Good to Great: Onscreen Lyrics and Notes – Part 2
August 2, 2008

In Part 1 of this article we explored Contrast, Alignment, and Font Choice. You can start there and catch up.
The Purpose of Backgrounds = Enhance ≠ Distract
The whole purpose of backgrounds – loops or still graphics – is to add visual interest to the screens and to break up the monotony of plain black behind the lyrics.
On the flip side, many churches drank the kool-aid and now believe that worship can’t happen unless there’s some sort of motion – whether abstract or video – behind the lyrics. Backgrounds were never meant to become the focal point of the music set (unless of course you want them to be the focal point on special occasions). If at any point in time they become the focus, pull a “Heart of Worship” and get rid of them for a time. They cannot become a crutch.
Some things to understand:
- Black backgrounds aren’t bad. One ministry in our church uses black backgrounds with their logo tucked in the corner very effectively.
- Loops aren’t bad. But like guns and matches, it’s not the object, it’s whose hands it’s in that can cause trouble.
- Still graphics aren’t bad. You could use one background for the entire set that fits in with the message/series. I’ve seen this done really well.
Use backgrounds in ways that empower the focal point. On songs that call for nature shots like “How Great is Our God”, use nature shots. On songs that call for something else, use backgrounds in that vein. But NEVER force backgrounds or use backgrounds out of place.
An artistic eye is of the utmost importance. Let art and appropriateness decide their use. Putting an accountant at the helm may mean you have someone perfect for looking for details but may make horrible artistic choices. Then you have someone like me who can’t pay attention to the screen due to the service going on in front of him. The balance of the two is to get your art guy to set the presentation up and have your details guy run it.
Here’s the test to see whether or not the backgrounds are enhancing the lyrics. The preferred answer follows in (parenthesis).
- Do you ever catch yourself wondering why a particular background was chosen? (no)
- Is the text set apart from the background so that the text is easily read? (yes)
- Does the text brightness contrast the background brightness? (yes)
- Do you leave it up to your volunteers to randomly choose backgrounds? (no)
- Does the speed/tone of the background match the song? (yes)
- Does the material in the background match the song? (yes)
KISS: Keep It Super Simple
Three sub-tips in this one. All focus on simplifying what is presented to the audience so that they can follow along and not get lost.
Break at logical points. Periods, commas, and musical pauses are all good places to begin new lines. The reader is already breaking in their mind so back this visually. For example, notice how awkward the breaks are on the left compared to the right where the lines break the way the song is sung. See how the odd breaks slightly disrupt the natural flow we expect. Fix this and you’re one step closer to great presentations.

Don’t put too much text on each slide. We tend to limit the lines per slide to 4 for lyrics. Occasionally we might have 5 if they are short lines. Our goal though is to break them up as much as possible in order to give the audience less to sort through when looking at the slide. It helps them to find where we are in the music quickly. Again, compare these two for examples of too much and just enough.

For sermon notes, “make it look great” is the rule. If it looks like too much, it is.
Simplify the formatting. I know this may give some masters of the English language heart attacks, but try to remove as much punctuation and other extraneous formatting as possible. No, I ain’t promotin’ bad use of the English language. I am suggesting that the use of logical line breaks as stated above replaces the punctuation and formatting. The other formatting I mentioned may include italics, underlines, and quote marks. In addition, use sentence case. Do not use all capitals. The readability of the test decreases greatly with all caps. It’s just a bad idea.

Summary
When it all comes down to it, God must be worshipped. One way is through song. Our job on the media side is to do whatever it takes to see to it that we have prepared the way for God to be worshiped. Laying all opinions aside, let’s make sure that slides are designed with that in mind.
Related posts:
- Good to Great: Onscreen Lyrics and Notes – Part 1
- 6 Tips for Memorizing Lyrics
- How to Find Great Worship Songs
- What Makes a Great Worship Song?
- 10 Things To Consider When Buying Worship Software

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[...] can now continue on to Part 2 of “Good to Great: Onscreen Lyrics and Notes” as we explore choosing good backgrounds [...]
Chris – great, to-the-point, helpful articles! Thanks for these! I’ll be sharing with my media people.
Very helpful. Thank you.
great article.
for me with a smaller screen verdana has been the perfect font.
Also Looped backgrounds can get overboard if you have a super zealous video person.
I like to intermingle video with image backgrounds
i also like to emphasize some text with one slide for a word or doing one word in all caps.
Well Joel I’d call that part three of the article. Now that you know the “rules” start breaking them with purpose. You do a good job Joel. Keep it up.
Thanks a lot for the comments. Anybody have further suggestions? Any other questions even?
Great pair of articles Chris. At my Church we use opensong with top left alignment and ‘treb ms’ bold.
Treb has been reckoned to be a good font for dyslexics & visually impaired people.
For background, by default we use a ‘steve jobs’ grey to black fade (so every service can be an apple keynote
This is good information to have, but I’d love to see more examples besides the blue abstract? Would you show some examples using nature and/or ones that have people or crosses in the background?
Btw, I have used Papyrus in the background and I thought they looked fantastic! I use an outline and a shadow to give extra contrast and make the text as big as I can without it “screaming” at the congregation.
Thank you for articles.
[...] do you think? Check out this article on the worship community. I found it pretty interesting, I actually haven’t read it all yet. but the parts that I did [...]
These have been helpful articles. Thanks, Chris. If there’s one thing I disagree with it’s the idea of removing the punctuation from the slides. We have punctuation for a reason. It sets certain phrases apart. It gives meaning.
When we sing, we’re singing poetry; and the idea behind the poetry is too often lost without the appropriate punctuation. Too, it can be difficult to learn a new song without the proper punctuation. During a recent worship conference, we were singing a song that was new to most of the congregation. One particular point in the refrain kept giving everyone trouble because there was a repeated word. The word was an important one, and without punctuation to set it apart, it took us a long time to get that line down.
To those ends, I always make sure the punctuation is as accurate as I possibly can. The benefits of doing that far outweigh the time saved in not doing so and the message of the song is much easier to grasp.
@theworshipcomm really great http://bit.ly/mGnIK thanks and god bless your work