Students looking for music, fellowship and free coffee flock to Coffeehouse.
Coffeehouse not only means good music for listeners but also important performances for local songwriters. Scott Wilson, a freshman at Lipscomb, played at Coffeehouse in September and said he was thrilled by the opportunity to perform for his peers.
“Someone is there to receive what I’ve created and worked really hard on,” he said.
Coffeehouse is a small, intimate concert performed by Lipscomb students for Lipscomb students. Every Thursday night at 10 p.m. the Starbucks located in the Bennett Campus Center is booming with people and tunes.
Coffeehouse is popular for the obvious reasons, among them the fact it gives the spotlight to songwriters who usually remain anonymous.
Wilson said Coffeehouse was the first live show he had ever done by himself, even though he records his own music and puts it on the Internet.
“I liked the first experience of that, and I liked getting to perform some of the music that I had written,” he said.
Coffeehouse is a place that can provide a live atmosphere without a scary audience for performers, but it also provides a platform for artists to get their point across through their music.
“Something about an audience changes the way you would perform”, Wilson said. “I think it gets me out of perfectionist mode, and it makes me not think about as much as how perfectly I’m playing but how well I’m conveying what I’m saying.”