Category Archives: Christian Music

Visions of Glory: Reintroducing Caritas Music

REGULAR READERS will need no reminder about one of the best trade sources for Christian music, Caritas Music: an impressive and growing catalogue of labels available, backed up by Katherine Douglas’ personal expertise and carriage-free delivery on all orders with no minimum order requirement. But for those who have not yet had the pleasure of doing business with Katherine, I invited her back for an update.

Katherine writes:

Thanks very much, Phil, for the invite to contribute a guest post, that was very kind of you and a welcome opportunity to write about what my small business Caritas Music Publishing tries to do. First of all for those of you who don’t know me, I am Katharine Douglas and I began my small business Caritas Music Publishing in 1998, originally in Edinburgh, but I relocated in 2006 to NW Scotland. With couriers, Royal Mail and the wonders of email / social media etc, Caritas is still here, I am very proud to say.

Caritas Music: Visions of Glory

Caritas Music: Visions of Glory

When I began Caritas I was — and still am — totally inspired by my father, Composer James Douglas (who wrote the music for 2 of David Adam’s books: Visions of Glory (words from The Edge of Glory, SPCK / Triangle) and Cry of the Deer (meditations from The Cry of the Deer, SPCK / Triangle). I initially wanted to promote, distribute and publish more of his music to Christian bookshops, music stores and also in mainstream shops too. Since then, so many people have told or contacted me to say how his music has inspired them and how it takes them on a journey or gives them wonderful images or visions. Caritas has now produced 16 recordings in total of the music of James Douglas and all of these sell well online, in stores and have even recently been taken to accompany a Trade Cruise Fair in Miami, USA, as well as being chosen to represent the area of Wester Ross in Visitor Centres.

I wanted to grow the business and by talking to customers, they were telling me that they were also looking for additional Classical and Sacred Music to sell in their shops. Gradually over the years, I have added a wealth of Classical, Sacred Music, Classical crossover and many other labels to the Caritas list and these are still growing daily, all be it 13 years later!

My ethos for Caritas is simple, but important, I feel and I hope: I want to take music to shops, to customers, to audiences and to make more people aware of just how much wonderful music there is available and hope that I can help people appreciate that. Each day, I get requests from booksellers to find particular CDs, even individual tracks of music, or perhaps something the customer has heard or read about in the press or somewhere online perhaps. No challenge is unanswered and it is very fulfilling for me, to get a recommendation, that if someone can find a piece of music, then Katharine at Caritas can. What a challenge, but one I relish every day.

Not only do I want to take Classical and Sacred Music to shops, I want to let them come to me, so my website www.caritas-music.co.uk is vital, as well as the newly updated Caritas facebook page, www.facebook.com/caritasmusicpublishing. These have been vital in communication, for example, new releases or perhaps details where Caritas will be with stalls of CDs or where our products are now also on sale. However, I fully understand that some bookshops may not have actually heard of Caritas Music Publishing and I thank Phil and UKCBD for giving me the opportunity to tell you what you, as a shop, can get from Caritas.

Currently, shops can open a Trade Account with Caritas: this allows you access to the full catalogue from all of the following labels and artists, gives 30 days credit (from invoice date), NO minimum order requirement and NO carriage charge on any orders. I want to give shops the chance to try some CDs and also to offer a chance for customer orders, in the hope that this will encourage the shops to try more and ultimately sell more CDs in the future.

Labels offered include:

  • UCJ (including Andrea Bocelli, Katherine Jenkins, Military Wives and Voices from Avignon)
  • Naxos
  • Collegium (John Rutter)
  • Taize
  • Chandos
  • EMI (including Libera and King’s College Choir Cambridge)
  • Sony Music (including The Priests & Susan Boyle)
  • Caritas (James Douglas)
  • BBC Audiobooks
  • Coro (The Sixteen and Sacred Music TV Series)
  • Hyperion / Helios.

Thank you for reading this guest post.

Katharine Douglas
Caritas Music Publishing, Achmore, Moss Road, Ullapool, IV26 2TF
Tel: 01854 612236
Email: caritas AT caritas-music.co.uk
Web: www.caritas-music.co.uk
Blog: caritasmusicpublishing.blogspot.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/caritasmusicpublishing

In Concert…

James Douglas, Katherine Douglas and soloist Richard Mein in concert, 2009, Macphail Theatre, NW Scotland

James Douglas, Katherine Douglas and soloist Richard Mein in concert, 2009, Macphail Theatre, NW Scotland (click to zoom)

Looking Back…

18 UK Jobs Lost as Kingsway/David C Cook Restructure for Global Marketplace

David C Cook/Kingsway Key Stakeholder Letter 21 Oct 2011 (pdf, 111kb)

David C Cook/Kingsway Key Stakeholder Letter 21 Oct 2011 (pdf, 111kb)

EIGHTEEN UK WORKERS HAVE PAID THE PRICE in job losses as the long-term globalisation strategy behind Kingsway’s merger with David C Cook has been “accelerated” following the group’s more recent acquisition of Integrity Music.

Emphasising the level of expertise and investment involved alongside the strength and stability of the group’s new distribution system, Cris Doornbos, President and CEO of David C Cook, explains the thinking behind the changes in a Letter to Our Key Stakeholders dated October 21st:

As a key stakeholder of David C Cook and Kingsway, we want you to be among the first to hear news of some changes we have recently made to our UK operation, Kingsway Music and Distribution.

In way of background, we developed a five-year strategic plan earlier this year which laid out specific strategies required to increase our ministry impact and best advance our mission: “To equip the Church with Christ centered resources for making and teaching disciples who obediently transform today’s generations.”

The plan included, among other things, establishing one global worship ministry unit as we see worship music as one of the greatest tools we have to equip the global church. We have long had a vision to utilize music as a key tool for creating disciples around the world, especially as over half of the world’s population entered the new millennium unable to read. Our recent acquisition of Integrity Music has made it possible for us to accelerate our goal and take another important step forward.

The five-year plan also included the strategy of leveraging the expertise in our Canadian distribution business to support growth. Over the past several years, we have made significant investments in both our Canadian distribution operation and our United Kingdom distribution operation. We now have a new warehouse management system in place in both locations coupled with a new ERP system that has proven to be highly efficient and world class. Together with our experienced and knowledgeable team, we are in the advantageous position of having processes and systems that are highly effective, and allow us to offer our current and potential publishing and music partners a strong and stable distribution service in both Canada and the United Kingdom.

The letter goes on to spell out a number of specific changes being made as the plan is implemented, concluding, sadly, with job losses in the UK:

  • Kingsway Music and Kingsway Distribution separated;
  • Kingsway Music and Integrity Music combined to create “one music ministry unit with two labels” headed up globally by Ryan Dunham with Jonathan Brown taking over from John Paculabo at Kingsway Music UK;
  • Creation of a single global distribution service operating from bases in the USA, Canada and the UK, headed by Greg Tombs, Managing Director of Global Distribution;
  • John Paculabo becomes Managing Director of Global Song Development, with specific responsibility “for seeing that our songs are being sung in local churches around the world, while working to nurture and develop indigenous writers and artists in other nations”;
  • 18 jobs in the UK “eliminated due to new operational efficiencies and redundancies in roles”, an outcome described as “necessary, but heartbreaking.”

My thanks to John Paculabo for providing the information upon which this report is based. John himself explains further:

We intend to remain focused and dedicated to the development of worship songs and worship writers on both sides of the Atlantic, a point which I would strongly emphasize.

The net result of [these realignments], plus the poor economic trading conditions that we are all experiencing, has brought about the redundancies of last week. These decisions are painful and difficult as Kingsway like so many other Christian ministries fosters a family atmosphere, and so it is true to say that friends and family have all been affected by these job losses.

Please keep those who have lost their current livelihood in your prayers.

Pray too that Kingsway/David C Cook’s globalised service strategy and systems prove more resilient and robust than Biblica/IBS-STL’s similar exercise back in 2008/2009.

Two Worlds: A Shout Out to Christian Publishers and Suppliers

Discussions Update
At some point within the next week or so I plan to post a summary of the recent discussions, working title “Kingsway: Discussion Summary and Unanswered Questions”.

A preliminary draft is available in the Christian Authors, Booksellers and Publishers facebook group: all group members are welcome to comment, suggest revisions and/or possible solutions, but I respectfully request that you refrain from taking the discussion into any public forums until it is finalised and published here. Thank you.

IN THIS EXCERPT from the recent discussions about Kingsway, the Spirit Break Out album in HMV and Kingsway’s RRPs, Luke Bunger (The Hub, Walsall) replies to John Robinson (aka ‘John the Areopagite’), presenting us with two possible ways in which things could turn out for the Christian book trade over the next few years.

Many publishers and suppliers offer their Christian retail partners wholly commendable and comprehensive support: I hear the praises of CWR, IVP and Lion Hudson sung most often. This shout out is not to them but to those who seem tempted to think, “Christian retailing is dead: let’s go elsewhere…”

No doubt there are many other scenarios between the two extremes in the picture Luke paints: we live not in a world of black and white but in a rainbow world, with myriad possibilities and God’s promise of grace arcing overhead; but rainbows only appear after the storm — and after the storm, by God’s grace, sometimes we get to choose the colours. Let’s choose wisely.

Obvious typos and minor punctuation/grammatical errors have been corrected, but otherwise these excerpts are exactly as written:

John Robinson said:

God forbid that Kingsway were to actually do their mission and spread the Kingdom message. I think it was high time that some Christian retailers were to understand that the messianic vision is for the world and not to be kept in the back streets – I heartily commend Kingsway for trying to spread the Gospel any way they can!

John the Areopagite

Luke Bunger replied:

John.

The simple fact of the matter is that no-one is criticising Kingsway for getting their stuff out there. In HMV, Amazon, iTunes or otherwise. Many of us (and I would suggest almost everyone who is commenting here) think that it’s good.

The thing we don’t like, however, is taking existing customers and encouraging them to shop elsewhere. Everyone receiving the email were existing Kingsway customers, primarily people who are already Christians, and many of whom already buy Christian music, who either signed up online, filled in contact cards at events, or responded to those cards which used to be placed in the front of CDs and DVDs.

This did NOT hit HMV’s sizeable database, nor did it hit every iTunes user. If it did, this would be amazing news, even given the unfortunate wording.

It hit Kingsway’s.

And as a result, in the main, it was read by people who already support Christian music. Many of these already use Christian bookshops (I know for a fact several of MY customers received it).

It encouraged these people to stop supporting their Christian bookshops and instead to use the secular HMV store for their Christian music needs, and that is what we take offence to.

The other issue is that does making the music available at HMV really spread the gospel, if as a result Christian businesses are closed down?

Let me propose two situations for you to consider:

In the first, Christian publishers and suppliers like Kingsway effectively abandon the Christian trade in favour of the secular trade. Their reasoning is simple: the Christian trade is dying, and focusing on retailers like HMV and Amazon reaches a wider audience.

As a result, their self-fulfilling prophecy comes to pass, the trend continues, and within the next few years, the Directory Phil manages reduces from a few hundred entries to a few dozen.

As a result, Christians still have access to music and books, and non-Christians have the possibility of stumbling across them while browsing through the Self Help sections of bookshops, or the Blues and Gospel section of HMV.

The second option is that suppliers and publishers make a continuing push to support the Christian trade, even if it risks alienating HMV, iTunes or Amazon. Their logic is simple: Christian bookshops exist primarily to support the Christians in the community, and spread the gospel to non-Christians and we should invest in that.

As a result, the trend of closures is slowed, and maybe even reverses. Christian bookshops become healthier, more vibrant and more appealing. Because of the commitment by suppliers, the bookshops become steadily more profitable, and are able to open up more branches, and move into more high profile locations. HMV, Amazon and others may kick up a stink, and may even decide not to stock the products (though that seems unlikely, if there is demand for it, and the possibility of making a profit).

Now. Picture a seeker. Someone who is interested in the bigger questions, but unsure whether they are ready to commit to anything by crossing the threshold of a church. The kind of person who I see most days at The Hub.

In world one, there is no Christian bookshop. They visit their local Waterstone’s, ask about Christianity, and are pointed to either the World Religions section, where they can buy three or four copies of the Bible, alongside dozens of other “Holy Books”, or the Self Help section, where they stumble across a Joel Osteen book, but not before picking up a handful of other books all advocating wildly different beliefs and opinions. They ask the staff member for advice, and the best answer he is trained to give is, “This one by Paul McKenna is very popular. You may have seen him advertising it on the TV recently”.

In this world someone interested in Christian music will be pointed to the Blues and Gospel section, and will think “I’m really more into Rock… I’m not really into Blues or Gospel music… I guess there is nothing in the Christian scene for me”.

They will probably save a few pounds on the books they buy, v/s the prices they would have paid in Christian bookshops, but that’s about the sum of it.

In world two, this seeker would hopefully be able to walk into a Christian bookshop in his or her town.

They would have the choice of dozens of translations of Bibles, in hundreds of different shapes and sizes. They would have a wealth of Christian teaching available, whatever background or circumstances they find themselves in, not to mention the wealth of information afforded to them by staff who have the time and knowledge to talk with them about their needs, and pray with them about their circumstances.

They would ask about music, and find that there are hundreds of CDs and DVDs available, in many different genres, that whatever music they like, there will be something in the Christian world for them.

They may have to journey into the backstreet to find it, but find it they hopefully will, and when they do, they will find a place where they can find out much more about the Christian faith than they likely ever would in HMV, Waterstone’s or at Amazon.

So I ask you this: in which circumstance is the Gospel of Jesus Christ really more effectively preached, and the lost more effectually reached?

Of course, we would all prefer not to have to live in an either/or world, but a both/and one. But if we do have to choose, I know which choice I would be making.

HMV gets @worshipcentral’s Spirit Break Out – at £7.99

Update, 29/09/2011
“Somehow we have to deal with this or we will be torn apart by it” - Eddie Olliffe reflects on the current situation: Book Trade – Pricing policy, discounts and the deepening sense of unease

THE SCREENSHOT BELOW shows Kingsway’s announcement telling everyone on their mailing lists to “check out your local HMV” for Worship Central’s Spirit Break Out, where people will be getting “a dose of God-soaked, Spirit-powered, Jesus-centered live worship” — and that’s what it’s all about, right?

“All about Jesus”, in the words of Tim Hughes.

Kingsway Announcement: HMV Gets Spirit Break Out

Kingsway Announcement: HMV Gets Spirit Break Out

I’d love to echo Kingsway’s enthusiasm, I really would. But what I see isn’t so much an opportunity as a missed opportunity — because the truth is that HMV don’t get Spirit Break Out: HMV don’t get it at all. To HMV, it’s just another money-spinner, another chance to rake in the £££s and set their tills ringing, just like iTunes.

And the people who do get it, the people who genuinely understand what it’s all about? The people for whom it really is all about Jesus, namely Christian retailers? They’re left out in the cold with a standard trade discount from Kingsway of 35% 33%* against Kingsway’s £12.99 RRP (apart from a few who may have secured more favourable terms through advance orders). That’s a retailer buy-in price of £8.44 £8.70*, which compares to the real market pricing as follows:

I ask quite simply: how can this in any sense be fair? Yes, it’s great that at least one bricks & mortar retailer can match the iTunes/Amazon price… but imagine how much better it could be: imagine not only the impact upon the UK’s struggling Christian retailers but also the outreach potential if Kingsway dropped the artificial RRP and used their own selling price as the starting point — then went a step further and declared that they’re making the album available to retail at £7.99 across the board!

Imagine a Christian publisher operating their business on a level-playing-field basis!

How about it, Kingsway? Is it all about Jesus? Or is it really all about the price?

And last but not least: I know since last year’s discussions you’re no longer comparing your actual selling prices with your own RRPs publicly on your website, and that’s great: thank you. But you are still doing so behind the scenes in your direct mailings. I’m sure that’s just an oversight, and no doubt now that you’re aware of the matter you’ll straighten things out in your one-to-one dealings too, so thanks again.



* Updated 28/09/2011 following Melanie’s comment - thanks Melanie!

All Change at Integrity

Mike Norbury retires from Kevin Mayhew: Reflections from Spain

Mike Norbury

Mike Norbury

CONGRATULATIONS to the one and only Mike Norbury as he rolls up his sleeves and relaxes in sunny Spain following his retirement from Kevin Mayhew Ltd — and what a day to retire: Mike’s 65th was May 21st 2011, the day the world ended and we were all left behind. Mike, however, has never been one to be left behind, so when he told me he’d retired, I invited him to offer us some reflections from his years in this turbulent trade… and if he was feeling brave, I suggested, perhaps he’d like to take a tentative look towards the future?

See below Mike’s ruminations for some brief notes about Kevin Mayhew accounts in the newly dawned post-Norbury era. That’s enough from me: over to Mike…

I HAD BEEN Sales Manager for a buying group that works into the newsagents and card shops industries but had been getting a lot of attack from “the management” especially when I refused to support a Hallowe’en promotion they were doing for one of our linked distributors. I was looking elsewhere and, having applied for various positions and got nowhere, God prompted me to simply write a letter to this company in Exeter telling them my current situation. The answer to that was an invitation to see Steve Thornett at Christian Art which resulted in a job!

Following the merger between Christian Art and Kingsway and the redundancies that followed I spent a short time freelancing, but one evening received a phone call asking if I was interested in a full time job: the company was Kevin Mayhew Ltd and that was almost sixteen years ago. I think the trade was already starting to change at that time although perhaps we couldn’t see it. There had already been “warnings” from the USA about future trends but, as often happens, perhaps we ignored them.

The two most obvious changes which the trade has had to face (apart from changes of distribution) have been the move in music away from CDs towards downloads and the decline in the purchasing of books from bookshops. The former has been partially addressed by companies allowing retailers to link to their downloads and sell them through their websites (as Kevin Mayhew does), but this is an area that requires very careful marketing and promotion. The latter, that of book purchasing, is far more complex.

I remember going into a store in East Anglia and being told that we were selling hymn books direct through Amazon cheaper than that retailer could purchase them through us; a quick investigation found that we had not — and incidentally still haven’t — given Amazon trade terms: the hymn books could have only got onto Amazon via one source, a Carlisle source. Later Amazon dealings became more open as they advertised the sources as part of their marketing.

So the growth of Amazon has certainly had an effect, but I believe that there is a greater one: whereas there has certainly been a decline in books aimed at the more traditional denominations, the decline in more evangelical/charismatic has, to me, been more apparent. The truth, backed up several years ago by a survey of ministers done in Derby, is that as the church’s evangelical side is growing — thus recent increases in numbers attending church rather than the previous decades of decline — so too very important elements have meant a decline in reading. As an example, in the church I attend, out of a membership of about 250, I am the sixth or seventh eldest. The vast majority are younger families with children and jobs. Also we tend to be a church where people are involved in ministry, not only within our congregation but “Go ye into the world…” with Christians Against Poverty, Street Pastors, Healing On The Streets, Schools Ministry, Community Cafe, Feeding The Roofless, etc. etc., all ministries which not only take us into the highways and byways but — at long last — have straddled the denominational divides that have previously restricted the one church of Christ being “seen” in the community, bringing brothers and sisters in Christ together representing and reflecting Jesus outside the confines of our buildings.

Talking to fellow Street Pastors, the majority admit that they now read far less than they used to because they are spending more time in ministry and, as part of that, in prayer – either in groups or by themselves.

I have often felt that everything we sell in our shops is a “luxury” rather than a necessity. When I have mentioned this to customers, almost all have said straightaway, “Apart from the Bible, of course!” Then we start reflecting on how many Bibles each of us has in our homes already!

This is, of course, a simplification of the situation. It would take a book or a ridiculously long and tedious report to put down all the facts and incidents that have changed our trade during the last twenty years or so — and another to look into the future. However our emphasis needs to be better focused: the expansion of the Kingdom. After all, that’s the only reason we’re here, isn’t it?

Below are three actions that I think are very positive actions to develop trade in shops, most of which have previously been mooted from time to time:

Re-address the stock balance in the shops: if books and CDs are declining, what is increasing? Answer: Better quality gifts and greetings cards. I am so delighted that Kevin Mayhew Ltd decided just prior to the recession to develop these areas.

Talk to the churches: hold once a year meetings for some of them; hold schools/junior church evenings; take the pastors/ministers/priests out for a coffee every so often and talk to them about THEIR needs and how you can help them.

Introduce other products and services: do you have areas in your shop where you could sell products which would attract Joe Public in off the street? Our trade does tend to be a bit exclusive. I remember one of my first visits to Northampton and seeing that Joe Storey had completely filled one window with gift wrapping paper at a silly price — people were coming into the shop to buy it and suddenly finding cards, CDs and children’s books they were also buying. In North Wales one shop is also the main stationery outlet for their town whilst another sells maps, tourism books, children’s books and secular cards as well as having a snack bar and internet café, which draw in both locals and visitors. Many have poo-pooed the Living Oasis concept of having a quality coffee shop at the front of the store, but what an excellent way of bringing people in to find what else we have to offer! What else could we do? What else are we doing already that others may like to copy? Is your local Post Office closing: could you invest in developing an area in your store to take it? (Might sound extreme but you never know).

OK, that’s enough of my ramblings as I intend to write neither a book nor a report!!!

Last Saturday was my 65th birthday and I have no doubt whatsoever that God made it clear that I was to officially retire from fulltime work on that day — OK, I know all the jokes about Christians never retire and that I’ll be far busier once I do!! — but after a year in which I lost my lovely wife, Jackie, very suddenly from illness, it is obvious I need a bit of a rest. Thus I am writing this near Mazarrón in Spain, having a well-earned break.

Oh yes, I shall be at the High Leigh event next month and you will see me at other events as the company has asked me to help them in that way, and I’m sure there will be other ways in which I will be involved. Nevertheless this will give me time to rest, reflect, pray and seek — with emphasis on the rest at the moment! — and see what God’s plans are for me in the future, while I’m still young enough to fulfill them! I got a message from friends in Bedford who are both turing 65 within these few weeks which said, “Welcome to the OAP club.” My reply was very simply, “I have no problem with the P but what’s this about OA?”

It has been my privilege and pleasure to have served God full time in this amazing Christian Distribution Industry. Visits to shops have developed into an extension of church, a wonderful church without walls that crossed the differences of denomination and stream. To have true friends — fellow worshippers — spread across these islands from Jan in Orkney to Julie in Jersey and from Padraig in Cork to Graham on Lindisfarne is an amazing thing! Thank you to all of you for your support, friendship, love and prayers over the years. I pray that you will each be guided by God in the direction that He has in mind for your respective shops. Bless you.

After Mike…

Mike’s position with Kevin Mayhew was Retail Trade Manager. Mark Lee takes over Mike’s accounts in the Midlands, North, Scotland and Ireland; Malcolm Corden takes over his key accounts in the south.

A new Sales Manager, Nicola Bullivant, has also been appointed, taking over from Tim Messinger who has left to develop his own events management business.

News Roundup: Celebrating 10 Years Online | Commentaries Sale at Wesley Owen | More Shops Seeking New Owners | More Than Another Day of Prayer | New Blog for Caritas Music

UK Christian Bookshops Directory: Discover your local Christian bookshop!

Celebrating 10 Years Online!

GOT NEWS? If you have news you’d like to share about your shop or staff, please leave a comment or contact me direct to be included in the next News Roundup


Don’t want to comment here? Join the conversation on facebook instead…

Celebrating 10 Years Online

THIS YEAR sees both the UK Christian Bookshops Directory and The Good Bookstall celebrating our tenth anniversaries: UKCBD was launched 10 years ago this month, in February 2001, whilst TGB was launched 10 years ago next month, March 2001 — and what an amazing 10 years it’s been!

We’ve seen STL expand its territory, Prayer-of-Jabez style, only to see the whole edifice here in the UK come tumbling down when they did a builder-who-didn’t-count-the-cost routine; we’ve seen the destruction of the SPCK Bookshops chain in the hands of the gruesome twosome, Messrs Phil and Mark Brewer; we’ve seen dozens of independent bookshop closures; and we’ve seen Christian Marketplace go from being a monthly independent magazine to a bi-monthly, surviving only as a subsidiary of another giant, the Premier Christian media empire.

We’ve also seen the phenomenal rise of online Christian bookseller Eden.co.uk, the emergence of the ebook and yet — in the face of all these challenges — many shops rising, phoenix-like, from the ashes of those destructions, an important reminder if ever we needed one that God isn’t interested in our ambitions and empires, no matter how much we persuade ourselves that it’s God’s kingdom we’re building — because our God, the God we meet in Jesus, isn’t ultimately found in huge presences or high profiles but is revealed rather in small and hidden things, babies born in poverty, bookshops in backstreets and market halls, and bookstalls at the back of forgotten churches. We strive for ‘Mission on the High Street’ but God calls us to mission wherever we are, with whatever we have.

5 Quid for Life: A Mental Health Safety Net

5 Quid for Life

At UKCBD, I’m celebrating 10 years with a simple commitment: over the next year a minimum of 10% of all UKCBD income will be donated to the new up-and-coming charity 5 Quid for Life: A Mental Health Safety Net. It’s a project that I’ve been privileged to be part of from the outset, emerging out of a friend’s desperation as she poured out her heart over the disruption the current government’s changes to the UK benefits system would have on her. If you haven’t already done so, read about it here: Welcome to 5 Quid for Life; and if you’d like to make a donation, you can do so here: 5quidforlife.org.uk/#donate

For further reflections on the changes the last ten years have wrought, see Mary Bartholomew’s latest Good Bookstall editorial; and as we celebrate 10 years online, congratulations must also go to Luke Bunger and his team at one of those small independents, The Hub, Walsall, as they celebrate their first anniversary after surviving the collapse of Wesley Owen … talking of which…


Commentaries Sale at Wesley Owen

THANK YOU to Wesley Owen Birmingham for letting me know about their commentaries sale: 25% off all commentaries; but anyone wanting a slice of the cake needs to move fast — offer ends tomorrow, Saturday 26th February. Available from all branches and online too!

Meanwhile congratulations are due to the inimitable David Chant, former WO Birmingham branch manager, who has moved on into ‘semi-retirement’ from where he should be able to spend a little more time promoting Planet BB. Have you ordered your stock yet? David’s itching to hear from you…


More Shops Seeking New Owners

CHRISTIAN BOOKSHOPS seeking new owners seems to be a trending topic at the moment. This time around we have two, The Ark, Lymington, and Cardiff Christian Bookshop.

The Ark, Lymington

Shop For Sale: The Ark, Lymington

THE ARK is a Christian Bookshop and Café which opened its doors in 2004 and has gone on to serve the local community and churches ever since, but owner Ginny Ayling now wishes to retire and hand on the business to someone else: sale price £325,000, Freehold. Could that someone be you or someone you know?

The shop is well loved and supported by the local people. Describing the shop, the Revd Peter Salisbury, Vicar of Lymington, said:

The Ark is an important part of the Christian outreach in Lymington and is an excellent central meeting place. All the volunteers are from the local churches and the bookshop gives advice and an ordering service, which we use for our personal and church orders. The Café, which is always buzzing at lunchtime, has a very high reputation and offers friendly and personal service plus gorgeous food – I’m usually in there about once a week!

Download the Particulars of Sale or an A4 Sale Poster (both pdfs) if you’d like to know more or would like to help promote the sale.

CARDIFF CHRISTIAN BOOKSHOP is currently owned and operated by the Evangelical Movement of Wales, who have reluctantly concluded that they can no longer support the shop. From the shop’s February Prayer Letter:

The Evangelical Movement of Wales has decided most reluctantly that it must bring its support of the Cardiff Christian Bookshop to an end. This is most regrettable since it has been such a witness in the heart of the city for almost 50 years. It is, however, very keen that the work and witness should continue and would actively invite Churches and other interested Christian groups to assume responsibility for it and to come forward with proposals for its future operation. The Movement is continuing to own and support the shop in the short term and the business will continue to function as usual.

The business costs around £55,000 per year to run in terms of staffing, rent and other expenses: download the February Prayer Letter (pdf) if you’d like to know more.


More Than Another Day of Prayer

8 Days of Prayer: Launching a Season of Prayer for Christian Retail in the UK

8 Days of Prayer: Launching a Season of Prayer for Christian Retail in the UK (pdf, 90kb)

JOY MCILROY of Ashburnham Books has been busy liaising with Clem Jackson at Christian Marketplace to draw up plans for another Day of Prayer for the trade — but this year it’s more than a day of prayer: the vision is for a season of prayer to run through Lent, starting on Ash Wednesday, 9th March. Announcement here: Day of Prayer for Christian Trade.

The announcement suggests sharing plans via the Christian Authors, Booksellers and Publishers facebook group. Should you choose to do so, please note that that is a closed group, set up specifically to facilitate discussion within the trade away from the public eye — in other words, not the best forum to use if you wish to engage with others beyond the trade…

As with previous occasions I’ll be updating this site’s Day of Prayer page with news and updates as and when they emerge: please do feel free to post details of any plans there and to point members of the general public in that direction.


New Blog for Caritas Music

LAST BUT NOT LEAST, another birthday this month as Caritas Music turned 13 back on February 2nd and have now launched a brand new bright-and-shiny blog for Caritas Music / Eschenbach Editions, where you’ll soon find all the latest news appearing from these two independent music publishers.

Looking Back…

Rediscovering the Latin Mass: Helen Sanderson-White introduces The Sanctus Project

Helen Sanderson-White

Helen Sanderson-White

WHAT HAPPENS when you combine creativity, a passion for music and a theological education? Helen Sanderson-White tells us a little of her story and introduces her latest offering, The Sanctus Project:

I often get asked “what do you do?” which always fills me with dread as I try to explain the many things that my work entails! I trained as both a musician and theologian although my work veers more closely to music than theology. I teach singing, piano and music theory to both children and adults in the Buckinghamshire area. I compose and perform a variety of music including secular songs, church worship songs and instrumental music.

I spent a few years working as a Musical Director for both Anglican and Baptist churches; have taught pop singing and keyboards in various colleges in London; have had performance residencies in restaurants and have led one day vocal courses around the country. Every week is different and I have always been very thankful for that. I’m married to the inimitable Graham White, a Theology and Youthwork lecturer for Oasis College and former youth minister with interdenominational experience.

The Sanctus Project

The Sanctus Project

My latest publication is The Sanctus Project music book which is available directly from me (full details below). An accompanying CD with demonstration tracks and backing tracks of each song will be released later in 2010.

Back in the summer of 2007 I began to work on the idea of creating a contemporary musical version of part of the Latin Mass. Having previously used some of the current musical versions with my youth group it became apparent that there was a need for a fresh, modern approach to the liturgy that young people found engaging and exciting. This was also an opportunity to make the liturgy more accessible, fun and to encourage young people to embrace the Latin heritage though the dance and pop music genre. The Sanctus Project was born…

Building on the heritage of Taize, The Sanctus Project has a contemporary setting and can be used in a variety of different gatherings and services. Each song has been designed with an easy and memorable melody line with full dance track behind it. The CD and music book come as separates but can be used together during a church service or youth group meeting. The demonstration tracks have also been played in the background during a service as part of a meditation. The music book contains simple voice and piano arrangements (including guitar chords).

My love is creativity: creativity to explore the life that God has given us. I’m grateful for the varied avenues that God has given us to express the world we see around us and thus understand it more. My goal is always to create music that is different to the current styles we have in church at the moment and to reach out to those outside or on the fringes of the church. I hope in some small way that this project may be helpful to others, not just for teenagers but for adults too.

The Sanctus Project The Sanctus Project
A Contemporary Latin Mass

Product Code: 5800046637681
Little Eliza Music, 2010
Paperback, 14pp
£7.50

Kingsway: Letter to Retailers from John Paculabo

Letter to Retailers (pdf, 1.6mb)

Letter to Retailers (pdf, 1.6mb)

MY THANKS to John Paculabo for kind permission to post his letter to retailers — which he mentioned yesterday, Friday 30th July 2010 — for download here. Some retailers will have already received it by email, others can expect to receive it by post within the next few days.

As John himself explains, it’s a long letter — three pages of A4 — in which John sets out to address recent concerns raised both here and privately, looking at issues such as distribution and fulfilment, direct sales and digital downloads in particular. John outlines initial proposals for ways forward that should work for all of us, acknowledges that mistakes have been made, seeks to reassure us that these have been genuine mistakes with absolutely no intention to compete with or undermine high street retailers, and finally invites us to share the journey: “to walk this road together”.

Rather than reproduce the full letter, I’ve simply excerpted the opening paragraphs: to read the rest, download the pdf: Kingsway Letter to Retailers (1.6mb).

John writes:

Dear Retailer,

I apologise for the length of this letter, but it is written to bring you up to speed in a number of areas, including distribution, fulfillment, direct and digital sales to name but  four, and so I would appreciate if you could make  time to read this carefully.

Distribution
Since the decision to bring home distribution from STL in Carlisle, we have worked tirelessly in the pursuit of of providing you, the retailer, with a first class service; as a consequence  this task has brought many challenges. Many of the skills that we previously possessed in this activity had been lost in the last 20 years.
I am aware that we have some way to go in this respect; however, I am extremely confident that within a relatively short space of time, our service to you will be much improved and by the end of October at the latest, we shall return to levels of excellence that many of you will remember.

Our new distribution system marries perfectly into our accounts package but has proved to be somewhat inflexible in certain areas, and while we forced it to fit our needs, it has been a difficult process. Having to train new staff with little prior knowledge of our products or the new system also added to our distribution difficulties, however, we continue to work extremely hard to improve our service to you. Having now completed our annual stock-take (our year begins June 1st) we are confident that we have stock integrity and therefore going forward, fulfillment of orders will increase…

Thank you, Kingsway!

… and thank you, Luke, for spotting this within the last hour or so:

THANK YOU KINGSWAY.

Anyone who has visited the Kingswayshop.com will notice a small victory for us.

Gone are the “Our Price” “RRP” and “You Save” boxes on the pages of most products.

Gone are the bogus “Pre-Order” Discounts.

Replaced simply with a “Web Price” and, nothing else.

It has yet to filter down to Kingsway owned PuraShop.com, but this is a serious step in the right direction.

I on the few items i have checked, the “Web Price” is the old “our price” so they are still undercutting their retail partners, but in a way that is neither illegal, nor lies to their own customers.

It is not entirely bannished, the search page still has some remnant of “RRP” and “You Save”, but I am willing to overlook this as a small oversight, or a “work in progress” glitch.

Indeed, on all the “Pre Order” titles that i looked at, there is no evidence of any exclusive saving to be had by placing the pre-order, no indication as to what the price will be once it is releases, and as i mentioned, with the offers they are making available to retail partners on “Pre-orders” we should be well on our way to achieving price-parity on pre-orders anyway.

Once again, thank you

And a follow-up comment from Andrew Lacey:

Well spotted- this must have been updated this morning after 10am or so……

This doesn’t happen overnight, so some serious thinking must have been going on somewhere behind the scenes- for some time. Might have been nice to note somewhere that this was underway- would have saved a few of us a lot of pondering & heartsearching?!

None the less welcome for all that.

I will not now, of course, be pursuing a formal complaint with the OFT :)