That’s What I Meant To Say Podcast Por James D. Newcomb arte de portada

That’s What I Meant To Say

That’s What I Meant To Say

De: James D. Newcomb
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This is a podcast for those who believe words still matter—words that shape us, steady us, and call us to something higher. Hosted by musician and scholar James D. Newcomb, this show explores the deeper currents beneath language, story, philosophy, and the human pursuit of meaning. Here you’ll find reflections, essays, and conversations that invite you to slow down, think deeply, and rediscover the wisdom woven into the world.Copyright 2025 James D. Newcomb Arte Ciencias Sociales Entretenimiento y Artes Escénicas Espiritualidad Filosofía
Episodios
  • The Destination Is Resonance
    Dec 17 2025

    What makes music feel alive? Technical precision and flawless execution are essential, but they do not explain why certain performances linger long after the final note fades.

    In this solo episode, James Newcomb reflects on the difference between playing notes and creating meaning, exploring how lived experience, embodiment, discipline, and humility shape real musical expression.

    Drawing on decades as a performer and teacher, this episode reframes music not as performance or self-expression, but as alignment—an encounter that draws both musician and listener into something deeper, larger, and true.

    Episode Highlights:

    • Why technical perfection alone often fails to move the listener
    • The difference between playing notes and creating meaning
    • How hardship and lived experience deepen musical expression
    • Why music cannot live in the intellect alone
    • Embodiment, presence, and the intelligence of the body
    • Discipline as the path to freedom, not limitation
    • Music as alignment rather than self-expression
    • Resonance as the true destination of musical practice

    Follow James Newcomb on the web at jamesdnewcomb.com.

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    11 m
  • Now THAT'S Real Music. Beyond Technical Proficiency and the Unspoken Language of Music
    Dec 16 2025

    Watch on YouTube

    In this episode, James Newcomb is joined by Brian Neal, longtime trumpeter with the Dallas Brass and Professor of Trumpet at the University of Denver’s Lamont School of Music.

    Together, they explore what lies beyond technical mastery in music—why virtuosity alone is not enough, and how true musical communication depends on vulnerability, context, and shared human experience.

    Drawing from performance, pedagogy, and decades on stage, the conversation examines how music conveys meaning words cannot, and why the highest form of musicianship is connection, not display.

    Resources mentioned:

    Brian Neal's Website: https://briannealtrumpet.com

    Dallas Brass: https://www.dallasbrass.com

    Brian Neal’s Concertante - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLTQjr4_u7M

    jamesdnewcomb.com

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    21 m
  • Thinking Orthodox & A Primer on that “Other” Way of Christian Discipleship with Dr. Jeannie Constantinou
    Nov 22 2025

    Show notes: https://jamesdnewcomb.com/jeannie

    We welcome biblical scholar and author Dr. Jeannie Constantinou for a sweeping, heartfelt, and clarifying conversation on phronema—the ancient Christian mindset preserved in the Orthodox Church.

    I open the conversation by sharing my own journey of transitioning into Orthodoxy, reflecting on how Western Christianity shaped my early worldview and how the discovery of the Orthodox Church revealed an entirely different way of understanding faith, thought, and spiritual life. As you'll hear, reframing an entire worldview and mindset does not happen overnight!


    In this episode, you'll hear why Orthodoxy speaks so deeply to those seeking “something more” i.e. a fuller experience of Christ rather than a purely symbolic one. The discussion highlights the West’s long-standing reliance on human reason, logic, and systematic explanations, contrasted with the Orthodox emphasis on mystery, experience, sacrament, community, and the healing of the heart.


    To put it another way: We can't possibly understand God in all His fullness, and we're perfectly okay with that!


    Dr. Jeannie explains the ancient Greek concept of phronema. This goes beyond a mere “worldview.,” It is a mindset, disposition, and lived mentality that flows from the apostles and the early Church, unchanged for two millennia.


    She also explains in detail how the Orthodox Church has maintained continuity with Christ’s original intent, what early Christian worship actually looked like, why tradition (and the dreaded ritual) matters, and how one begins to cultivate the mind of Christ through prayer, humility, sacramental life, and participation in the community.


    Whether you’re new to Orthodoxy, curious about early Christianity, or simply wrestling with the limits of Western religious paradigms, this episode offers clarity, depth, and a pastoral invitation to encounter the reality of Christ via the fullness of His Church.


    Episode highlights:


    01:10 – James’s transition (not conversion) from Protestant/Western Christianity into Orthodoxy


    07:10 – The unfulfilled Protestant mindset: salvation as a “destination” vs. lifelong journey


    10:10 – Western fixation on explanation vs. Orthodox acceptance of mystery


    13:10 – What phronema is—and isn’t


    14:10 – How Christ Himself taught “the mind of God” through His deeds and teachings


    17:10 – The West’s attempt to reconstruct early Christianity through reason


    21:10 – The problem of individualism and denominational fragmentation


    24:10 – The Church is the physical body of Christ, not some invisible abstraction


    28:10 – The Eastern Church didn’t “break off” from Rome


    30:10 – Bishops, councils, and why the early Church rejected papal monarchy


    34:10 – The sincere desire to rediscover early Christianity


    37:10 – How the apostles taught—and preserved—Christ’s actual teachings


    41:10 – Early Christian worship: sacred, communal, experiential


    46:10 – Oral tradition and why Scripture was never meant to stand alon


    49:10 – Understanding the much-maligned Constantine’s role in Church history


    51:10 – Why ritual is natural, ancient, and thoroughly Christian


    53:10 – How to acquire phronema through lived participation within community


    01:03:10 – How to connect with Dr. Jeannie and closing remarks


    Quotable...

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    1 h y 5 m
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