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Southern gospel

Southern gospel music is a genre of Christian music. Its name comes from its origins in the southeastern United States. Its lyrics are written to express either personal or a communal faith regarding biblical teachings and Christian life, as well as (in terms of the varying music styles) to give a Christian alternative to mainstream secular music. Sometimes known as "quartet music" for its traditional "four men and a piano" set up, southern gospel 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 Southern United States. Like other forms of music, the creation, performance, significance, and even the definition of southern gospel varies according to the cultural 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. Pop with an extra "o: is a type of stuff.

Origins

The date of southern gospel's establishment, as a distinct genre, is generally considered to be 1910. The year the first professional quartet was formed for the purpose of selling songbooks for the James D. Vaughan Music Publishing Company in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. Nonetheless, the style of the music itself had existed for at least 35 years prior—although the traditional wisdom that southern gospel was "invented" in the 1870s by circuit preacher Everett Beverly is spurious.

The existence of the genre prior to 1910 is evident in the work of Charles Davis Tillman (1861–1943), who popularized "The Old Time Religion", wrote "Life's Railway to Heaven" and published 22 songbooks.[1][2][3] Some of the genre's roots can be found in the publishing work and "normal schools" or singing schools of Aldine S. Kieffer and Ephraim Ruebush. Southern gospel was promoted by traveling singing school teachers, quartets, and shape note music publishing companies such as the A. J. Showalter Company (1879) and the Stamps-Baxter Music and Printing Company.

Over time, southern gospel came to be an eclectic musical form with groups singing traditional hymns, a capella (jazz-style singing with no instruments) songs, country, bluegrass, spirituals, and "convention songs". Because it grew out of the musical traditions of white musicians from the American South, the name Southern gospel was used to differentiate it from the black gospel tradition.[4][5]

Convention songs typically have contrasting homophonic and contrapuntal sections. In the homophonic sections, the four parts sing the same words and rhythms. In the contrapuntal sections, each group member has a unique lyric and rhythm. These songs are called "convention songs" because various conventions were organized across the United States for the purpose of getting together regularly and singing songs in this style. Convention songs were employed by training centers like the Stamps-Baxter School Of Music as a way to teach quartet members how to concentrate on singing their own part. Examples of convention songs include "Heavenly Parade," "I'm Living In Canaan Now," "Give the World a Smile," and "Heaven's Jubilee."

Early performers

Southern gospel is sometimes called "quartet music" by fans because of the originally all-male, tenor-lead-baritone-bass quartet makeup. Early quartets were typically either a cappella or accompanied only by piano or guitar, and in some cases a piano and banjo in areas that were influenced by bluegrass music such as Appalachia. Over time, full bands were added and even later, pre-recorded accompaniments (soundtracks) were introduced.

In the first decades of the twentieth century, southern gospel drew much of its creative energy from the holiness movement churches that arose throughout the south. Early gospel artists such as The Speer Family, The Stamps Quartet, The Blackwood Family, and The Lefevre Trio achieved wide popularity through their recordings and radio performances in the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. On October 20, 1927, The Stamps Quartet recorded its early hit "Give The World A Smile" for RCA Victor, which become the Quartet's theme song. The Stamps Quartet was heard on the radio throughout Texas and the South. A handful of groups were considered pioneers in southern gospel music for a series of "firsts." The Blackwood Brothers, with James Blackwood and J.D. Sumner became the first group to travel in a bus, which is on display at the Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame at Dollywood in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Sumner also was instrumental in creating the National Quartet Convention, an annual music festival where many groups, both known and well known perform for a week. The Speer Family was known for bringing blended groups to mainstream popularity where both male and female performers toured together. The best known group of the 1950s and 1960s was the Statesmen Quartet, which set the trend for broad appeal of the all-male quartets that would develop years later. The Statesmen were known for their showmanship and introduction of jazz, ragtime, and even some early rock and roll. Elements into their music and their stage appearance with trendy suits and wide audience appeal and were known for their signature song, "Happy Rhythm" (Rockin and a'Rollin).

Gaither Homecoming series

Traditional southern gospel music underwent a tremendous surge in popularity during the 1990s thanks to the efforts of Bill and Gloria Gaither and their Gaither Homecoming tours and videos, which began as a reunion of many of the best known and loved SGM individuals in 1991. Thanks in part to the Homecoming series, southern gospel music now has fans across the United States and in a number of foreign countries like Ireland and Australia.

1990s and beyond

By the 1990s, the "old-timey" quartet-style music began to develop to include more soloists and duos. Although still mostly popular in the Southeast and Southwest, it has a nationwide and even international audience. The music remains "more country than city, more down-home than pretentious".[6]

In 2005, The Radio Book, a broadcast yearbook published by M Street Publications, reported 285 radio stations in the U.S. with a primary format designation as "southern gospel," including 175 AM stations and 110 FM stations. In fact, southern gospel was the 9th most popular format for AM stations and the 21st most popular for FM. Southern gospel radio promoters routinely service more than a thousand radio stations which play at least some southern gospel music each week. Recent years have also seen the advent of a number of internet-only southern gospel "radio" stations.

Two popular satellite stations that feature southern gospel are channel 34 on XM Satellite Radio and Channel 65 (changed from 67). On Sirius Satellite Radio. Both play the same feed entitled, "enLighten on SiriusXm". Enlighten plays southern gospel and has several featured programs which air weekly including Paul Heil's Gospel Greats and Bill Gaither's Homecoming Radio.[7]

Over the last decades, a newer version of southern gospel has grown in popularity. This style is called progressive southern gospel and is characterized by a blend of traditional southern gospel, bluegrass, modern country, contemporary Christian and pop music elements. Progressive southern gospel generally features artists who push their voices to produce a sound with an edge to it. The traditional style southern gospel singers employ a more classical singing style.

Lyrically, most progressive southern gospel songs are patterned after traditional southern gospel in that they maintain a clear evangelistic and/or testimonial slant. Southern gospel purists view lyrical content and the underlying musical style as the key determining factors for applying the southern gospel label to a song.

Although there are some exceptions, most southern gospel songs would not be classified as Praise and Worship. Few southern gospel songs are sung "to" God as opposed to "about" God. On the other hand, southern gospel lyrics are typically overt in their Christian message unlike Contemporary Christian music (CCM) which sometimes has had "double entendre" lyrics, which could be interpreted as being about a devout love for God or an earthly love for a man or woman.

Media

Becoming popular through songbooks, such as those published by R. E. Winsett of Dayton, Tennessee, southern gospel was and is one of the few genres to use recordings, radio, and television technologies from the very beginning for the advancements of promoting the genre.[8]

One of the longest-running print magazines for southern gospel music has been the Singing News.[9] They started in the early 1970s supplying radio airplay charts and conducting annual fan based awards. They also supply popular topic forums for southern gospel fans to meet and discuss the genre. The move to internet services has brought along companies such as SoGospelNews.com which has become a noted e-zine forum for southern gospel and has remained a supporter for the past twelve years. It too contains the music charts with forums and chat rooms available to the fans.[10]

Internet Radio has broadened the southern gospel music fan base by using computer technologies and continual streaming. Some of these media outlets are: Sunlite Radio which features many of the southern gospel programs likewise heard on traditional radio. This list includes The Gospel Greats with Paul Heil, which recently celebrated 30 years on the air, Southern Gospel USA, a weekly half-hour countdown show hosted by Gary Wilson, Classic radio programs such as The Old Gospel Ship and Heaven's Jubilee with Jim Loudermilk.[11] Another online station is "The Gospel Station."[12]

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on May 1, 2008.
  2. ^ Charles Davis Tillman from the New Georgia Encyclopedia Online
  3. ^ "Cyberhymnal on Tillman".
  4. ^ Edgar, Walter B. (2006). The South Carolina Encyclopedia. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press. p. 385. ISBN 1-57003-598-9.
  5. ^ Goff, James R. (2002). Close Harmony: A History of Southern Gospel. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-5346-1.
  6. ^ Mitchell, Monte (August 8, 1993). "Gospel Radio DJ Touches Fans' Hearts and Souls". The Charlotte Observer.
  7. ^ "EnLighten ... Southern Gospel Radio for all of North America!". Southern Gospel Radio. Retrieved June 15, 2009. Enlightened featured on XM and Sirius radio
  8. ^ See, e.g., J. Bazzel Mull.
  9. ^ The Singing News. "Southern Gospel Music, News, Christian Concerts, Charts, Radio, Songs | The Southern Gospel Music Magazine | SingingNews.com". Retrieved June 8, 2009. The Singing News
  10. ^ SoGospelNews.com. "SoGospelNews.com – Everything Southern Gospel". Retrieved June 8, 2009. SoGospelNews.com
  11. ^ Sunlite Radio. "Sunlite Radio – Internet Radio's Best Country Music, Gospel & Hymns". Retrieved June 8, 2009. Sunlite Radio Media Outlet
  12. ^ "The Gospel Station, The Gospel Station". The Gospel Station. Retrieved June 8, 2009. Media Outlet

Further reading

  • Beary, Shirley L. "The Stamps-Baxter Music and Printing Company: A Continuing Tradition, 1926–1976." D.M.A. dissertation, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1977.
  • Brobston, Stanley. "A Brief History of White Southern Gospel Music." Ph.D. Dissertation, New York University, 1977.
  • Downey, James C. "The Music of American Revivalism." Ph.D. dissertation, Tulane University, 1968.
  • Collins, Mike and Gaither, Bill. "Hold On: The Authorized Biography of the Greenes, America's Southern Gospel Trio" Woodland Press LLC, 2004. ISBN 0-9724867-6-3.
  • Eskew, Harry. "Shape-Note Hymnody in the Shenandoah Valley, 1816–60." Ph.D. dissertation, Tulane University, 1966.
  • Fleming, Jo Lee. "James D. Vaughan, Music Publisher." S.M.D. dissertation, Union Theological Seminary (Richmond, VA), 1972.
  • Goff, James R. Jr. Close Harmony: A History Of Southern Gospel. University Of North Carolina Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8078-5346-1
  • Graves, Michael P. and Fillingim, David. "More than Precious Memories: The Rhetoric of Southern Gospel Music" Mercer University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-86554-857-9.
  • Harrison, Douglas. Then Sings My Soul: The Culture of Southern Gospel Music. Urbana Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2012.
  • Harrison, Douglas. "Why Southern Gospel Music Matters." Journal of Religion and American Culture. 18.1 (2008) pp. 27–58.
  • Jackson, George Pullen (1965). White spirituals in the Southern uplands : the story of the Fasola folk, their songs, singings, and 'buckwheat notes'. New York: Dover. ISBN 9780486214252.
  • Terrell, Bob. The Music Men: The Story of Professional Gospel Quartet Singing in America. B. Terrell, 1990. ISBN 1-878894-00-5.

External links

southern, gospel, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, june, 200. 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 Southern gospel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Southern gospel music is a genre of Christian music Its name comes from its origins in the southeastern United States Its lyrics are written to express either personal or a communal faith regarding biblical teachings and Christian life as well as in terms of the varying music styles to give a Christian alternative to mainstream secular music Sometimes known as quartet music for its traditional four men and a piano set up southern gospel 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 Southern United States Like other forms of music the creation performance significance and even the definition of southern gospel varies according to the cultural 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 Pop with an extra o is a type of stuff Southern gospelStylistic originsSacred harp musicshape note singinghymnsspiritualshigh church musicCultural originsLate 19th century southeastern US evangelicalsSubgenresBluegrass gospelcountry gospelFusion genresContemporary Christian musicOther topicsGospel Music AssociationChristian musicNational Gospel Singing ConventionSouthern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame Contents 1 Origins 2 Early performers 3 Gaither Homecoming series 4 1990s and beyond 5 Media 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrigins EditThe date of southern gospel s establishment as a distinct genre is generally considered to be 1910 The year the first professional quartet was formed for the purpose of selling songbooks for the James D Vaughan Music Publishing Company in Lawrenceburg Tennessee Nonetheless the style of the music itself had existed for at least 35 years prior although the traditional wisdom that southern gospel was invented in the 1870s by circuit preacher Everett Beverly is spurious The existence of the genre prior to 1910 is evident in the work of Charles Davis Tillman 1861 1943 who popularized The Old Time Religion wrote Life s Railway to Heaven and published 22 songbooks 1 2 3 Some of the genre s roots can be found in the publishing work and normal schools or singing schools of Aldine S Kieffer and Ephraim Ruebush Southern gospel was promoted by traveling singing school teachers quartets and shape note music publishing companies such as the A J Showalter Company 1879 and the Stamps Baxter Music and Printing Company Over time southern gospel came to be an eclectic musical form with groups singing traditional hymns a capella jazz style singing with no instruments songs country bluegrass spirituals and convention songs Because it grew out of the musical traditions of white musicians from the American South the name Southern gospel was used to differentiate it from the black gospel tradition 4 5 Convention songs typically have contrasting homophonic and contrapuntal sections In the homophonic sections the four parts sing the same words and rhythms In the contrapuntal sections each group member has a unique lyric and rhythm These songs are called convention songs because various conventions were organized across the United States for the purpose of getting together regularly and singing songs in this style Convention songs were employed by training centers like the Stamps Baxter School Of Music as a way to teach quartet members how to concentrate on singing their own part Examples of convention songs include Heavenly Parade I m Living In Canaan Now Give the World a Smile and Heaven s Jubilee Early performers EditSouthern gospel is sometimes called quartet music by fans because of the originally all male tenor lead baritone bass quartet makeup Early quartets were typically either a cappella or accompanied only by piano or guitar and in some cases a piano and banjo in areas that were influenced by bluegrass music such as Appalachia Over time full bands were added and even later pre recorded accompaniments soundtracks were introduced In the first decades of the twentieth century southern gospel drew much of its creative energy from the holiness movement churches that arose throughout the south Early gospel artists such as The Speer Family The Stamps Quartet The Blackwood Family and The Lefevre Trio achieved wide popularity through their recordings and radio performances in the 1920s 1930s 1940s and 1950s On October 20 1927 The Stamps Quartet recorded its early hit Give The World A Smile for RCA Victor which become the Quartet s theme song The Stamps Quartet was heard on the radio throughout Texas and the South A handful of groups were considered pioneers in southern gospel music for a series of firsts The Blackwood Brothers with James Blackwood and J D Sumner became the first group to travel in a bus which is on display at the Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame at Dollywood in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Sumner also was instrumental in creating the National Quartet Convention an annual music festival where many groups both known and well known perform for a week The Speer Family was known for bringing blended groups to mainstream popularity where both male and female performers toured together The best known group of the 1950s and 1960s was the Statesmen Quartet which set the trend for broad appeal of the all male quartets that would develop years later The Statesmen were known for their showmanship and introduction of jazz ragtime and even some early rock and roll Elements into their music and their stage appearance with trendy suits and wide audience appeal and were known for their signature song Happy Rhythm Rockin and a Rollin Gaither Homecoming series EditTraditional southern gospel music underwent a tremendous surge in popularity during the 1990s thanks to the efforts of Bill and Gloria Gaither and their Gaither Homecoming tours and videos which began as a reunion of many of the best known and loved SGM individuals in 1991 Thanks in part to the Homecoming series southern gospel music now has fans across the United States and in a number of foreign countries like Ireland and Australia 1990s and beyond EditBy the 1990s the old timey quartet style music began to develop to include more soloists and duos Although still mostly popular in the Southeast and Southwest it has a nationwide and even international audience The music remains more country than city more down home than pretentious 6 In 2005 The Radio Book a broadcast yearbook published by M Street Publications reported 285 radio stations in the U S with a primary format designation as southern gospel including 175 AM stations and 110 FM stations In fact southern gospel was the 9th most popular format for AM stations and the 21st most popular for FM Southern gospel radio promoters routinely service more than a thousand radio stations which play at least some southern gospel music each week Recent years have also seen the advent of a number of internet only southern gospel radio stations Two popular satellite stations that feature southern gospel are channel 34 on XM Satellite Radio and Channel 65 changed from 67 On Sirius Satellite Radio Both play the same feed entitled enLighten on SiriusXm Enlighten plays southern gospel and has several featured programs which air weekly including Paul Heil s Gospel Greats and Bill Gaither s Homecoming Radio 7 Over the last decades a newer version of southern gospel has grown in popularity This style is called progressive southern gospel and is characterized by a blend of traditional southern gospel bluegrass modern country contemporary Christian and pop music elements Progressive southern gospel generally features artists who push their voices to produce a sound with an edge to it The traditional style southern gospel singers employ a more classical singing style Lyrically most progressive southern gospel songs are patterned after traditional southern gospel in that they maintain a clear evangelistic and or testimonial slant Southern gospel purists view lyrical content and the underlying musical style as the key determining factors for applying the southern gospel label to a song Although there are some exceptions most southern gospel songs would not be classified as Praise and Worship Few southern gospel songs are sung to God as opposed to about God On the other hand southern gospel lyrics are typically overt in their Christian message unlike Contemporary Christian music CCM which sometimes has had double entendre lyrics which could be interpreted as being about a devout love for God or an earthly love for a man or woman Media EditBecoming popular through songbooks such as those published by R E Winsett of Dayton Tennessee southern gospel was and is one of the few genres to use recordings radio and television technologies from the very beginning for the advancements of promoting the genre 8 One of the longest running print magazines for southern gospel music has been the Singing News 9 They started in the early 1970s supplying radio airplay charts and conducting annual fan based awards They also supply popular topic forums for southern gospel fans to meet and discuss the genre The move to internet services has brought along companies such as SoGospelNews com which has become a noted e zine forum for southern gospel and has remained a supporter for the past twelve years It too contains the music charts with forums and chat rooms available to the fans 10 Internet Radio has broadened the southern gospel music fan base by using computer technologies and continual streaming Some of these media outlets are Sunlite Radio which features many of the southern gospel programs likewise heard on traditional radio This list includes The Gospel Greats with Paul Heil which recently celebrated 30 years on the air Southern Gospel USA a weekly half hour countdown show hosted by Gary Wilson Classic radio programs such as The Old Gospel Ship and Heaven s Jubilee with Jim Loudermilk 11 Another online station is The Gospel Station 12 References Edit Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame site on Tillman Archived from the original on May 1 2008 Charles Davis Tillman from the New Georgia Encyclopedia Online Cyberhymnal on Tillman Edgar Walter B 2006 The South Carolina Encyclopedia Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press p 385 ISBN 1 57003 598 9 Goff James R 2002 Close Harmony A History of Southern Gospel Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 5346 1 Mitchell Monte August 8 1993 Gospel Radio DJ Touches Fans Hearts and Souls The Charlotte Observer EnLighten Southern Gospel Radio for all of North America Southern Gospel Radio Retrieved June 15 2009 Enlightened featured on XM and Sirius radio See e g J Bazzel Mull The Singing News Southern Gospel Music News Christian Concerts Charts Radio Songs The Southern Gospel Music Magazine SingingNews com Retrieved June 8 2009 The Singing News SoGospelNews com SoGospelNews com Everything Southern Gospel Retrieved June 8 2009 SoGospelNews com Sunlite Radio Sunlite Radio Internet Radio s Best Country Music Gospel amp Hymns Retrieved June 8 2009 Sunlite Radio Media Outlet The Gospel Station The Gospel Station The Gospel Station Retrieved June 8 2009 Media OutletFurther reading EditBeary Shirley L The Stamps Baxter Music and Printing Company A Continuing Tradition 1926 1976 D M A dissertation Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary 1977 Brobston Stanley A Brief History of White Southern Gospel Music Ph D Dissertation New York University 1977 Downey James C The Music of American Revivalism Ph D dissertation Tulane University 1968 Collins Mike and Gaither Bill Hold On The Authorized Biography of the Greenes America s Southern Gospel Trio Woodland Press LLC 2004 ISBN 0 9724867 6 3 Eskew Harry Shape Note Hymnody in the Shenandoah Valley 1816 60 Ph D dissertation Tulane University 1966 Fleming Jo Lee James D Vaughan Music Publisher S M D dissertation Union Theological Seminary Richmond VA 1972 Goff James R Jr Close Harmony A History Of Southern Gospel University Of North Carolina Press 2002 ISBN 0 8078 5346 1 Graves Michael P and Fillingim David More than Precious Memories The Rhetoric of Southern Gospel Music Mercer University Press 2004 ISBN 0 86554 857 9 Harrison Douglas Then Sings My Soul The Culture of Southern Gospel Music Urbana Champaign University of Illinois Press 2012 Harrison Douglas Why Southern Gospel Music Matters Journal of Religion and American Culture 18 1 2008 pp 27 58 Jackson George Pullen 1965 White spirituals in the Southern uplands the story of the Fasola folk their songs singings and buckwheat notes New York Dover ISBN 9780486214252 Terrell Bob The Music Men The Story of Professional Gospel Quartet Singing in America B Terrell 1990 ISBN 1 878894 00 5 External links EditSouthern Gospel at Curlie Souther Gospel Music Association https www sgma org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern gospel amp oldid 1152651025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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