|
As published in Christianity Today magazine
November 15, 1999
An Education with a Backbeat
by Yvi Martin in Greenville
The next Jars of Clay may be in class right now, taking notes on
the art of Amy Grant or doing lab work on the science of dc Talk.
Since 1987, starry-eyed students hoping to parlay their bachelor’s
degrees into recording contracts have signed up for a trailblazing
program in Contemporary
Christian Music (CCM) at Greenville College, a Christian liberal-arts school in
south-central Illinois.
Paved with Mayberryesque streets and surrounded by enough corn
fields to host a Hee Haw convention, Greenville is not the first
place you’d think of going to find Contemporary Christian Music.
But with the explosive growth of CCM (the genre posted $863 million
in 1998, according to CCM Update), and with secular music companies
gobbling up independent Christian labels, Greenville College’s CCM
major seems ahead of its time.
The program was the brainchild of Greenville music department head
Ralph Montgomery, who wanted to equip students for working in the
music industry. "We met a lot of Christian musicians who didn’t
know what they were doing," says Montgomery. A major in CCM could
train students both musically and spiritually, he reasoned.
But how do you teach a genre of music that many people perceive
as being more flash than art, more commercialism than ministry?
"We do not graduate students to necessarily work in the Contemporary
Christian Music industry," says Warren Pettit, who now leads the
CCM program. "We are just as interested in students graduating to
work in the general marketplace and bringing their Christian world-view
to it."
The course load for CCM majors looks a lot like the curriculum
for traditional music majors, but with ample class time on studio
technology, live performance, and business. In a class called "The
Philosophy and Ethics of CCM," for instance, students wrestle with
the challenges of maintaining one’s integrity in a cutthroat business
environment.
Each year, 70 to 80 freshmen enter as CCM majors, but only about
15 will graduate with a CCM degree. According to sophomore Kenny
Carlson, the program is no cakewalk. "It’s not for everybody who
has stars in their eyes and wants to be a rock ’n’ roll star," he
says, "but it has taught me that anybody can have the potential
if they’re willing to concentrate on the work that’s involved."
So far, the members of Jars of Clay are the most recognizable names
on the CCM program’s roll of alumni, but nationally known artists
like Sarah Jahn, Amy Susan Foster, and Stereo Deluxx are also alums.
According to Pettit, it’s often difficult for Christian schools
to embrace the rock, alternative, and atypical styles that characterize
music today: "It’s a shame that we’re one of few schools that have
fully embraced a contemporary music curriculum. Greenville’s CCM
major has a web site that not only includes the required course
descriptions and faculty listing, but also a listing of alumni and
the all-important list of careers you can enter with a degree in
CCM.
Randall Balmer took a look at Greenville’s most famous alumni,
Jars of Clay, in an article that ran Monday on ChristianityToday.com.
|