6/3/12 – Check out the great pics from the CD Release party covered by the Oakdale Patch! Click here for more information.
5/7/12 – WATCH 2012 is on Cable Channel 19 all this month! Thanks to Judy Skeie-Voss for picking up the story and helping to get the word out! (*Note: the image below is on their segment on unemployment for returning veterans. Once you click on the video, our story is the first 10 minutes of the program.) Enjoy!
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4/22/12 – The We Are The Children Project was featured in the Star Tribune today (front page of the Washington County section)
Oakdale pastor’s album project offers songs of hopes
- Article by: TIM HARLOW
- Star Tribune
- April 20, 2012 – 6:04 PM
Two murder-suicides just weeks apart last fall involving children and parents connected to Skyview Middle School in Oakdale were troubling for city residents and devastating for students.
The Rev. John Stiles of nearby Holy Cross Lutheran Church knew he had to do something to bring hope and encouragement to kids and lift up the community.
This month he’s putting the final touches on “We Are the Children,” a gospel album chock-full of songs that are laced with positive messages from some of the Twin Cities’ finest singers and even kids in a Head Start program.
It’s due out in May, and Stiles plans to sell it and use the proceeds to benefit victims of domestic violence and fund a popular tutoring program for school-age children.
“When something like this happens, we are affected in a deep way,” said Stiles, the guitar-playing pastor of the church that is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. “The goal is to find common solidarity with these families and try to bring hope to the community. Oakdale has had some bad press lately, and there is so much good that needs to be lifted up.”
Stiles came up with the idea in the wake of two tragedies. The first occurred on Sept. 15, when a 6-year-old Skyview student found her parents dead at home. Her mother, Cintia Guadalupe Ornelas Bustos, 28, and babysitter, Angela Uscanga Gonzalez, had been shot. Her father, Jaime Anival Almaras Velasquez, 32, had committed suicide.
In the second, authorities said that Anthony DeHaven, 35, shot and killed his children — 11-year-old son Jace and 5-year-old daughter Jersey, who were students at Skyview Middle and Skyview Elementary schools — then killed himself. Their bodies were found in a burned-out motor home near the Grand Canyon in Arizona.
Stiles, a self-professed Lionel Richie fan and fan club member, reached out to the superstar to be a part of the project, but never heard back from him. He did hear from several church members and local artists, however, who were eager to jump on board.
Dan Neale, who plays on “A Prairie Home Companion,” teamed with gospel singer Sam Butler, who performed with the Blind Boys of Alabama on the song, “In My Heart.” Pippi Ardennia, whose “Lovely Day” is one of the 15 to 18 tracks on the project, lent her voice as well.
“This was a no-brainer. Anything that is going to be of help to the children and the community,” said Ardennia, who hosts “PipJazz Sundays” at the Landmark Center in St. Paul. “He has an amazing heart and has the desire to create change. Not all pastors go outside their congregation into the community.”
Ardennia said she chose “Lovely Day” because the song communicates the message that life is worth living, and that no matter what people are facing they can make it another day.
Like Ardennia, several artists recorded tracks in a studio which Holy Cross member Kendall Johnson operates in the basement of his Oakdale townhouse. Johnson, who composes and mixes music for movies, TV’s Nickelodeon network and video games, offered his studio to keep costs down.
“This is a chance for people to get some good music,” said Johnson, who teamed with Stiles to record a few tracks. Johnson also offered “Dawn Again,” a number from the indie rock band Submission that he played with for 12 years.
Artists such as Lauren Redpath and Jonathan Rundman, who could not make it to Johnson’s studio due to other commitments, donated pre-recorded tracks to be included on the project. For others, Stiles and Johnson took microphones to the artists, as when they recorded the Progressive Baptist Church Choir singing “Psalm 1” and when they taped the 12 children who attend the Washington County Head Start program at Holy Cross Church singing “We Are the World.”
“To see them light up, that was worth the whole price of the project,” Stiles said.
Stiles said it will cost between $5,000 and $7,000 to produce “We Are the Children.” He plans to make 1,000 CDs and charge about $15 each. He may also offer the music in downloadable form through iTunes or a similar service. Proceeds will go to Building Bridges, child support and family-building programs that include after-school tutoring offered through Holy Cross and Transfiguration Catholic churches and other organizations.
To promote the project, Stiles has started a website that includes music samples, photographs, videos and a place to make a donation. Butler and Neale will play May 20 during worship services at the church, located at 6355 N. 10th St. in Oakdale. An album release party is planned for May 24 at the Oakdale Dunn Bros.
“It’s a wonderful project and for a great cause,” said Butler, whose song “In My Heart” appears on the album. “I hope he is able to generate a lot of capital to help needy children, and that this would grow bigger and into something that continues throughout the state of Minnesota.”
Tim Harlow • 651-925-5039 Twitter: @timstrib
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4/7/12 – Our album project was featured on the Oakdale Patch this week!
Oakdale Tragedies Inspired Pastor to Record Benefit Album
A local pastor wanted to do something positive for the community after two murder-suicide incidents took place that affected Skyview Community School students. After two murder-suicide incidents affected Skyview Community School students last year in less than a month, Holy Cross Lutheran Church Pastor John Stiles felt he had to do something positive for children in the area. He decided to do it through music—by making a CD to raise money for local charities that help children and address domestic violence. “This is really important to lift up children, and that’s what this has been from the get-go,” he said. “It’s coming from a real spiritual base. I think that’s something that we just decided that we really wanted to do, to really bring some hope and some light into the darkness, some of the dark stuff that this community has had to go through.”
Stiles reached out to everyone from his brother—whom he jams with at family gatherings—to Lionel Richie (no answer yet from him). He scored some big local names like Sam Butler, who has played with the Blind Boys of Alabama, and Dan Neale, who often plays on a Prairie Home Companion. But many of the performers are people Stiles knew through Holy Cross. “I have been just blown away,” Stiles said, “by people that I never knew, and people from our church and just people locally that just, they come and they open up their guitar case and they pull a little magic out, or they open up their voice and it’s just like you’re on holy ground when you hear some of that.”
Although some of the songs were simply donated in pre-recorded form for the CD—like Lauren Redpath Auge’s rendition of The Grass Withers—many of the artists have been going to Oakdale resident Kendall Johnson’s home studio to record their parts. Johnson, who plays guitar at Holy Cross, composes music for movies, television and video games. When he heard about the project, he thought it was a “fantastic opportunity” to use his skills for good, he said. “I thought it was a phenomenal idea,” he said. “It’s been a wonderful learning experience, working with different personalities and different problems that may arise.”
One of the most memorable experiences, Johnson said, was recording the children in the Head Start program housed at Holy Cross singing We are the World. “The kids are adorable and most of them don’t sing in key, so it’s going to be a fun project to try to tweak that and see if I can make it work,” he said. “Also, to see how excited they were just to be a part of it … for me, that was one of the coolest experiences.” About 12 of the students who are part of Head Start got permission from their parents to sing for the CD, Stiles said.
Stiles said they’re hoping to have the album ready by the end of April—before Head Start is over for the season. The album is up to about 15 songs, Stiles said. In addition to all the musicians who helped out, graphic designers and a photographer also donated or discounted their services. “It’s been kind of exciting to see people come in and take this in a new direction that we hadn’t quite thought possible,” he said. “I couldn’t do this without the people just stepping up and saying we support this idea and we really want to get behind it.”
How to Help
The We are the Children 2012 Project is currently collecting donations to pay for the production costs—such as licensing fees for the songs that weren’t donated—through gofundme.com, PayPal or by sending checks. Proceeds from the CD sales will go toward causes supporting children and preventing domestic violence such as Building Bridges and the Lutheran Community Foundation. See the project website for more information.
Credit: Oakdale Patch writer, Patty Busse