Lil Mann was trying to get the lights on in the studio this afternoon… #clapper #grayday #gloomy #dark #studio
Tag Archives: musicians
Lil Mann: Writing in the Dust
Lil Mann’s back in his #Philly studio writing in the dust (John 8:6-9) #backhome #studio #cleaning #chilly #dust #broom #bible #bibleverse #philadelphia #north
Lil Mann: Lil Maestro
Lil Mann today wanted to be called Lil Maestro (Psalm 150) #tuesday #tuesdaymotivation #bible #bibleverse #maestro #conductor #conducting #psalms #psalm150 #melbournebeachfl #brevardcountyfl #florida
Lil Mann: Feelin’ It!
Lil Mann is feelin’ it during playback (Psalm 150:6) #guitar #airguitar #guitarist #praise #psalm150 #bible #bibleverse #studio #studiolife #melbournebeachfl #brevardcountyfl #florida
Pray on!
Hey friends, this is going to sound familiar at first, but I promise it’ll end differently. I’m recording a new worship album and it’s on my heart to invite you to become a partner in prayer with me. That’s it! Just partner with me in prayer.
Pray over the writing. Pray over the message. Pray over the musicians, Pray over the engineers, Pray over the equipment, Pray over the promotion. Pray over the expenses. And most of all pray that it touches those that He wants it to touch.
2 Corinthians reveals that when we pray together, the church prays. If the church prays, then each and every portion of the project will be covered, and that would bless my heart greatly.
Pray with me whether it’s once a month, once a week, or once a day. However the Spirit leads, pray.
The worship project is a call to a prayer campaign, instead of a financial pledge campaign, a call to pray for the project as community, a community that collectively represents the wisdom of God.
Nothing would bless this project more than your prayers.
If you haven’t signed up to the email list as of yet, now is the perfect time. Sign up and receive updates and free mp3s as the project moves forward. I’d be blessed to share what your partnership is creating. Click here!
So don’t Go Fund Me, Go Pray For Me!
Love you all!
Pray on,
Eddy
Be Happy, I Am!
I’d like to honor my father by remembering the seasons of his life. To do that I have to start with a childhood that seemed to be littered with every illness known to man at that time. Remarkably through God’s grace he survived those weakened moments of his early life.
My father was blessed to be only one generation away from farmers. Because of this, though growing up in the Hunting Park section of Philadelphia, he grew up spending his weekends and summers on the family farm in Doylestown, PA. Though the time away created a little distance between him and his father, it enabled him to grow a deeper bond with his two uncles. At eleven years of age he was driving the tractor and by fifteen was making the milk and egg deliveries. The farm was also a blessing in that it always provided food for the table during the depression years.
My father missed his high school graduation as he had enlisted in the Navy towards the end of World War II. He served his time on a fire boat in and around the sea of Japan. Upon arriving home after the war the government had a program that enabled veterans to receive a small stipend of money each week for one year as a way to ease back into daily life. My father wrote that he became bored after a couple of months and looked for a job.
What followed was a forty plus year career with General Electric, which started in a warehouse and ended with a private office atop 3 Penn Center by Philadelphia’s City Hall. He had managed to rise to a level where he was the only one without a college degree.
It was during his early years at GE where he and my mother decided to spend a lifetime together.
My father until his last days always spoke of my mother as being one of, if not his greatest earthly gift from God.
My sister and I were brought into this world in a row home in the Olney section of Philly. My grandfather was politically involved and knew someone who helped my parents find the home during the post war housing shortage. We lived there until 1962 when we moved to Bustleton, and my parent’s dream home, in the then suburbs of Philadelphia.
As I was at an age where I was becoming more aware of my parent’s lives, I can recall the endless hours my father spent working on our church’s financial issues.
His passion, and gift, for finances was a way for him to serve God through those years.
I know that the news of my sister Lynn’s condition was a tough time for both of my parents. But as the years have passed, our lives have been so much fuller by having her blessing as part of them. We have grown in so many different ways by having her remind us what’s important, and what isn’t. My father was especially touched and grateful by the enlightenment she brought to his journey.
I can’t overlook my father the musician.
My father spent the first year of his piano lessons without ever touching a key.
That would never fly in today’s world where parents want to hear a song played by week two. He spent a year writing out chord inversions and learning harmony and theory. He was remarkably talented at creating different harmonic beds for melodies. I have a lasting memory of him yelling out the chord changes of a swing tune in real time as they were flying by as we sat by the beach one afternoon. He loved to play a supportive role to the other musicians in his band, always allowing them the freedom to express themselves. That supportive role was evident in most, if not all of his life.
In his later years he was really honored to be a lay minister. He loved to visit the homebound and hospitalized, to talk with them, and mostly to just be there for them. Administering communion was never something he took for granted. Even in this latter season, he was blessed to serve God.
Looking back as we do on these occasions, I’ve found a journey that’s connected with faith dots. My father’s life was peppered with moments of preparing, moments of providing, and moments of protecting. In short, a life of servanthood. We didn’t always see eye-to-eye, but we enjoyed our last twenty plus years together as best of friends. There was never a time in my life when I couldn’t go to my father for help… and a few times I know it must have been hard for him.
But if there’s a message here, it’s about living a life that is not centered on you, but on others.
My mother, my sister, the church, GE, friends and family can all attest to that fact.
In closing as I was going through some papers a week or so ago I found a small sheet that laid out my father’s wishes for this day. At the bottom of the sheet there was a section that read, ‘any last comments you’d like to make?’ My father wrote, ‘be happy, I am!’
You want to remember my father? Be happy, he is!