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Annapurna mountain range in the Himalayas, Nepal

 Posted on June 6, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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growth

 Posted on May 3, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Moyer Hubbard teaching at Grace EV Free

 Posted on May 1, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Brian Scheuble at the Village Recorder in Santa Monica

 Posted on April 29, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Brian Scheuble
Producer / Audio Recording / Mixing Engineer

Online Mixing available email for details: bscheuble@mac.com
homepage.mac.com/bscheuble/disco/Personal18.html

See another pic here
flickr.com/photos/bpbp/2742195121/

Brian Scheuble – Audio Recording / Mixing Engineer / Producer Credits

Need To Breathe – Record & Mixing (upcoming releaes)

Crosby Loggins – Record & Mix (upcoming release)

Dave Matthews “Live” – Mix (upcoming release)

“Yes Man” Jim Carrey – Mix – New Movie (upcoming)

Brett Dennen – Record & Mix (New record)

Serena Ryder – Record & Mix (upcoming release)

Tyler Hilton – Record & Mix (upcoming release)

Lenka – “Knock Knock” – Single Mix – New Record

Robbie Robertson – Mix

Ben Lee – Record & Mix

A Fine Frenzy – Record & Mix

Sheryl Crow – Record

Aimee Mann – Record & Mix

(Magnolia soundtrack) & Bach. #2

Matt Nathanson – Recording

Rachael Yamagata (new record) – Record & Mix

Bethany Dillon – Record & Mix

Edie Brickell (new record) – Recording

Brendan James – Record & Mix

I Nine – Record Strings

Trevor Hall – Recording & Mixing

John Mayer Live – Mixing

New Found Glory -Recording

Dave Matthews – Record & Mixing

Meika Pauley – Mix

Stone Temple Pilots “Revolution” – Record

Liz Phair – Recording & Mixing

Five For Fighting – Record

Eric B. & Rakim – Mix

The Last Goodnight – Record

Michelle Branch – Record

Kate Voegele – Record

Ryan Shupe & The Rubberband Band – Record

George Stanford – Record & Mix 2 songs – new record

Train -Record

Lisa Marie Presley – Record

Year Long Disaster – Mix

Megan McCauley -Record & Mix Song on, Dr Phil Show

Chantal Keziazuk – Record

Stage – Record

Dishwalla – Record & Mix

Elton John – Record

MC Solaar Live – Record & Mix

Fiona Apple “TIDAL” – Record

Amy Carriea “Carnival” – Record & Mix

Stevie Nicks (soundtrack) – Record

Five For Fighting “America Town” – Record & Mix

Jeremy Toback – Record & Mix

Liz Phair (single) – Record & Mix

Crash Test Dummies – Record & Mix

Wallflowers (Godzilla soundtrack) -Record

Wallflowers (Virgin) – Record & Mix

Ringo Starr & The All-Starrs – Mix

Marilyn Manson – Record

Nine Inch Nails – Mix

Butthole Surfers – Mix

Ice Cube – Record & Mix

Don Henley “End Of The Innocence” – Record & Mix

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers – Record

X – Record

Wild Colonials “This Can?t Be Life” – Record

John Hiatt -Record & Mix

Mel Torme “Joe’s Garage” Soundtrack – Record & Mix

Wayne Shorter “High Life” – Record o/d’s

Barbara Streisand Rehearsal

Charlie Haden/Hampton Hawes – Mix

Beth Nielsen Chapman – Record & Mix

Soul Mission – Record & Mix

Robben Ford “Handful of Blues” -Record

Lili Haydn – Mix (2 songs)

Paul Thorn – Record

3 Mile Pilot – Record

Jon Bon Jovi “Blaze of Glory” – Mix & co-record

Fantasia “American Idol” – Record

Otep – Record & Mixing

Backstreet Boys – Record

Dandy Warhols (new record) Mix 1 song

Teddy Thompson (new record) – Recording

honeybird – Mix

ALSO-Recording & Mixing – iTunes Originals

Death Cab For Cutie

Liz Phair

Melissa Etheridge

Under The Influence Of Giants

Papa Roach

CONTACT INFO:

Management: Jim Phelan & Jerimaya Grabher @ GPS | Global Positioning Services

3435 Ocean Park Blvd., Ste. 107-191

Santa Monica, CA 90405

Tel – 310.828.1350

Fax – 310.828.1352


Romania VBS in Jina

 Posted on April 28, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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A shot from Jina Romania in 2007.

Our team split up as the VBS took place in the villages of Jina and Poinana with stories about Zacchaeus, the story of creation, and a Gospel message based on the wordless book. After the story and times of worship with fun children’s songs, we divided the kids into two groups and sent them off to do crafts while the other group went outside to play games. Working with the translators while trying to communicate with a hundred kids was challenging at first but the team did well, and it became comfortable by the end of our time. Some of the children traveled miles on dirt roads in the summer heat to get to the church for the VBS, and we know it was as the children had a great time. Even though Romania has few resources for children’s ministry when compared to the U.S., we are thankful that at each location there are local Romanian Christians who will continue their work with the youth through the local evangelical churches. Jina (Hungarian: Zsinna) is a commune in Sibiu County, Transylvania, Romania, in the Cindrel Mountains, 40 km west of the county capital Sibiu, in the Mărginimea Sibiului ethnographic area.


Westminster Abbey – London church

 Posted on April 17, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Westminster Abbey – London church, originally uploaded by bpbp Brian Petersen.

Westminster Abbey in London

Westminster Abbey’s long history can be traced back to the community of Benedictine monks established here c. 960 by Dunstan, bishop of London. Almost a century later King Edward established a palace close to this community and built for it a new church, dedicated to St Peter. It was consecrated on 28 December 1065 and when King Edward died a few days later he was buried in front of its high altar. When William the Conqueror arrived in London after the Battle of Hastings he chose to be crowned in the Abbey (on 25 December 1066) and it has been the coronation church ever since.

The monastery flourished. Royal patronage, extensive lands and the presence of the shrine of St Edward the Confessor (King Edward had been canonised in 1161) made it a wealthy and influential religious house. In 1245 King Henry III resolved to build a new abbey church, modelled on French Gothic cathedrals such as Reims and Amiens. By October 1269 the choir, transepts and eastern section were complete, and St Edward’s body was translated to a magnificent new shrine, where it remains to this day. Henry III’s own tomb was subsequently placed near by and the Abbey became the principal place of royal burial until the eighteenth century.

Building work continued at the end of the fourteenth century but in the earlier architectural style, thus giving the church a remarkable unity of design even though the very west end of the nave was not finally vaulted until the early 1500s. By then the construction of the new Lady Chapel of King Henry VII was also well advanced at the east end. This chapel, one of the architectural glories of the Abbey, became the chapel of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath in 1725. An early procession of the Knights of the Order was painted by Canaletto and provides one of the first views of the west towers which were finally completed in 1745.

Preserving the physical structure of this great church and its precincts has always been a challenging task. In the second half of the twentieth century the removal of centuries of dirt both inside and outside the church revealed its full beauty to many people for the first time. The restoration of the exterior (completed in 1995) was made possible by the Westminster Abbey Trust which, under the chairmanship of HRH The Duke of Edinburgh, raised more than £25 million to fund the work, but important works of maintenance and repair continue.

The Benedictine monastery at Westminster was dissolved in 1540. Most of the liturgical furnishings were removed, but the Abbey’s status as a coronation church and a royal mausoleum probably protected it from more extreme vandalism at this time. For ten years the Abbey became a cathedral, and then under Mary I the monastery was briefly revived. Mary’s successor, Elizabeth I, established the Abbey as ‘the Collegiate Church of St Peter’, outside the jurisdictions of the Bishop of London and the Archbishop of Canterbury but instead a ‘Royal Peculiar’, with the Sovereign as its Visitor. The new foundation consisted of a dean and prebendaries (later known as canons), minor canons and additional lay officers. It was charged with two main duties: to continue daily worship (for which an organist, choristers and singing men was provided) and to maintain a school for the education of forty scholars. Both activities continue today, though Westminster School is now greatly enlarged and independently governed. The Abbey’s own choristers are educated at Westminster Abbey Choir School.

In the later sixteenth century the apsidal chapels, stripped of their medieval altars and furnishings, began to fill with tombs and monuments. Edmund Spenser’s burial close to Geoffrey Chaucer’s tomb in the south transept initiated what later became known as Poets’ Corner, and over time large numbers of monuments were also erected in the transepts and the nave. Today, with over 600 such memorials, the Abbey houses the most important single collection of monumental sculpture in the country.

The reform movements of the nineteenth century touched the Abbey in two significant ways: in 1868 Westminster School became independent of the Dean and Chapter’s control, and at about the same time the Dean and Chapter was required to hand over its extensive estates to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The latter change had significant financial consequences for the Abbey which receives no funding from the Church or the State. The Dean of Westminster at this time, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, brought new vigour to the Abbey’s life and wrote extensively about its history. He gave permission for the burial of figures such as Dickens, Livingstone and Darwin, and did much to establish a unique place for the Abbey in the nation’s life. This sense of the Abbey’s national role was reinforced in the early twentieth century by the burial here of the Unknown Warrior in 1920 and continues to be evident in the many special services held each year to mark national events or to commemorate significant anniversaries.

The Chapter Office
20 Dean’s Yard
Westminster Abbey
London
SW1P 3PA
United Kingdom

Telephone: +44 (0) 20 7222 5152
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7233 2072
Email: info@westminster-abbey.org

www.westminster-abbey.org/

Published on the web in Schmap England Guide


Recording in the studio with the Biola King’s Men and Walt Harrah

 Posted on April 15, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Shots from the studio with Walt Harrah and Biola University’s very own a cappella group, the King’s Men.

The record was being produced by Walt Harrah and was engineered by Brian Petersen at Grace Evangelical Free Church in La Mirada, CA.  The album has been recorded in Pro Tools 8 at 24 /48.00 kHz using Universal Audio Tube mic pres and Neumann microphones.


Church Prayer for Grace Sending Missionaries

 Posted on April 1, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Grace Worship

 Posted on April 1, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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clouds over the sierra nevada mountains

 Posted on March 12, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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This was a wild cloud formation over the Sierra Nevada mountains

But Jesus remained silent. The high priest said to him, “I charge you under oath by the living God: Tell us if you are the Christ, the Son of God.”

“Yes, it is as you say,” Jesus replied. “But I say to all of you: In the future you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven.”

Then the high priest tore his clothes and said, “He has spoken blasphemy! Why do we need any more witnesses? Look, now you have heard the blasphemy. What do you think?” “He is worthy of death,” they answered.
– Matthew 26.63-66 NIV

My friend mentioned Jesus’ return on the clouds as we watched this wild scene unfold. It is a shot at 8,000 to 9,000 feet from the White Mountain range looking across the Owens Valley to the Eastern Sierras. We were coming down the road from the ancient bristlecone pine forest near Bishop, and the sky was constantly shifting over the Sierras during the afternoon when this wild formation began. Sections of the cloud layer started peeling away while the sun peered through the gaps, and I had never seen anything quite like it.

“The White Mountains of California are a mountain range that runs along the eastern side of the upper Owens Valley, just east of the Sierra Nevada. They extend for approximately 60 miles (100 km), and are approximately 10 miles (16 km) wide. The northern end of the range extends slightly into Nevada, creating that state’s highest point, Boundary Peak. The range’s southern end is near the community of Big Pine, where Westgard Pass separates it from the Inyo Mountains.”
From en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Mountains_(California)

See another shot
flickr.com/photos/bpbp/343789977


Romanian Hymns on an Accordion

 Posted on March 11, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen


clouds at sunset background

 Posted on March 7, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.


Attention please

 Posted on March 7, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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stained glass church worship background

 Posted on March 7, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Yellow Rose

 Posted on March 5, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Romanian Lightning

 Posted on March 4, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Nepalese Family

 Posted on March 3, 2009      by Brian Petersen
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Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen