?
 
Didn't think so.
 
I didn't get one either.
 

Monday, May 28, 2007

The Golden Hour

Guiding the Attitude of Your Day
Dan Miller

Henry Ward Beecher said, “The first hour is the rudder of the day -- cBe very careful how you start your morning.  You are planting the seeds for what the day will hold.  If you get up late, grab a cheap cup of coffee and a cigarette, rush to work fuming at the idiots in traffic, and drop down exhausted at your desk at 8:10, you have set the tone for your day.  Everything will seem like pressure and your best efforts will be greatly diluted.

However, if you get up leisurely after a completely restful night’s sleep, you can choose a different beginning.  I have not used an alarm clock for the last 25 years, because I go to bed at a reasonable time and have clearly in my mind when I want to start the next day.  I get up, spend 30 minutes in meditative and devotional reading, and then go to my workout area.  While working out physically, I take advantage of my extensive tape library, so that I fill that 45 minutes with physical exertion combined with mental input and expansion.  The motivation of Earl Nightingale, Zig Ziglar, Brian Tracy, Kenneth Blanchard, Jay Abraham, and Denis Waitely, the philosophy of Aristotle and Plato, the theology of Robert Schuller, Dietrick Bonhoeffer, and John Maxwell are the first input into my brain each morning.

"Consult not your fears but your hopes and your dreams. Think not about your frustrations, but about your unfulfilled potential. Concern yourself not with what you tried and failed in, but with what it is still possible for you to do." -  Pope John XXIII

I never read the paper first thing in the morning, no matter how important it may seem to know the news.  The news is filled with rape, murder, pestilence, and heartache, and that is not the input I want in my brain.  Later in the day, I can scan the news for anything related to my areas of interest and quickly sort through what I need.  But I carefully protect that first hour of the day, making sure that all input is positive, clean, pure, creative and inspirational.  Many of my most creative ideas have come from this protected time of the day, often when I am in a full sweat.  By 9:00 AM I am invigorated, motivated and ready to face anything the day may bring.

Just remember this important thought, “The first hour is the rudder of the day.”

From the Bible:

“Listen to my words, Lord; consider my sighing.  Pay attention to the sound of my cry, my King and my God, for I pray to You.  At daybreak, Lord, You hear my voice; at daybreak I plead my case to You and watch expectantly.”   Psalm 5: 1-3 (HCSB)

Direction for Today:

What can you do today to set the direction in a positive way?  

Dan Miller is President of The Business Source, founder of "48 Days" and author of 48 Days To The Work You Love and 48 Days To Creative Income. He is the growing authority for creating effective life plans that are achieved by integrating natural gifts, unique personality traits and one's own values and passions. His unique clarification of how God gifts us will introduce you to a new sense of freedom and fulfillment of your life's calling. For more information, visit http://www.48days.com/.

Plunge in CD Sales Shakes Up Big Labels

Plunge in CD Sales Shakes Up Big Labels
 
By JEFF LEEDS
Published: May 28, 2007

“Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” the Beatles album often cited as the greatest pop recording in music history, received a thoroughly modern 40th-anniversary salute last week when singers on “American Idol” belted out their own versions of its songs live on the show’s season finale.

But off stage, in a sign of the recording industry’s declining fortunes, shareholders of EMI, the music conglomerate that markets “Sgt. Pepper” and a vast trove of other recordings, were weighing a plan to sell the company as its financial performance was weakening.

It’s a maddening juxtaposition for more than one top record-label executive. Music may still be a big force in pop culture — from “Idol” to the iPod — but the music business’s own comeback attempt is falling flat.

Even pop’s pioneers are rethinking their approach. As it happens, one of the performers on “Sgt. Pepper,” Paul McCartney, is releasing a new album on June 5. But Mr. McCartney is not betting on the traditional record-label methods: He elected to sidestep EMI, his longtime home, and release the album through a new arrangement with Starbucks.

It’s too soon to tell if Starbucks’ new label (a partnership with the established Concord label) will have much success in marketing CDs. But not many other players are.

Despite costly efforts to build buzz around new talent and thwart piracy, CD sales have plunged more than 20 percent this year, far outweighing any gains made by digital sales at iTunes and similar services. Aram Sinnreich, a media industry consultant at Radar Research in Los Angeles, said the CD format, introduced in the United States 24 years ago, is in its death throes. “Everyone in the industry thinks of this Christmas as the last big holiday season for CD sales,” Mr. Sinnreich said, “and then everything goes kaput.”

It’s been four years since the last big shuffle in ownership of the major record labels. But now, with the sales plunge dimming hopes for a recovery any time soon, there is a new game of corporate musical chairs afoot that could shake up the industry hierarchy.

Under the deal that awaits shareholder approval, London-based EMI agreed last week to be purchased for more than $4.7 billion by a private equity investor, Terra Firma Capital Partners, whose diverse holdings include a European waste-conversion business. Rival bids could yet surface — though the higher the ultimate price, the more pressure the owners will face to make dramatic cuts or sell the company in pieces in order to recoup their investment.

For the companies that choose to plow ahead, the question is how to weather the worsening storm. One answer: diversify into businesses that do not rely directly on CD sales or downloads. The biggest one is music publishing, which represents songwriters (who may or may not also be performers) and earns money when their songs are used in TV commercials, video games or other media. Universal Music Group, already the biggest label, became the world’s biggest music publisher on Friday after closing its purchase of BMG Music, publisher of songs by artists like Keane, for more than $2 billion.

Now both Universal and Warner Music Group are said to be kicking the tires of Sanctuary, an independent British music and artist management company whose roster includes Iron Maiden and Elton John. The owners of all four of the major record companies also recently have chewed over deals to diversify into merchandise sales, concert tickets, advertising and other fields that are not part of their traditional business.

Even as the industry tries to branch out, though, there is no promise of an answer to a potentially more profound predicament: a creative drought and a corresponding lack of artists who ignite consumers’ interest in buying music. Sales of rap, which had provided the industry with a lifeboat in recent years, fell far more than the overall market last year with a drop of almost 21 percent, according to Nielsen SoundScan. (And the marquee star 50 Cent just delayed his forthcoming album, “Curtis.”)

In other genres the picture is not much brighter. Fans do still turn out (at least initially) for artists that have managed to build loyal followings. The biggest debut of the year came just last week from the rock band Linkin Park, whose third studio album, “Minutes to Midnight,” sold an estimated 623,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan data.

But very few albums have gained traction. And that is compounded by the industry’s core structural problem: Its main product is widely available free. More than half of all music acquired by fans last year came from unpaid sources including Internet file sharing and CD burning, according to the market research company NPD Group. The “social” ripping and burning of CDs among friends — which takes place offline and almost entirely out of reach of industry policing efforts — accounted for 37 percent of all music consumption, more than file-sharing, NPD said.

The industry had long pinned its hopes on making up some of the business lost to piracy with licensed digital sales. But those prospects have dimmed as the rapid CD decline has overshadowed the rise in sales at services like Apple’s iTunes. Even as music executives fret that iTunes has not generated enough sales, though, they gripe that it unfairly dominates the sale of digital music.

Partly out of frustration with Apple, some of the music companies have been slowly retreating from their longtime insistence on selling music online with digital locks that prevent unlimited copying. Their aim is to sell more music that can be played on Apple’s wildly popular iPod device, which is not compatible with the protection software used by most other digital music services. EMI led the reversal, striking a deal with Apple to offer its music catalog in the unrestricted MP3 format.

Some music executives say that dropping copy-restriction software, also known as digital-rights management, would stoke business at iTunes’ competitors and generate a surge in sales. Others predict it would have little impact, though they add that the labels squandered years on failed attempts to restrict digital music instead of converting more fans into paying consumers.

“They were so slow to react, and let things get totally out of hand,” said Russ Crupnick, a senior entertainment industry analyst at NPD, the research company. “They just missed the boat.”

Perhaps there is little to lose, then, in experimentation. Mr. McCartney, for example, may not have made it to the “American Idol” finale, but he too is employing thoroughly modern techniques to reach his audience.

Starbucks will be selling his album “Memory Almost Full” through regular music retail shops but will also be playing it repeatedly in thousands of its coffee shops in more than two dozen countries on the day of release. And the first music video from the new album had it premiere on YouTube. Mr. McCartney, in announcing his deal with Starbucks, described his rationale simply: “It’s a new world.”

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Lemon Meringue Pie while you are Waiting?

 What do yo do while you are Waiting?

 Build a Barn!

The waiting period between Gods promises and His fulfillment is filled with great anticipation. If anticipation were not an invention, we would have to invent a word that would signify the souls longing and future tense.

What to do while you are Waiting? Maintain, preserve and repair the barns that God gave you. Anyone can kick down a barn but it takes a good carpenter to build one

What to do while you are Waiting? Maintain, preserve and repair the barns that God gave you. John 14:2 (King James Version) In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.  John 14:2 (The Message)1-4 "Don't let this throw you. You trust God, don't you? Trust me. There is plenty of room for you in my Father's home. If that weren't so, would I have told you that I'm on my way to get a room ready for you? And if I'm on my way to get your room ready, I'll come back and get you so you can live where I live. And you already know the road I'm taking."

  • Your barns must be repaired because the barn may be the habitation for another sojourner

  • A Barn forecast and anticipates the mansion house.

  • Your barns must be repaired because your threshing floor is in the Barn Ruth 3

  • Your barns must be repaired because it is the birthplace of Prophet Priest, King- Jesus

  • Your barns must be repaired because your Ruth awaits you. read Ruth

  • Your barns must be repaired because the Wiseman will visit the barn

  • Your barns must be repaired because the barn contain the threshing floor

  • Your delay increases the enjoyment of your new dwelling

  • Your delay heightens the joy of the new barn owners

  • Rehabilitated barns may serve the same uses for generations

  • A barn will house the prophet to come

  • A barn foretells the mansion house

  • A barn houses the tithe

  • The barn must be repaired because your helpmate will seek a covering in the barn Ruth 3:14

Easton's Bible Dictionary Barn [N] a storehouse (Deuteronomy 28:8; Job 39:12; Haggai 2:19) for grain, which was usually under ground, although also sometimes above ground (Luke 12:18). Easton's Bible Dictionary Manger [N] [S] (Luke 2:7,12,16), the name (Gr. phatne, rendered "stall" in Luke 13:15) given to the place where the infant Redeemer was laid. It seems to have been a stall or crib for feeding cattle. Stables and mangers in our modern sense were in ancient times unknown in the East. The word here properly denotes "the ledge or projection in the end of the room used as a stall on which the hay or other food of the animals of travellers was placed."

 What to do While you are Waiting? Build a Barn! I anticipate the raising of my barns like I anticipate lemon Meringue Pie. I love lemon Meringue Pie. It was 2 of the calendar years great childhood holiday anticipated delight.

I love the  snow capped meringue of the lemon desert-lemon pie. The meringue of the pie is like life. It is like the steeple a church. The Steeple and snow capped meringue are an archetype of an heavenly experience.  Steeple and snow capped meringue pinnacle of an existential delight.

The meringue obscures the lemon filling. The meringue defers the anticipated filling. The meringue delays the hope for lemon filling. The nature of the pie is hidden by the meringue.

We also purchase a pie pan in order to make a lemon pie. The pie pan hangs in the pantry.  The pie pan can not produce a lemon pie. The pie pan contours the crust and holding the filling of life.

 

 

 

 
Classic lemon Pie

Lemon Filling:
1 1/4 cups sugar
1/3 cup cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cups tepid water
4 large egg yolks
1/4 cup freshlemon juice
2 tablespoons finely grated lemon zest
2 tablespoons unsalted butter

Meringue:
5 large egg whites
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup sugar

preparation

1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Prepare the crust as directed through Step 3 in the Classic Pie Crust recipe to fit a 9-inch pie plate. Prick the crust all over with a fork, then line with foil and fill with dried beans or pie weights. Bake the crust in the center of the oven until very light golden, about 8 minutes. Remove the foil and beans or pie weights; bake until light golden, 5 minutes more. Cool on a rack. Raise oven temperature to 400°F.

2. Prepare the filling: Combine the sugar, cornstarch and salt in a saucepan. Slowly add the water, stirring until smooth. Place over medium heat and bring to a gentle boil, stirring constantly. Boil to thicken, about 1 minute; remove from the heat.

3. Whisk the egg yolks in a bowl. Whisking constantly, slowly pour about 1/4 cup of the hot sugar mixture into the yolks. Slowly pour the egg mixture back into the saucepan, whisking until smooth. Stir in the lemon juice, zest, and butter, then return the pan to the heat. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly, and boil to thicken for 1 minute; remove from the heat. Pour the filling into the prepared pie crust.

4. Prepare the meringue: Place the egg whites, cream of tartar, and salt in a large bowl. Beat with an electric mixer at low speed until soft peaks begin to form. Increase the speed to medium and add the sugar, a tablespoon at a time, beating just until stiff peaks form. Do not overbeat.

5. Spoon the meringue over the filling decoratively, mounding it in the center and spreading it all the way to the outer edge, so it touches the crust.

6. Bake the pie in the center of the oven until the meringue is lightly browned on the edges, about 5 to 7 minutes. Do not allow the meringue to overcolor. Cool the pie on a rack. Refrigerate at least 3 hours before serving.

While the "plebeians" throw tomatoes at you...

   
   

July Music

Summer Music Preview For Eclectic Tastes New And Old Artists Who Figure To Make A Splash In Summer '07 Updated:  Summer Music Preview For Eclectic Tastes
Bill Flanagan takes a look at a diverse group of musicians who are set to leave their mark on the Summer of 2007, from rock and R&B to classical.  More...
Musician Regine Chassagne from the band Arcade Fire performs during day two of the Coachella Music Festival held at the Empire Polo Field on April 28, 2007 in Indio, California.  (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)



(CBS) Summer is back — It had to happen eventually. Music always sounds better with the top down so let's load up the CD player and hit the road.

The hot new rock band this summer is Arcade Fire, a musical collective from Montreal who combine the urgent, this-is-all-too-much-for-me vocals of the Talking Heads with big anthemic rock in the Springsteen/U2 tradition. You would think those two things would not work together, but they do. Singer Win Butler rides those grand tunes like a little guy full of big ideas. Arcade Fire prove that even intellectuals like to get roused once in a while.

I suspect that the album I will play the most this summer is Sky Blue Sky by Wilco. This is wide-open folk-rock with echoes of The Band, Neil Young and all the other music I reach for when I get out of the city and up into the woods and lakes. Sky Blue Sky sounds like how I hope the Summer of 2007 will be: Joyful, easy-going and serene.

Amy Winehouse is a soul singer from England who combines the big hair and bad girl attitude of the Ronettes with a vintage R&B vocabulary that might remind you of Martha and the Vandellas. You've probably already heard her hit, "Rehab" ("They tried to make me go to rehab, I said, 'No, No, No'"). That's what I call bad girl attitude. Amy Winehouse songs are to be played loud while driving slowly through the parking lot of the burger joint.

Speaking of soul, Alice Smith is a name you should write down. She's clearly a child of the 21st century, but her voice will remind you of great seventies R&B singers, and her arrangements veer between Isaac Hayes and the Beatles. She's got a song about getting out of New York City and heading up to Woodstock that will make you believe that she's equally at home in the city with the hip-hoppers or in the country with the hippies. If someone told me that Alice Smith was the secret daughter of Sly Stone I would not be surprised at all.

Now, I know that we have some sophisticates in our audience. Some of you don't want to hear about rock bands, soul singers or cruising the burger joint. Some of you want to spend the summer sipping wine and reading poetry on the deck of a villa overlooking the ocean. Do I have some music for you?

I do, and some of it's even in French! "Welcome To The Voice" is a new classical piece — oh, I might as well admit it, it's an opera with libretto by the French writer Muriel Teodori and music by Steve Nieve, best known to the hoi polloi as the brilliant pianist in Elvis Costello & the Attractions. It's a piece about the clash between high culture and low, the upper class and the workers, and Nieve has very cleverly cast legit opera singers such as Barbara Bonney and Amanda Roocroft as the Sacred Voices, and rock singers like Costello and Sting as the "Profane Voices." It's a conceit worthy of Bertold Brecht and it really works. If this Police reunion doesn't pan out, Sting has a future in a Viking helmet. Whether you come in through the front door of serious music or the servant's entrance of pop, "Welcome To The Voice" will make you feel welcome at the party.

Finally, I want to tell you about a new country singer named Elizabeth Cook who has Tammy Wynette's eye for domestic detail in her lyrics and Dolly Parton's high mountain breeze in her voice. Her new album is a real breath of fresh air but there has been some argument here about whether we can say the record's name on Sunday Morning.

Here's a clue. This summer I'll be watching the Red Sox play base____. When we go to the shore we blow up an inflatable beach ____. Cinderella lost her shoe at the ____.

You get the idea.

Elizabeth Cook's new album title is the plural form of a word that means a sphere. She says that's what it takes to be a woman. Tammy would have just spelled it out.
Musician Regine Chassagne from the band Arcade Fire performs during day two of the Coachella Music Festival held at the Empire Polo Field on April 28, 2007 in Indio, California.  (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Here's wishing you no flat tires in heavy traffic, that everybody remembers to use sun screen, and that nothing flies off the roof of the car on the way to the cabin.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Say Amen, Everybody, 15 Years Down the Line

Say Amen, Everybody, 15 Years Down the Line
Hiroyuki Ito for The New York Times

From left, Wycliffe Gordon, Reginald Veal and Wynton Marsalis performing “In This House, on This Morning.”

Published: May 26, 2007

When Wynton Marsalis unveiled his sanctified long-form composition “In This House, on This Morning” 15 years ago, it marked a breakthrough for him as well as for Jazz at Lincoln Center, where he had recently begun his tenure as artistic director. So it might be tempting to view the piece’s revival this week as an act of misty nostalgia, the equivalent of dusting off a scrapbook, or a treasured hymnal, and gingerly turning pages.

Maybe it does serve that purpose on some level. But there were much greater rewards on Thursday night, as Mr. Marsalis and his reunited septet performed the first of three season-closing concerts at the Rose Theater. Their interpretation of the work was more than authoritative: It was much stronger and clearer than the original recording (a double album, issued in 1994) and performance (as documented on a DVD released last year).

Building on the bedrock of spirituals, blues and swing, with a structure borrowed from the gospel church, “In This House” advances a traditional ideal of African-American cultural expression. But it also reflects ambitions and techniques traceable to post-bop and other relatively recent strains of jazz. It’s a decidedly contemporary work, with a twitchy sensibility that might almost be described as postmodern.

As before, “Devotional,” the overture, began with a single melodic line played by Wess Anderson on soprano saxophone. Its first four notes were familiar — Leonard Bernstein employed a similar phrase in “Somewhere,” from “West Side Story” — but then came a piercing, upward-swooping cry. The phrase proved to be a motif, resurfacing in a movement titled “Altar Call (Introspection),” and again as a rumbling piano allusion in “Holy Ghost.” (The pianist, Richard Johnson, was the only member of the band not to appear in the original concert and recording, and he filled the post admirably.)

Collectivism is a major point of the piece, but there’s ample space for individual statements, both notated and improvised. Mr. Marsalis played a muezzinlike trumpet part early on, in “Call to Prayer.” The tenor saxophonist Todd Williams devised a strong succession of blues choruses on “Introspection.” The trombonist Wycliffe Gordon delivered several rousing solos, notably on an up-tempo gospel stomp called “Invocation.”

That movement offered an almost literal appropriation of church music, and served as a pinnacle of the concert. After Mr. Gordon’s blaring testimony, Mr. Marsalis offered his own, fanning a bowler-hat mute over the bell of his horn. He sat on one note for a while before nudging the band up a step, and then another, echoing a heavenward climb. It was no surprise that the audience leapt to its feet when the tune came crashing home.

Vocals provided some of the other highlights, including a sermon of sorts by the bassist Reginald Veal. One spine-tingling movement had a guest, Melonie Daniels, singing a prayer in her impeccably controlled alto, undaunted by some oblique intervals.

“In This House” felt a bit lopsided with the two intermissions Mr. Marsalis has newly imposed. (The first part stopped too soon, and the third part stretched too long.) Still, it’s a powerful success: as a suite, as a statement and as an illustration of where Mr. Marsalis and his organization are coming from, and just how far they have come.

“In This House, on This Morning” will be performed again tonight at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center, 60th Street and Broadway; (212) 721-6500, jalc.org.

Fortifi@ Recent Entries 2007 05/26/07

Nahum 3:14

Draw thee waters for the siege, fortify thy strong holds: go into clay, and tread the morter, make strong the brickkiln.

 

Fortifi@

Recent Entries 2007

 

The purpose of Fortifi@ is to betray a certain poverty, callousness and fortify the feebleness of imagination.

 

Nahum 3:14

Store up water for the siege.
   Shore up your defenses.
Get down to basics: Work the clay
   and make bricks.

 

 

We fortify in paper and in figures, Using the names of men instead of men, Like one that draws the model of an house Beyond his power to build”

 

 

 

   

Fortifi@ Entries 2006

2006 Review

 

Music Ministry Revival part136

 
 

 

 

Music Ministry Revival part136

I (We) prophesy to the 4 winds of the heavens. Revival Angels come into the Music Ministry. Come,  Spirit of Music Ministry Revival. The Spirit of awakening come.  Come, Music Ministry Revival, Music Ministry harvest angels come. Music Ministry...angels of revival come... awaken Lord. Send your glory. Send your glory... send your glory and change the atmosphere in the Music Ministry. Fire of God come. Light of God come. Go forth Light of God. Breathe ... wind of God, breathe into the Music Ministry, now in Jesus name. 

 The Music Ministry Revival has arrived. Revival has come. The Lord has made an appearance in the Music Neighborhood. When God makes an appearance in the Music Neighborhood the region is subject to His correction.  The correction is called a Music Quake.

Musicquake occurs when God makes an appearance in the Music neighborhood. Musicquake \'myĆ¼-zik-kwayk\ noun: a Sovereign shift in the science or art of ordering tones or sounds in succession, in combination, and in temporal relationships to produce a composition having Divine unity and continuity.

 

 

The Music Neighborhood is experiencing a shift. In the recording studios of Los Angeles and the boardrooms of New York, they say the record business has been hit by a perfect storm: a convergence of industry-wide consolidation, Internet theft, and artistic drought. The effect has been the loss of billions of dollars, thousands of jobs, and that indefinable quality that once characterized American pop music...Click here: frontline: the way the music died: watch the full program online | PBS.

The Music Neighborhood is experiencing a generational shift. Click here: 21 Under 21 -- Today's Hottest Young Musical Talents - AOL Music  Their is a music  Electronic revolution which have hastened the demolition of the Music Industrial complex. The "grandfathers of music" are in transition. New faces in the music Industry and are emerging. Suggestive music images and bad language are under scrutiny.

Gods appearance in the neighborhood gives the region hope for a safe music zone, and an creative environment that drives music business.  If the Music neighborhood rejects Jesus, the arm of music industrial complex will become their thorns.

The Music Ministry Revival will sink or swim based on its teamwork. Could teamwork among the Music Ministry solve:

  • The music Ministry assignment The Music Cosmos
  • World Hunger
  • A common agenda for Music Ministry Convention-leaders
  • Lower the increasing divorce rate among Music Ministry couples in their 40s, 50s, 60s and even the 70s
  • Music Ministry and AIDS and drug dependency
  • Control, Distribute , Produce CD for the general Music Ministry
  • Sexism, classism, racism in the Music Ministry
  • Affordable Senior Housing for the Music Ministry
  • Music Ministry pension funds
  • Retooling the the Music Ministry from Industrial Pipe Organ, organic Piano to electronic instruments
  • Institute Remedial music education program for the Music Ministry
  • Updating resume service for the Music Ministry who is out of work
  • Redeem rap music into Christ-centric rap Music

 

Friday, May 25, 2007

Instant Star, Just Add Hype

Instant Star, Just Add Hype
By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: May 25, 2007

America voted and the new American idol is the dewy-eyed Jordin Sparks. A 17-year-old girl with a big voice and a melting smile, she sings more from the adolescent heart than from the grown-up head.

Skip to next paragraph
Fred Prouser/Reuters

Jordin Sparks, winner of the sixth “American Idol” contest.

My grown-up heart was broken. I was rooting for Melinda Doolittle, the phenomenally gifted, stylistically adroit 29-year-old former backup singer from Tennessee who was voted off last week. A Gladys Knight-Tina Turner hybrid, she brings a compelling honesty to every phrase she sings.

But I wasn’t fooling myself. What chance did a humble, not as pretty 29-year-old woman have against a radiant but artistically undeveloped teenager?

My only consolation is that Ms. Doolittle will not be forgotten. As Chris Daughtry and Jennifer Hudson have shown, there are multiplatinum records and even Oscars in the future of a worthy also-ran.

As for this year’s runner-up, Blake Lewis, he deserves credit for bringing a rare taste of hip-hop into the show.

As he exchanged beat-box clicks with Doug E. Fresh on Wednesday’s two-hour season finale, I detected the beginnings a dialogue between “American Idol” and rap: beginnings that, I fear, given the show’s conservative, middle-of-the-road aesthetics, may lead nowhere.

Like many “American Idol” devotees, I have a love-hate relationship with the show, which is often inspiring and infuriating at the same time. In Wednesday’s blowout it was apparent how tight its co-dependent grip has become on an increasingly desperate record industry. What other phenomenon has minted so many instant pop superstars? Its commercial impact recalls Elvis’s teenage-idol phase, Beatlemania and the heyday of Motown.

The appearance this year of performers like Bono, Madonna, Annie Lennox, Green Day and Gwen Stefani, who in earlier seasons would probably have given “American Idol” a wide berth, lent the show a hip imprimatur. No one dares shun “American Idol”; the mass exposure it affords is irresistible. As a pop marketing tool, it’s bigger than “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”

To cheer or to boo: that is the question. The show’s charity fund-raiser, “Idol Gives Back,” was a noble idea carried out with the heavy-handed touch of a bad Disney movie. As the judges were photographed cuddling poor African children, some of whom were shown weeping a single tear positioned like a glycerine prop, the shameless sentimentality was nauseating. Yet $30 million dollars was raised.

At the end Ms. Sparks and Mr. Lewis were both obliged to sing “This Is My Now,” a piece of boilerplate kitsch that won the show’s songwriting contest. This faded carbon copy of “A Moment Like This,” Kelly Clarkson’s hit from Season 1, suggested that the show’s heart was still made of polyester.

But whether by accident or design, “American Idol” answers a mass hunger for consensus in a time of political strife and niche marketing; it presents a wishful teenage vision of the world as one big happy family. To be sure, there are squabbles, but they are resolved with group hugs. Strict but loving Papa Bear, Simon Cowell, enforces discipline; weepy, all-forgiving Mama Bear Paula Abdul, who can’t bring herself to say an unkind word to her brood, offers comfort and encouragement. Kindly Uncle Randy Jackson, with his pseudo-hip argot of “check it out” and “dog,” offers a calmer perspective when Papa Bear gets mad.

Most important, the kids rule the family. The parents may advise, but the children get the final say. Giving viewers voting power is also ratings insurance. Sanjaya Malakar, this year’s novelty sensation, is the boy you wouldn’t want your daughter to date because his head is in the clouds and his report card is all C’s and D’s. The kids kept him in the running. And in the end the family is indivisible. Older brothers and sisters return to visit after graduation, aglow with triumph.

There is enough reality in all this stage-managed hokum to make me a partial believer. More than half a century ago, however, Arthur Godfrey’s shows exerted the same mystique. Only later was it revealed that he was a tyrant. Undoubtedly “American Idol” has its own dark side.

In its six-year existence on Fox, the show has done much to codify the second chapter of the Great American Songbook: the one that begins in the late 1950s and extends to the present. The songs aren’t as literate as the standards of yesteryear, but the American public isn’t as literate either. Popular music has moved out of the head and into the body and become a competitive sport. The public may not know much about American history, but millions can recite pop and rock ’n’ roll history like catechism; it may be the only history most Americans really know.

And the appearances of guest coaches like Diana Ross, Barry Gibb, Rod Stewart and Tony Bennett reinforce that notion of a continuity between now and then. In the world of “American Idol” there is no generation gap, only the loving perpetuation of tradition. Never mind that the oldsters’ voices have deteriorated to the point that the contestants usually out-sing them. And never mind that the contestants’ versions of beloved hits are usually half-baked imitations of the original recordings.

Late in the finale, fragments of songs from the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” a sacred rock relic if ever there was one, were slaughtered by several contestants. Did anyone notice or care? In a commercial climate ruled by buzzwords and hype, dropping the name is what counts.