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Gospel music

Gospel music is a traditional genre of Christian music, and a cornerstone of Christian media. The creation, performance, significance, and even the definition of gospel music varies according to culture and social context. Gospel music is composed and performed for many purposes, including aesthetic pleasure, religious or ceremonial purposes, and as an entertainment product for the marketplace. Gospel music is characterized by dominant vocals and strong use of harmony with Christian lyrics. Gospel music can be traced to the early 17th century.[1]

Gospel music
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsEarly 17th century, Scotland, Southern United States
Derivative forms
Subgenres
Black gospel
Fusion genres
Christian country music
Regional scenes
Southern gospel

Hymns and sacred songs were often repeated in a call and response fashion, heavily influenced by ancestral African music. Most of the churches relied on hand-clapping and foot-stomping as rhythmic accompaniment. Most of the singing was done a cappella.[2] The first published use of the term "gospel song" probably appeared in 1874.

The original gospel songs were written and composed by authors such as George F. Root, Philip Bliss, Charles H. Gabriel, William Howard Doane, and Fanny Crosby.[3] Gospel music publishing houses emerged. The advent of radio in the 1920s greatly increased the audience for gospel music. Following World War II, gospel music moved into major auditoriums, and gospel music concerts became quite elaborate.[4]

Black and Southern gospel music are largely responsible for gospel's continued presence in contemporary Christian music, with soul music by far the best-known popular music variant.[5] The styles emerged from the African-American music and American folk music traditions and have evolved in various ways over the years, continuing to form the basis of Black church worship even today. It has also come to be used in churches of various other cultural traditions (especially within Pentecostalism) and, via the gospel choir phenomenon spearheaded by Thomas Dorsey, has become a form of musical devotion worldwide. Southern used all-male, tenor-lead-baritone-bass quartets. Progressive Southern gospel has grown out of Southern gospel over the past couple of decades. Christian country music, sometimes referred to as country gospel music, is a subgenre of gospel music with a country flair. It peaked in popularity in the mid-1990s. Bluegrass gospel music is rooted in American mountain music. Celtic gospel music infuses gospel music with a Celtic flair, and is quite popular in countries such as Ireland. British black gospel refers to Gospel music of the African diaspora produced in the UK.

History

According to Yale University music professor Willie Ruff, the singing of psalms in Scottish Gaelic by Presbyterians of the Scottish Hebrides evolved from "lining out"—where one person sang a solo and others followed—into the call and response of gospel music of the American South.[6] Another theory notes foundations in the works of Dr. Isaac Watts and others.[7][unreliable source?]

Moreover, the genre arose during a time when literacy was not a guarantee, utilizing a great deal of repetition (which, unlike more traditional hymns, allowed those who could not read the opportunity to participate).[citation needed]

18th century

Perhaps the most famous gospel-based hymns were composed in the 1760s and 1770s by English writers John Newton ("Amazing Grace") and Augustus Toplady ("Rock of Ages"), members of the Anglican Church. Starting out as lyrics only, it took decades for standardized tunes to be added to them. Although not directly connected with African-American gospel music, they were adopted by African-Americans as well as white Americans, and Newton's connection with the abolition movement provided cross-fertilization.

Holiness-Pentecostal era (19th century)

 
Philip Paul Bliss

The first published use of the term "Gospel song" probably appeared in 1874 when Philip Bliss released a songbook entitled Gospel Songs. A Choice Collection of Hymns and Tunes. It was used to describe a new style of church music, songs that were easy to grasp and more easily singable than the traditional church hymns, which came out of the mass revival movement starting with Dwight L. Moody, whose musician was Ira D. Sankey, as well as the Holiness-Pentecostal movement.[3] Prior to the meeting of Moody and Sankey in 1870, there was an American rural/frontier history of revival and camp meeting songs, but the gospel hymn was of a different character, and it served the needs of mass revivals in the great cities.[8]

The revival movement employed popular singers and song leaders, the most famous of them being Ira D. Sankey. The original "gospel" songs were written and composed by authors such as George F. Root, Philip Bliss, Charles H. Gabriel, William Howard Doane, and Fanny Crosby.[3] As an extension to his initial publication Gospel Songs, Philip Bliss, in collaboration with Ira D. Sankey issued no's. 1 to 6 of Gospel Hymns in 1875.[9] Sankey and Bliss's collection can be found in many libraries today.

The popularity of revival singers and the openness of rural churches to this type of music (in spite of its initial use in city revivals) led to the late 19th and early 20th century establishment of gospel music publishing houses such as those of Homer Rodeheaver, E. O. Excell, Charlie Tillman, and Charles Tindley. These publishers were in the market for large quantities of new music, providing an outlet for the creative work of many songwriters and composers.[10]

The advent of radio in the 1920s greatly increased the audience for gospel music, and James D. Vaughan used radio as an integral part of his business model, which also included traveling quartets to publicize the gospel music books he published several times a year.[11] Virgil O. Stamps and Jesse R. Baxter studied Vaughan's business model and by the late 1920s were running heavy competition for Vaughan.[12] The 1920s also saw the marketing of gospel records by groups such as the Carter Family.

Emergence of Black gospel (1920s–1970s)

 
Mahalia Jackson has been called the "Queen of Gospel"

The Pentecostal movement quickly made inroads with churches not attuned to the Europeanized Black church music that had become popular over the years since Emancipation. These congregations readily adopted and contributed to the gospel music publications of the early 20th century. Sister Rosetta Tharpe, pioneer of rock and roll, soon emerged from this tradition as the first great gospel recording artist.[13] The first person to introduce ragtime to gospel (and the first to play piano on a gospel recording) was Arizona Dranes.[14]

The 1930s saw the rise of Black gospel quartets such as the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama.[15] In addition to these high-profile quartets, there were many Black gospel musicians performing in the 1920s and 30s, usually playing the guitar and singing in the streets of Southern cities.

In the 1930s, in Chicago, Thomas A. Dorsey turned to gospel music, establishing a publishing house.[4] It has been said that 1930 was the year traditional black gospel music began, as the National Baptist Convention first publicly endorsed the music at its 1930 meeting.[16] Dorsey was responsible for developing the musical careers of many African-American artists, such as Mahalia Jackson (best known for her rendition of his "Precious Lord, Take My Hand").[4]

Meanwhile, radio continued to develop an audience for gospel music, a fact that was commemorated in Albert E. Brumley's 1937 song, "Turn Your Radio On" (which is still being published in gospel song books). (In 1972, a recording of "Turn Your Radio On" by the Lewis Family was nominated for Gospel Song of the Year.)[17]

In 1964, the Gospel Music Association was established, which in turn began the Dove Awards (in 1969) and the Gospel Music Hall of Fame (in 1972). Both of the latter two groups began primarily for Southern gospel performers, but in the late 1970s, began including artists of other subgenres, which brought in many Black artists.[18] Also in 1969, James Cleveland established the Gospel Music Workshop of America, a Black gospel outlet.

Late 20th-century musicians such as Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the Blackwood Brothers were also known for their gospel influences and recordings.[12]

Contemporary Black gospel and gospel rap (1970s–present)

Urban contemporary gospel emerged in the late 1960s and early 70s with Walter Hawkins highly popular "Oh Happy Day" which is still performed worldwide in the 2000. Artists such as James Cleveland, Aretha Franklin, the Clark Sisters, Andrae Crouch and Richard Smallwood followed crossing over musically and gaining notoriety, and this pattern would repeat itself in subsequent decades, with new artists like Yolanda Adams and Kirk Franklin making increasingly more bold forays into the secular world with their musical stylings. The current sphere of Black gospel recording artists is almost exclusively of the urban contemporary bent.

Also of note is the rise of Christian (or gospel) rap/hip-hop, which has gained increasing popularity since the days of the Gospel Gangstaz and The Cross Movement. Often considered a subgenre of urban contemporary gospel, Christian rap has become dominated in present times by artists from Reach Records, who have seen perhaps the most commercial success of any artists in the gospel genre; Lecrae (the label's founder and preeminent artist) has charted in the top 10 of on the Billboard 200 three times, with his 2014 album "Anomaly" debuting at No. 1.

Subgenres

Black gospel

Traditional

Traditional Black gospel music is the most well-known form, often seen in Black churches, non-Black Pentecostal and evangelical churches, and in entertainment spaces across the country and world. It originates from the Southeastern United States ("the South"), where most Black Americans lived prior to the Great Migration. This music was highly influenced by the hymnody of the spirituals and of Watts and, later, the musical style and vision of Dorsey. Whereas northern Black churches did not at first welcome Dorsey's music (having become accustomed to their own more Eurocentric flavorings), after the Southern migrants' new churches became more popular, so did gospel music, gospel choirs, and the general trend toward exclusive use of this music in Black churches. Dorsey, Mahalia Jackson, the Mississippi Mass Choir, and the Georgia Mass Choir are but a few notable examples.

Urban contemporary

Developing out of the fusion of traditional Black gospel with the styles of secular Black music popular in the 70s and 80s, Urban Contemporary gospel is the most common form of recorded gospel music today. It relies heavily on rhythms and instrumentation common in the secular music of the contemporary era (often including the use of electronic beats), while still incorporating the themes and heritage of the traditional Black gospel genre. Kirk Franklin is the foremost (and by far the bestselling) individual in this genre, while Andrae Crouch, the Clark Sisters, and Yolanda Adams are also very popular and noteworthy.[citation needed]

British

British black gospel refers to gospel music of the African diaspora in the UK. It is also often referred to as "UK gospel".[19] The distinctive sound is heavily influenced by UK street culture with many artists from the African and Caribbean majority black churches in the UK.[20] The genre has gained recognition in various awards such as the GEM (Gospel Entertainment Music) Awards,[21] MOBO Awards,[22][23] Urban Music Awards[24] and has its own Official Christian & Gospel Albums Chart.[25]

Southern gospel music

Southern gospel music comes from the Southeastern United States and is similar in sound to Christian country music, but it sometimes known as "quartet music" for its traditional "four men and a piano" set up. The genre, while remaining predominantly White, began to integrate Black gospel stylings in the 1960s.[26] It has evolved over the years into a popular form of music across the United States and overseas, especially among baby boomers and those living in the South. Like other forms of music the creation, performance, significance, and even the definition of southern gospel varies according to culture and social context. It is composed and performed for many purposes, ranging from aesthetic pleasure, religious or ceremonial purposes, or as an entertainment product for the marketplace.

Christian country music

Christian country music, sometimes referred to as country gospel music, is a subgenre of gospel music with a country flair, is also known as inspirational country. Christian country over the years has progressed into a mainstream country sound with inspirational or positive country lyrics. In the mid-1990s, Christian country hit its highest popularity. This popularity was such that mainstream artists like Larry Gatlin, Charlie Daniels and Barbara Mandrell, just to name a few, began recording music that had this positive Christian country flair. These mainstream artists have now become award winners in this genre.[27][28]

Comparison to other hymnody

Some proponents of "standard" hymns generally dislike gospel music of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. For example, Patrick and Sydnor complain that commercial success led to a proliferation of such music, and "deterioration, even in a standard which to begin with was not high, resulted."[29] They went on to say, "there is no doubt that a deterioration in taste follows the use of this type of hymn and tune; it fosters an attachment to the trivial and sensational which dulls and often destroys sense of the dignity and beauty which best befit the song that is used in the service of God."[30]

Gold reviewed the issue in 1958, and collected a number of quotations similar to the complaints of Patrick and Sydnor. However, he also provided this quotation: "Gospel hymnody has the distinction of being America's most typical contribution to Christian song. As such, it is valid in its inspiration and in its employment."[31][32]

Today, with historical distance, there is a greater acceptance of such gospel songs into official denominational hymnals. For example, the United Methodist Church made this acceptance explicit in The Faith We Sing, a 2000 supplement to the official denominational hymnal. In the preface, the editors say, "Experience has shown that some older treasures were missed when the current hymnals were compiled."[33]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Gospel History Timeline". University of Southern California. Retrieved January 31, 2012.
  2. ^ Jackson, Joyce Marie. "The changing nature of gospel music: A southern case study." African American Review 29.2 (1995): 185. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. October 5, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Malone (1984), p. 520
  4. ^ a b c Malone (1984), p. 523
  5. ^ McGuinness, Paul (August 26, 2022). "A Change Is Gonna Come: How Gospel Gave Birth To Soul". uDiscover Music. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
  6. ^ "From Charles Mackintosh's waterproof to Dolly the sheep: 43 innovations Scotland has given the world". The Independent. January 3, 2016.
  7. ^ "Isaac Watts – The Center For Church Music, Songs and Hymns". Songsandhymns.org.
  8. ^ Christ-Janer, Hughes & Smith (1980), p. 364
  9. ^ Benson, Louis F. The English Hymn: Its Development and Use in Worship. New York: George H. Doran Co., 1915, p. 486. Several sources cite the Bliss and Sankey 1875 publication as the first to use the word "gospel" in this sense. For example, Malone (1984), p. 520.
  10. ^ Hall, Jacob Henry. Biography of Gospel Song and Hymn Writers. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1914, provides contemporary information about songwriters, composers and publishers.
  11. ^ See also Charles Davis Tillman.
  12. ^ a b Malone (1984), p. 521
  13. ^ "Godmother of Rock and Roll: Sister Rosetta Tharpe". PBS. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  14. ^ "COGIC Women in Gospel Music on Patheos". Patheos.com. June 10, 2009. Retrieved February 2, 2010.
  15. ^ Malone (1984), p. 522
  16. ^ Southern (1997), p. 484
  17. ^ "The Gospel Music Association's Dove Awards Nominations for the Gospel Song of 1972," Canaan Records (Waco, Texas) CAS-9732-LP Stereo.
  18. ^ Malone (1984), p. 524
  19. ^ "Gospel Music". BBC. July 11, 2011.
  20. ^ Smith, Steve Alexander (2009). British Black Gospel: Foundations of this vibrant UK sound. Monarch Books. ISBN 9781854248961.
  21. ^ Mackay, Maria (November 4, 2005). "Freddie Kofi Wins Best Male at GEM Awards". Christian Today.
  22. ^ N.A. (October 20, 2010). "Mobo Awards 2010: The Winners". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 11, 2022.
  23. ^ "Gospel's Lurine Cato is triumphant at the MOBOs". The Voice Online. October 21, 2013.
  24. ^ "Urban Music Awards". Urbanmusicawards.net.
  25. ^ "UKs first Official Christian & Gospel Albums Chart to launch next week". Recordoftheday.com. March 14, 2013.
  26. ^ Goff, James R. (1998). "The Rise of Southern Gospel Music". Church History. 67 (4): 722–744. doi:10.2307/3169850. ISSN 0009-6407. JSTOR 3169850. S2CID 162017997.
  27. ^ . Tollbooth.org. Archived from the original on November 4, 2009. Retrieved September 11, 2008.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on February 25, 2015.
  29. ^ Patrick (1962), p. 171
  30. ^ Patrick (1962), p. 172
  31. ^ Stevenson, Robert. Religion in Life, Winter, 1950–51[page needed]
  32. ^ Gold, Charles E. "The Gospel Song: Contemporary Opinion," The Hymn. v. 9, no. 3 (July 1958), p. 70.
  33. ^ Hickman, Hoyt L., ed. "Introduction," The Faith We Sing (Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 2000).[page needed]

Bibliography

  • Christ-Janer, Albert; Hughes, Charles W.; Smith, Carleton Sprague (1980). American Hymns Old and New. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Malone, Bill C. (1984). "Music, Religious, of the Protestant South". In Samuel S. Hill (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religion in the South. Mercer University Press.
  • Patrick, Millar (1962). The Story of the Church's Song. Revised by James Rawlings Sydnor. Richmond, Virginia: John Knox Press.
  • Southern, Eileen (1997). The Music of Black Americans: a History (3rd ed.). New York: W. W. Norton.

Further reading

  • Allen, Ray. Singing in the Spirit: African-American Sacred Quartets in New York City, in series, Publication[s] of the American Folklore Society: New Series. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991. xx,[2], 268 p., ill. with b&w photos. ISBN 0-8122-1331-9 pbk.
  • Barlow, Sanna Morrison. Mountain Singing: the Story of Gospel Recordings in the Philippines. Hong Kong: Alliance Press, 1952. 352 p.
  • Blackwell, Lois. The Wings of a Dove: The Story of Gospel Music in America. Norfolk: Donning, 1978.[ISBN missing]
  • Boyer, Horace Clarence. How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel. Elliott and Clark, 1995. ISBN 0-252-06877-7.
  • Broughton, Viv. Too Close to Heaven: The Illustrated History of Gospel Music. Midnight Books, 1996. ISBN 1-900516-00-4.
  • Albert E Brumley & Sons. The Best of Albert E. Brumley. Gospel Songs, 1966, paperback Amazing Grace[ISBN missing]
  • Cleall, Charles. Sixty Songs From Sankey. London: Marshall, Morgan and Scott, 1960.
  • Collins, Irma H. (2013). Dictionary of Music Education. Maryland: Scarecrow Press.
  • Cusic, Don. The Sound of Light: a History of Gospel Music. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1990. iv, 267 p. ISBN 0879724986 pbk.
  • Darden, Robert. People Get Ready: A New History of Black Gospel Music. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005, ISBN 0-8264-1752-3.
  • Downey, James C. The Gospel Hymn 1875–1930. University of Southern Mississippi, MA,[clarification needed] 1963.
  • Eskew, Harry. "Gospel Music, I" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980), VII, 549–554.
  • Hanson, Kenneth, The Hymnody and Hymnals of the Restoration Movement. Butler University, BD,[clarification needed] 1951.
  • Heilbut, Tony, The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times, Limelight Editions, 1997, ISBN 0-87910-034-6.
  • McNeil, W. K., ed. Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music. Routledge, 2005. ISBN 0-415-94179-2.
  • Marovich, Robert M., A City Called Heaven: Chicago and the Birth of Gospel Music. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0252080692.
  • Mungons, Kevin and Douglas Yeo, Homer Rodeheaver and the Rise of the Gospel Music Industry. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2021. ISBN 978-0252085833.
  • Stevenson, Arthur L. The Story of Southern Hymnology. Roanoke, Virginia: Stone Printing and Manufacturing, 1931.
  • Zolten, Jerry. Great God A' Mighty!: The Dixie Hummingbirds – Celebrating The Rise of Soul Gospel Music. Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-19-515272-7.

Archival sources

  • USC Gospel Music History Archive
  • Finding aid to Camille Taylor collection of Black Music Caucus Gospel Choir Competition recordings at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

External links

Professional organizations

  • Gospel Music Association – Acknowledges all forms of gospel/Christian music
  • Gospel Viu – Gospel Without Borders
  • Gospel Wire – Primarily urban contemporary gospel
  • Pacific Gospel Music Association – Known for Southern gospel
  • Southern Gospel Music Association
  • Gospel Music Information
  • Festival Lumen – the biggest gospel music festival in central Europe

Media outlets

  • Black Family Channel
  • Bobby Jones Gospel
  • Christian Broadcasting Network
  • Daystar Television Network
  • Gospel Music Channel
  • The Inspirational Network
  • Trinity Broadcasting Network
  • KALO TV

gospel, music, gospel, genre, redirects, here, literary, genre, gospel, african, american, musical, genre, black, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . Gospel genre redirects here For the literary genre see Gospel For the African American musical genre see Black Gospel music This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gospel music news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gospel music is a traditional genre of Christian music and a cornerstone of Christian media The creation performance significance and even the definition of gospel music varies according to culture and social context Gospel music is composed and performed for many purposes including aesthetic pleasure religious or ceremonial purposes and as an entertainment product for the marketplace Gospel music is characterized by dominant vocals and strong use of harmony with Christian lyrics Gospel music can be traced to the early 17th century 1 Gospel musicStylistic originsChristian hymnsspiritualsCultural originsEarly 17th century Scotland Southern United StatesDerivative formsCountryrhythm and bluessoulrock and rollSubgenresBlack gospelFusion genresChristian country musicRegional scenesSouthern gospelHymns and sacred songs were often repeated in a call and response fashion heavily influenced by ancestral African music Most of the churches relied on hand clapping and foot stomping as rhythmic accompaniment Most of the singing was done a cappella 2 The first published use of the term gospel song probably appeared in 1874 The original gospel songs were written and composed by authors such as George F Root Philip Bliss Charles H Gabriel William Howard Doane and Fanny Crosby 3 Gospel music publishing houses emerged The advent of radio in the 1920s greatly increased the audience for gospel music Following World War II gospel music moved into major auditoriums and gospel music concerts became quite elaborate 4 Black and Southern gospel music are largely responsible for gospel s continued presence in contemporary Christian music with soul music by far the best known popular music variant 5 The styles emerged from the African American music and American folk music traditions and have evolved in various ways over the years continuing to form the basis of Black church worship even today It has also come to be used in churches of various other cultural traditions especially within Pentecostalism and via the gospel choir phenomenon spearheaded by Thomas Dorsey has become a form of musical devotion worldwide Southern used all male tenor lead baritone bass quartets Progressive Southern gospel has grown out of Southern gospel over the past couple of decades Christian country music sometimes referred to as country gospel music is a subgenre of gospel music with a country flair It peaked in popularity in the mid 1990s Bluegrass gospel music is rooted in American mountain music Celtic gospel music infuses gospel music with a Celtic flair and is quite popular in countries such as Ireland British black gospel refers to Gospel music of the African diaspora produced in the UK Contents 1 History 1 1 18th century 1 2 Holiness Pentecostal era 19th century 1 3 Emergence of Black gospel 1920s 1970s 1 4 Contemporary Black gospel and gospel rap 1970s present 2 Subgenres 2 1 Black gospel 2 1 1 Traditional 2 1 2 Urban contemporary 2 1 3 British 2 2 Southern gospel music 2 3 Christian country music 3 Comparison to other hymnody 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 Archival sources 8 External links 8 1 Professional organizations 8 2 Media outletsHistory EditAccording to Yale University music professor Willie Ruff the singing of psalms in Scottish Gaelic by Presbyterians of the Scottish Hebrides evolved from lining out where one person sang a solo and others followed into the call and response of gospel music of the American South 6 Another theory notes foundations in the works of Dr Isaac Watts and others 7 unreliable source Moreover the genre arose during a time when literacy was not a guarantee utilizing a great deal of repetition which unlike more traditional hymns allowed those who could not read the opportunity to participate citation needed 18th century Edit Perhaps the most famous gospel based hymns were composed in the 1760s and 1770s by English writers John Newton Amazing Grace and Augustus Toplady Rock of Ages members of the Anglican Church Starting out as lyrics only it took decades for standardized tunes to be added to them Although not directly connected with African American gospel music they were adopted by African Americans as well as white Americans and Newton s connection with the abolition movement provided cross fertilization Holiness Pentecostal era 19th century Edit Philip Paul Bliss The first published use of the term Gospel song probably appeared in 1874 when Philip Bliss released a songbook entitled Gospel Songs A Choice Collection of Hymns and Tunes It was used to describe a new style of church music songs that were easy to grasp and more easily singable than the traditional church hymns which came out of the mass revival movement starting with Dwight L Moody whose musician was Ira D Sankey as well as the Holiness Pentecostal movement 3 Prior to the meeting of Moody and Sankey in 1870 there was an American rural frontier history of revival and camp meeting songs but the gospel hymn was of a different character and it served the needs of mass revivals in the great cities 8 The revival movement employed popular singers and song leaders the most famous of them being Ira D Sankey The original gospel songs were written and composed by authors such as George F Root Philip Bliss Charles H Gabriel William Howard Doane and Fanny Crosby 3 As an extension to his initial publication Gospel Songs Philip Bliss in collaboration with Ira D Sankey issued no s 1 to 6 of Gospel Hymns in 1875 9 Sankey and Bliss s collection can be found in many libraries today The popularity of revival singers and the openness of rural churches to this type of music in spite of its initial use in city revivals led to the late 19th and early 20th century establishment of gospel music publishing houses such as those of Homer Rodeheaver E O Excell Charlie Tillman and Charles Tindley These publishers were in the market for large quantities of new music providing an outlet for the creative work of many songwriters and composers 10 The advent of radio in the 1920s greatly increased the audience for gospel music and James D Vaughan used radio as an integral part of his business model which also included traveling quartets to publicize the gospel music books he published several times a year 11 Virgil O Stamps and Jesse R Baxter studied Vaughan s business model and by the late 1920s were running heavy competition for Vaughan 12 The 1920s also saw the marketing of gospel records by groups such as the Carter Family Emergence of Black gospel 1920s 1970s Edit Main article Black Gospel music Mahalia Jackson has been called the Queen of Gospel The Pentecostal movement quickly made inroads with churches not attuned to the Europeanized Black church music that had become popular over the years since Emancipation These congregations readily adopted and contributed to the gospel music publications of the early 20th century Sister Rosetta Tharpe pioneer of rock and roll soon emerged from this tradition as the first great gospel recording artist 13 The first person to introduce ragtime to gospel and the first to play piano on a gospel recording was Arizona Dranes 14 The 1930s saw the rise of Black gospel quartets such as the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama 15 In addition to these high profile quartets there were many Black gospel musicians performing in the 1920s and 30s usually playing the guitar and singing in the streets of Southern cities In the 1930s in Chicago Thomas A Dorsey turned to gospel music establishing a publishing house 4 It has been said that 1930 was the year traditional black gospel music began as the National Baptist Convention first publicly endorsed the music at its 1930 meeting 16 Dorsey was responsible for developing the musical careers of many African American artists such as Mahalia Jackson best known for her rendition of his Precious Lord Take My Hand 4 Meanwhile radio continued to develop an audience for gospel music a fact that was commemorated in Albert E Brumley s 1937 song Turn Your Radio On which is still being published in gospel song books In 1972 a recording of Turn Your Radio On by the Lewis Family was nominated for Gospel Song of the Year 17 In 1964 the Gospel Music Association was established which in turn began the Dove Awards in 1969 and the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 1972 Both of the latter two groups began primarily for Southern gospel performers but in the late 1970s began including artists of other subgenres which brought in many Black artists 18 Also in 1969 James Cleveland established the Gospel Music Workshop of America a Black gospel outlet Late 20th century musicians such as Elvis Presley Jerry Lee Lewis and the Blackwood Brothers were also known for their gospel influences and recordings 12 Contemporary Black gospel and gospel rap 1970s present Edit Main article Urban contemporary gospel Urban contemporary gospel emerged in the late 1960s and early 70s with Walter Hawkins highly popular Oh Happy Day which is still performed worldwide in the 2000 Artists such as James Cleveland Aretha Franklin the Clark Sisters Andrae Crouch and Richard Smallwood followed crossing over musically and gaining notoriety and this pattern would repeat itself in subsequent decades with new artists like Yolanda Adams and Kirk Franklin making increasingly more bold forays into the secular world with their musical stylings The current sphere of Black gospel recording artists is almost exclusively of the urban contemporary bent Also of note is the rise of Christian or gospel rap hip hop which has gained increasing popularity since the days of the Gospel Gangstaz and The Cross Movement Often considered a subgenre of urban contemporary gospel Christian rap has become dominated in present times by artists from Reach Records who have seen perhaps the most commercial success of any artists in the gospel genre Lecrae the label s founder and preeminent artist has charted in the top 10 of on the Billboard 200 three times with his 2014 album Anomaly debuting at No 1 Subgenres EditBlack gospel Edit Traditional Edit Main article Traditional black gospel Traditional Black gospel music is the most well known form often seen in Black churches non Black Pentecostal and evangelical churches and in entertainment spaces across the country and world It originates from the Southeastern United States the South where most Black Americans lived prior to the Great Migration This music was highly influenced by the hymnody of the spirituals and of Watts and later the musical style and vision of Dorsey Whereas northern Black churches did not at first welcome Dorsey s music having become accustomed to their own more Eurocentric flavorings after the Southern migrants new churches became more popular so did gospel music gospel choirs and the general trend toward exclusive use of this music in Black churches Dorsey Mahalia Jackson the Mississippi Mass Choir and the Georgia Mass Choir are but a few notable examples Urban contemporary Edit Main article Urban contemporary gospel Developing out of the fusion of traditional Black gospel with the styles of secular Black music popular in the 70s and 80s Urban Contemporary gospel is the most common form of recorded gospel music today It relies heavily on rhythms and instrumentation common in the secular music of the contemporary era often including the use of electronic beats while still incorporating the themes and heritage of the traditional Black gospel genre Kirk Franklin is the foremost and by far the bestselling individual in this genre while Andrae Crouch the Clark Sisters and Yolanda Adams are also very popular and noteworthy citation needed British Edit British black gospel refers to gospel music of the African diaspora in the UK It is also often referred to as UK gospel 19 The distinctive sound is heavily influenced by UK street culture with many artists from the African and Caribbean majority black churches in the UK 20 The genre has gained recognition in various awards such as the GEM Gospel Entertainment Music Awards 21 MOBO Awards 22 23 Urban Music Awards 24 and has its own Official Christian amp Gospel Albums Chart 25 Southern gospel music Edit Main article Southern gospel Southern gospel music comes from the Southeastern United States and is similar in sound to Christian country music but it sometimes known as quartet music for its traditional four men and a piano set up The genre while remaining predominantly White began to integrate Black gospel stylings in the 1960s 26 It has evolved over the years into a popular form of music across the United States and overseas especially among baby boomers and those living in the South Like other forms of music the creation performance significance and even the definition of southern gospel varies according to culture and social context It is composed and performed for many purposes ranging from aesthetic pleasure religious or ceremonial purposes or as an entertainment product for the marketplace Christian country music Edit Main article Christian country music Christian country music sometimes referred to as country gospel music is a subgenre of gospel music with a country flair is also known as inspirational country Christian country over the years has progressed into a mainstream country sound with inspirational or positive country lyrics In the mid 1990s Christian country hit its highest popularity This popularity was such that mainstream artists like Larry Gatlin Charlie Daniels and Barbara Mandrell just to name a few began recording music that had this positive Christian country flair These mainstream artists have now become award winners in this genre 27 28 Comparison to other hymnody EditSome proponents of standard hymns generally dislike gospel music of the late 19th and early 20th centuries For example Patrick and Sydnor complain that commercial success led to a proliferation of such music and deterioration even in a standard which to begin with was not high resulted 29 They went on to say there is no doubt that a deterioration in taste follows the use of this type of hymn and tune it fosters an attachment to the trivial and sensational which dulls and often destroys sense of the dignity and beauty which best befit the song that is used in the service of God 30 Gold reviewed the issue in 1958 and collected a number of quotations similar to the complaints of Patrick and Sydnor However he also provided this quotation Gospel hymnody has the distinction of being America s most typical contribution to Christian song As such it is valid in its inspiration and in its employment 31 32 Today with historical distance there is a greater acceptance of such gospel songs into official denominational hymnals For example the United Methodist Church made this acceptance explicit in The Faith We Sing a 2000 supplement to the official denominational hymnal In the preface the editors say Experience has shown that some older treasures were missed when the current hymnals were compiled 33 See also EditGospel Music Hall of Fame List of gospel musicians Phillip Paul Bliss House Soul music Stellar AwardsReferences Edit Gospel History Timeline University of Southern California Retrieved January 31 2012 Jackson Joyce Marie The changing nature of gospel music A southern case study African American Review 29 2 1995 185 Academic Search Premier EBSCO Web October 5 2010 a b c Malone 1984 p 520 a b c Malone 1984 p 523 McGuinness Paul August 26 2022 A Change Is Gonna Come How Gospel Gave Birth To Soul uDiscover Music Retrieved December 13 2022 From Charles Mackintosh s waterproof to Dolly the sheep 43 innovations Scotland has given the world The Independent January 3 2016 Isaac Watts The Center For Church Music Songs and Hymns Songsandhymns org Christ Janer Hughes amp Smith 1980 p 364 Benson Louis F The English Hymn Its Development and Use in Worship New York George H Doran Co 1915 p 486 Several sources cite the Bliss and Sankey 1875 publication as the first to use the word gospel in this sense For example Malone 1984 p 520 Hall Jacob Henry Biography of Gospel Song and Hymn Writers New York Fleming H Revell Company 1914 provides contemporary information about songwriters composers and publishers See also Charles Davis Tillman a b Malone 1984 p 521 Godmother of Rock and Roll Sister Rosetta Tharpe PBS Retrieved August 8 2015 COGIC Women in Gospel Music on Patheos Patheos com June 10 2009 Retrieved February 2 2010 Malone 1984 p 522 Southern 1997 p 484 The Gospel Music Association s Dove Awards Nominations for the Gospel Song of 1972 Canaan Records Waco Texas CAS 9732 LP Stereo Malone 1984 p 524 Gospel Music BBC July 11 2011 Smith Steve Alexander 2009 British Black Gospel Foundations of this vibrant UK sound Monarch Books ISBN 9781854248961 Mackay Maria November 4 2005 Freddie Kofi Wins Best Male at GEM Awards Christian Today N A October 20 2010 Mobo Awards 2010 The Winners The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Gospel s Lurine Cato is triumphant at the MOBOs The Voice Online October 21 2013 Urban Music Awards Urbanmusicawards net UKs first Official Christian amp Gospel Albums Chart to launch next week Recordoftheday com March 14 2013 Goff James R 1998 The Rise of Southern Gospel Music Church History 67 4 722 744 doi 10 2307 3169850 ISSN 0009 6407 JSTOR 3169850 S2CID 162017997 Larry Gatlin nominated for Christian Country Album of the Year Tollbooth org Archived from the original on November 4 2009 Retrieved September 11 2008 Barbara Mandrell inducted into the Country Gospel Music Hall of Fame Archived from the original on February 25 2015 Patrick 1962 p 171 Patrick 1962 p 172 Stevenson Robert Religion in Life Winter 1950 51 page needed Gold Charles E The Gospel Song Contemporary Opinion The Hymn v 9 no 3 July 1958 p 70 Hickman Hoyt L ed Introduction The Faith We Sing Nashville Tennessee Abingdon Press 2000 page needed Bibliography Edit Christ Janer Albert Hughes Charles W Smith Carleton Sprague 1980 American Hymns Old and New New York Columbia University Press Malone Bill C 1984 Music Religious of the Protestant South In Samuel S Hill ed Encyclopedia of Religion in the South Mercer University Press Patrick Millar 1962 The Story of the Church s Song Revised by James Rawlings Sydnor Richmond Virginia John Knox Press Southern Eileen 1997 The Music of Black Americans a History 3rd ed New York W W Norton Further reading Edit Selection of gospel music collected by the Library of Congress in 1943 Oh Jonah source source Sung by the Golden Jubilee QuartetMy Lord Is Writin source source Sung by the Cochran Field SingersDeath is an Awful Thing source source Sung by the Middle Georgia SingersWe are Americans Praise the Lord source source Sung by Bertha Houston and her congregation with a few topical verses on World War II Death Come a Knockin source source Sung by The Four BrothersJohn the Revelator source source Sung by the Spiritual Four Quartet Edward Bond Cleve Parker James Bond and Elwood Gaines Problems playing these files See media help Allen Ray Singing in the Spirit African American Sacred Quartets in New York City in series Publication s of the American Folklore Society New Series Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press 1991 xx 2 268 p ill with b amp w photos ISBN 0 8122 1331 9 pbk Barlow Sanna Morrison Mountain Singing the Story of Gospel Recordings in the Philippines Hong Kong Alliance Press 1952 352 p Blackwell Lois The Wings of a Dove The Story of Gospel Music in America Norfolk Donning 1978 ISBN missing Boyer Horace Clarence How Sweet the Sound The Golden Age of Gospel Elliott and Clark 1995 ISBN 0 252 06877 7 Broughton Viv Too Close to Heaven The Illustrated History of Gospel Music Midnight Books 1996 ISBN 1 900516 00 4 Albert E Brumley amp Sons The Best of Albert E Brumley Gospel Songs 1966 paperback Amazing Grace ISBN missing Cleall Charles Sixty Songs From Sankey London Marshall Morgan and Scott 1960 Collins Irma H 2013 Dictionary of Music Education Maryland Scarecrow Press Cusic Don The Sound of Light a History of Gospel Music Bowling Green Ohio Bowling Green State University Popular Press 1990 iv 267 p ISBN 0879724986 pbk Darden Robert People Get Ready A New History of Black Gospel Music Continuum International Publishing Group 2005 ISBN 0 8264 1752 3 Downey James C The Gospel Hymn 1875 1930 University of Southern Mississippi MA clarification needed 1963 Eskew Harry Gospel Music I in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 1980 VII 549 554 Hanson Kenneth The Hymnody and Hymnals of the Restoration Movement Butler University BD clarification needed 1951 Heilbut Tony The Gospel Sound Good News and Bad Times Limelight Editions 1997 ISBN 0 87910 034 6 McNeil W K ed Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music Routledge 2005 ISBN 0 415 94179 2 Marovich Robert M A City Called Heaven Chicago and the Birth of Gospel Music Urbana University of Illinois Press 2015 ISBN 978 0252080692 Mungons Kevin and Douglas Yeo Homer Rodeheaver and the Rise of the Gospel Music Industry Urbana University of Illinois Press 2021 ISBN 978 0252085833 Stevenson Arthur L The Story of Southern Hymnology Roanoke Virginia Stone Printing and Manufacturing 1931 Zolten Jerry Great God A Mighty The Dixie Hummingbirds Celebrating The Rise of Soul Gospel Music Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 515272 7 Archival sources EditUSC Gospel Music History Archive Finding aid to Camille Taylor collection of Black Music Caucus Gospel Choir Competition recordings at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gospel music This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Professional organizations Edit Gospel Music Association Acknowledges all forms of gospel Christian music Gospel Viu Gospel Without Borders Gospel Wire Primarily urban contemporary gospel Pacific Gospel Music Association Known for Southern gospel Southern Gospel Music Association Gospel Music Information Festival Lumen the biggest gospel music festival in central EuropeMedia outlets Edit Black Family Channel Bobby Jones Gospel Christian Broadcasting Network Daystar Television Network Gospel Music Channel The Inspirational Network Trinity Broadcasting Network KALO TV Portal Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gospel music amp oldid 1127586474, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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