fbpx
Wikipedia

The Blind Boys of Alabama

The Blind Boys of Alabama, also billed as The Five Blind Boys of Alabama, and Clarence Fountain and the Blind Boys of Alabama,[2] is an American gospel group. The group was founded in 1939 in Talladega, Alabama, and has featured a changing roster of musicians over its history, the majority of whom are or were vision impaired.[2][3][4][5]

The Blind Boys of Alabama
The Blind Boys of Alabama performing at Cosmopolite Scene Oslo in 2018.
Background information
OriginTalladega, Alabama, U.S.
GenresGospel, traditional black gospel, blues, soul
Years active1939–present
Members
Past members
  • Ben Moore
  • Clarence Fountain
  • Johnny Fields
  • George Scott
  • Olice Thomas
  • Vel Bozman Traylor
  • Reverend J.T. Hutton
  • Bishop Billy Bowers
  • Caleb Butler
  • Samuel Butler Jr
  • Roscoe Robinson
  • Charles Porter
  • Dwight Fields
  • Paul Beasley
  • Jimmy Carter
Websiteblindboys.com

The Blind Boys found mainstream success following their appearance in the 1983 Obie Award-winning musical The Gospel at Colonus.[2][6][7] Since then, the group has toured internationally and has performed and recorded with such artists as Prince, Lou Reed, Peter Gabriel, Bonnie Raitt, Ben Harper, Bon Iver, and Amadou & Mariam.[2][3][6][8][9] The group's cover of the Tom Waits song "Way Down in the Hole" was used as the theme song for the first season of the HBO series The Wire.[3][8]

The Blind Boys have won five Grammy Awards in addition to being presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009.[10] They were endowed with a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1994,[11] they were inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2003,[12] and they were inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 2010.[13] The group was also invited to the White House during the Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama administrations.[6][14]

Group member Ricky McKinnie said in a 2011 interview with the magazine Mother Jones: "Our disability doesn't have to be a handicap. It's not about what you can't do. It's about what you do. And what we do is sing good gospel music."[6]

History edit

1930s and 1940s edit

The Blind Boys of Alabama first sang together in 1939 as part of the school chorus at the Alabama Institute for the Negro Deaf and Blind in Talladega, Alabama.[2] The founding members were Clarence Fountain (1929–2018), George Scott (1929–2005), Velma Bozman Traylor (1923–1947), Johnny Fields (1927–2009), Olice Thomas (b. 1926, d. unknown), and the only sighted member, J. T. Hutton (c. 1924–2012.)[2][15][note 1]

Early influences of the Blind Boys include the Golden Gate Quartet, The Soul Stirrers and The Heavenly Gospel Singers.[20] While the boys were not allowed to sing black gospel music at their school (which was run by an all-white faculty), they were able to hear it on the radio.[20]

The earliest version of the group was known as The Happy Land Jubilee Singers and their first performances were for World War II soldiers at nearby encampments, where the boys sung for pocket change.[8][15][20] The group's first professional performance was on June 10, 1944, during a broadcast from radio station WSGN (currently WAGG) in Birmingham, Alabama.[3] The following year, the members dropped out of school and began touring the gospel circuit.[15] In 1947, lead vocalist Traylor died in a gun accident.[2][8]

In 1948, a Newark, New Jersey promoter booked the Happy Land Jubilee Singers along with a gospel act from Mississippi known as the Jackson Harmoneers, whose members were also visually impaired, and advertised the program as the "Battle of the Blind Boys."[2][8] The two acts soon changed their names to the Five Blind Boys of Alabama and the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and often toured together.[2] The Blind Boys' early sound was also influenced by the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi who were singing in the "hard gospel" style that was becoming popular at the time.[8][21] Hard gospel often involved a shrieking and screaming style of singing and during performances some audience members reportedly would get so excited that some would have to be sent to the hospital.[8][21]

The Blind Boys made their first recordings in 1948 on the Coleman label and their first national hit was "I Can See Everybody's Mother But Mine" released in 1949.[22] Their success led to a series of recordings on various record labels.[22]

Reverend Paul Exkano of the King Solomon Baptist Church in New Orleans joined the group shortly after they changed their name to Five Blind Boys of Alabama and was present during the group's first recordings in 1948 and 1949, but he left the group after two years and was replaced by Percell Perkins of the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, later replaced by Joe Watson.[20]

1950s edit

During the 1950s, black gospel music was popular and the Blind Boys were one of the better known groups.[2] Artists from pop and rock genres began to include aspects of black gospel music in their arrangements and black gospel artists such as Ray Charles and Sam Cooke began crossing over to pop and rock music.[2][15] Ray Charles's manager offered the Blind Boys a big touring deal if they would cross over to other genres, but the group decided to stick to their gospel roots.[8][15] They signed with Specialty Records in 1953, but left five years later, after again being pressured to sing secular music.[8]

While the Blind Boys were selling records in the 1950s, they did not make much money. In an interview with Ebony magazine in 2003, Fountain stated that they signed contracts that took advantage of them and that they were each paid $50 per album side and the record company kept the rest.[23] By 1953, each member made $100 per side and, as per Fountain, "That was good money in that day. We didn't know what we were worth."[23]

1960s and 1970s edit

Into the 1960s the popularity of traditional gospel music was on the decline and soul music gained favor as a new type of secular black music.[2][10] At the same time, rhythm and blues and rock musicians began to incorporate traditional gospel sounds into their music.[2][3] The term soul was originally used by gospel musicians in the 1950s to identify the spiritual nature of their music.[24] By the late 1960s, the term being used more commonly to describe all popular music by African Americans.[24]

During the 1960s, the Blind Boys performed at benefits for Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement.[10] They continued to resist offers to sing more secular music. Fountain attributed their resistance to selling out to their lack of need, noting that they were happy and well-fed as they were and wanted to enjoy performing the music they sought to perform, as opposed to recording popular music solely for a paycheck.[25]

In 1969, Fountain left the group in order to pursue a solo career.[2] Neither the Blind Boys nor Fountain found much success into the 1970s.[2] In 1972, guitarist Samuel Butler Jr. (son of the guitarist of the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi) joined the group.[26] Fountain returned to the group in 1977.[2]

1980s and 1990s edit

During their first 40 years, the Blind Boys had primarily played for black gospel audiences, mainly in churches and school auditoriums.[3][6] The 1980s would mark the group's exposure to a wider audience.[2][6]

By the early 1980s, singer Clarence Fountain had taken the role as the group's frontman.[2][22] It was at this time that the group was joined by vocalist Jimmy Carter, whose first recording with the group was on their 1982 record I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord.[17][26] Carter sang with the Dixieland Blind Boys, as well as the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, prior to his work with The Blind Boys of Alabama.[26] Carter was a student of the Alabama Institute for the Negro Blind when the group was originally formed, but was too young to join the group when they began touring.[26][17]

In 1983, the group (billed as Clarence Fountain and The Five Blind Boys of Alabama) was cast in the theatrical production The Gospel at Colonus, an African-American musical version of Sophocles' tragedy, Oedipus at Colonus.[2][6] In the play, the Blind Boys collectively played the part of blinded Oedipus.[8] The cast included Morgan Freeman as well as members of The Soul Stirrers.[8][27] The Gospel at Colonus won an Obie for Best Musical in 1984 and the production moved to Broadway in 1988.[2][8] The play's success led to the Blind Boys' exposure to a wider mainstream audience and marked a turning point for the group.[2][6][7]

In 1990, vocalist and percussionist Ricky McKinnie was invited by Fountain to join the Blind Boys.[5][28] McKinnie had actually met the Blind Boys when he was about five years old.[5][28] McKinnie's mother, Sarah McKinnie Shivers, was a singer who would often cross paths with the Blind Boys while she was on tour.[5][28] McKinnie lost his sight due to glaucoma at age 23, but had been playing drums for over a decade prior.[5][28]

The Blind Boys released Deep River in 1992, which was nominated for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album at the 36th Annual Grammy Awards.[29] The album was produced by Booker T. Jones, and featured a version of Bob Dylan's "I Believe In You."[2][10] In 1993, they appeared as musical guests on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.[6][30]

In 1994, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded a National Heritage Fellowship to Clarence Fountain and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama.[31] The award was presented to the Blind Boys by First Lady Hillary Clinton.[32]

In 1995, the Blind Boys became the first artists to be signed to the new House of Blues gospel label, for which they recorded their first live album I Brought Him with Me.[7][22] The album featured appearances from blues singers Koko Taylor and Solomon Burke.[7] In December 1996, the group appeared in the Christmas episode of TV series Beverly Hills, 90210 titled "Gift Wrapped".[32][33] The Blind Boys continued experimenting with contemporary popular music on their 1997 release Holding On, also released on the House of Blues label.[32] The album contained elements of funk and reggae.[32][34]

2000s edit

The Blind Boys of Alabama enjoyed further exposure and success in the 2000s and 2010s, including collaborations with many high-profile musical artists. Their songs were featured on soundtracks of television series, such as Boston Public, Lost, and Criminal Minds, as well as films, such as Madea Goes to Jail, Alpha and Omega, and Hop.[30] The Blind Boys made an appearance in the film The Fighting Temptations and were featured on such television series as 60 Minutes II and The Colbert Report, as well as on multiple episodes of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Late Night with David Letterman.[30] They were invited to perform at the White House in both 2002 during the presidency of George W. Bush for a celebration of gospel music, and in 2010 during the presidency of Barack Obama for a celebration of music from the civil rights movement.[14][35]

In 2001, the Blind Boys released Spirit of the Century on Peter Gabriel's Real World Records.[2] The album won the award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album at the 44th Annual Grammy Awards.[36] The album included a version of "I Just Want to See His Face" by The Rolling Stones as well as a version of the song "Amazing Grace" arranged to the tune of "The House of the Rising Sun".[4]

In 2002, they released Higher Ground, an album that combines traditional gospel lyrics with the music of other artists.[23] The title song is a rendition of the Stevie Wonder hit, but some of the lyrics were changed to make it a gospel song—for example, the line "Lovers, keep on lovin'" became "Prayers, keep on prayin."[23] Other songs covered on the album include "People Get Ready" by Curtis Mayfield, "Spirit in the Dark" by Aretha Franklin, "The Cross" by Prince, and "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks" by Funkadelic.[23] The album won the Blind Boys another Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album and also won them a GMA Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year.[37][38] The Blind Boys also performed on the steps of the Library of Congress in 2002.[22]

In 2003, the Blind Boys released Go Tell It on the Mountain.[39] The album contains renditions of mostly Christmas-related gospel songs and features guest artists Solomon Burke, Tom Waits, Michael Franti, Chrissie Hynde, Richard Thompson, Aaron Neville, Mavis Staples, Shelby Lynne, George Clinton, Robert Randolph, Meshell Ndegeocello, and Les McCann.[39] The album went on to win the Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album.[40]

The Blind Boys performed live twice with Lou Reed: In 2004, they performed together at a private concert on the floor of the UN General Assembly for the Landmine Survivors Network and in 2010, they appeared on Late Night with David Letterman and performed "Jesus", a song originally released by The Velvet Underground on their eponymous album.[41]

The Blind Boys collaborated several times with Ben Harper: Harper played guitar on the Blind Boys' albums Higher Ground and Spirit of the Century.[42] The Blind Boys again collaborated with Harper on his 2004 album There Will Be a Light and toured with him throughout Europe that year.[6][20][42] The majority of the songs were Harper originals, but the album also included a cover of Bob Dylan and Danny O'Keefe's "Well, Well, Well."[42] There Will Be a Light also won the Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album.[43] The following year, Harper and the Blind Boys released Live at the Apollo, a recording of their live performance from the Apollo Theater in October 2004.[44]

The Blind Boys released the album Atom Bomb in 2005.[45] The album features cover versions of songs such as "Demons" by Fatboy Slim and Macy Gray, (a track that also featured a guest appearance by rapper Gift of Gab); Blind Faith's "Presence of the Lord," featuring soul musician Billy Preston; and a cover of Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky," featuring David Hidalgo of Los Lobos and blues musician Charlie Musselwhite.[45] The album was awarded the prize for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year at the 37th GMA Dove Awards.[38]

On March 9, 2005, at the age of 75, vocalist George Scott died of complications from diabetes and a heart condition.[46] In 2006, vocalist Ben Moore was invited to join the group by Carter.[47] Moore had previously performed under the name "Bobby Purify" as part of the R&B duo James & Bobby Purify and continued to use the name as a solo artist after the duo broke up in the 1980s.[47] In 2007, Fountain stopped touring with the group due to complications from diabetes.[8]

In 2008, the Blind Boys released the album Down in New Orleans.[48] The album was recorded in New Orleans, which was a first for the group,[49] and includes songs written by or made famous by New Orleans musicians along with updated gospel standards.[48] Many tracks also feature guest musicians from the city.[48] Tracks include a jazzy version of the popular gospel song "Uncloudy Day", backed by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band; blues song "Make a Better World" written by musician Earl King), backed by the Hot 8 Brass Band; as well as a bluesy version of "If I Could Help Somebody" by Mahalia Jackson with Allen Toussaint on piano.[48] The album also won the GMA Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year.[38]

The Blind Boys released their album Duets in 2009.[50][51] Each song features a duet between the Blind Boys and another artist; some of these artists include Susan Tedeschi, Bonnie Raitt, and John Hammond.[50][51] Earlier that same year, the group was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards.

2010s edit

In 2010, the Blind Boys were inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame.[13][52]

 
The Blind Boys of Alabama performing at the West Coast Blues & Roots Festival in 2011.

In 2011, the group appeared in the live-action/animated feature film Hop.

Vocalist Billy Bowers left the group in 2011 when he was injured and underwent back surgery.[5][53] Bowers' role as vocalist was filled by Ricky McKinnie, who was also the groups' percussionist for many years.[5][53][54] Bowers died July 2, 2013, of heart failure in Montgomery, Alabama at the age of 71.[53]

In 2013, the Blind Boys released I'll Find a Way, produced by Justin Vernon of Bon Iver.[55] The album also features guest appearances by Sam Amidon and Merrill Garbus of Tune-Yards.[55] The following year, the Blind Boys released Talkin' Christmas! in collaboration with blues musician Taj Mahal.[56]

In 2016, the Blind Boys contributed to God Don't Never Change: The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson, a tribute album recorded in honor of gospel musician Blind Willie Johnson.[57] The Blind Boys performed the song "Mother's Children Have a Hard Time", a performance that was nominated for Best American Roots Performance at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards.[58] The album was also nominated in the category of Best Roots Gospel Album.[58]

 
The Blind Boys of Alabama make a surprise appearance at the Newport Folk Festival in 2016.

In 2017, the Blind Boys released the album Almost Home on BBOA Records in collaboration with Amazon Music.[59][60] Fountain also rejoined the group for the album's recording.[8] The songs on the album were written for the Blind Boys by writers including Marc Cohn, Phil Cook, John Leventhal, and Valerie June.[59][61] The Blind Boys' manager, Charles Driebe, recorded interviews with the members of the group then shared them with the songwriters who wrote songs reflecting the Blind Boys' personal stories.[61] The song "Let My Mother Live" from the album was nominated for Best American Roots Performance at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards.[62] Written by Leventhal, the song is about Carter as a young boy at the Alabama Institute and "how scared I was, and that I wanted my mother to live until I got grown."[61] On August 28, 2020, Single Lock Records released the Blind Boys' album Almost Home to all platforms, including a bonus track: previously unreleased Bob Dylan song, "See By Faith."

On June 3, 2018, Clarence Fountain died of complications from diabetes at the age of 88 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[63] His final performance with the Blind Boys of Alabama was on May 16, 2018, at the Manship Theatre there.[63]

September 2018 saw the release of the Muscle Shoals tribute album, Small Town, Big Sound.[64] The Blind Boys, along with blues musician Mike Farris, performed a cover of the song "Respect Yourself."[64] The album also featured cover songs by such artists as Steven Tyler, Willie Nelson, Grace Potter, Chris Stapleton, and Kid Rock.[64]

In January 2019, the Blind Boys performed with Marc Cohn at the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center.[65] The performance was broadcast on the PBS live music series The Kate that spring.[66]

Over the summer of 2019, the Blind Boys toured Europe with blind Afro-pop duo Amadou & Mariam.[9] Similar to the Blind Boys, the husband-and-wife duo originally met in 1975 at the Bamako Institute for the Blind in Mali.[9] During the tour, the two groups of vocalists would provide vocal accompaniment to performances of each group's songs.[9] They would also perform original material that they had created together, such as the songs "Bamako to Birmingham" and "Two Cultures, One Beat."[9]

In August of that same year, the Blind Boys released a collaborative album with Marc Cohn titled Work To Do.[67] The album features Cohn and the Blind Boys performing new and older material by Cohn in addition to renditions of traditional gospel songs.[67][68] Seven of the tracks are recordings from their performance on The Kate earlier that same year, including Cohn's hit "Walking in Memphis", as well the Blind Boys' version of "Amazing Grace" to the melody of "The House of the Rising Sun".[67][68] On October 15, 2019, the group appeared on Today to perform the title track alongside Marc Cohn.[69]

Music blog UDiscoverMusic named Blind Boys the longest standing music group, as they are still touring and writing/recording music after being founded in 1939.[70] In 2019, Jason Isbell selected the Blind Boys to join him for his October residency at the Ryman Auditorium.[71] Shortly after, they were featured with Irish TV host Hector Ó hEochagáin for his show Hector USA.[72] The Blind Boys' 2019 Christmas Tour earned the praise of The New Yorker, which commented "The beloved gospel ensemble the Blind Boys of Alabama...remains perennially fresh, whether it's interjecting godliness into unexpected songs or, as in this case, saluting Christmas."[73]

2020s edit

In March 2020, the group toured Australia and New Zealand, performing at the Womadelaide and Womad NZ festivals.[74][75] In May 2020, Woodstock legend Wavy Gravy included the Blind Boys in his virtual music festival celebrating his 84th birthday.[76]

To kick off 2021, the Recording Academy featured the Blind Boys performing 'If I Had a Hammer' on their "Positive Vibes Only" series.[77] Later that year, the Blind Boys teamed up with Béla Fleck to release a new version of "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free" for Record Store Day.[78] The song went on to be nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best American Roots Performance category.[79]

Singer Ben Moore (Benjamin Moore, Jr.) died of natural causes on May 12, 2022.[80] He was 80 years old.[80] In July 2022, the Blind Boys were featured as performers at the closing ceremonies of the World Games at the Protective Stadium in Birmingham, Alabama. They performed with Jamey Johnson and a 75-piece orchestra led by Dr. Henry Panion on a bill headlined by Lionel Richie.[81]

In September 2022, the Blind Boys released two collaborative tracks with Black Violin titled "We Are One" and "The Message", the latter of which was nominated for a Grammy for Best Americana Performance.[82][83] The View featured the Blind Boys on Martin Luther King Jr Day 2023, including an interview and multiple performances.[84]

Tenor Paul Beasley died on March 13, 2023 at the age of 78.[85] Beasley was previously a member of such groups as Gospel Keynotes and the Mighty Clouds of Joy.[85] He joined the Blind Boys in 2013 after losing his eyesight.[85]

In 2023, the Blind Boys album Echoes of the South earned three Grammy Award nominations, including Best Roots Gospel Album, as well as Best American Roots Performance for the song "Heaven Help Us All" and Best Americana Performance for the song "Friendship".[86] The album was named after the Birmingham radio program that hosted the group's first professional performance in 1944.[86] Jimmy Carter retired from the Blind Boys after recording the album, at the age of 91.[86]

Awards and nominations edit

Year Nominee / work Category Award Result
1994 Deep River Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Nominated
2002 Spirit of the Century Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won
2003 Higher Ground Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won
Traditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won
2004 Go Tell It on the Mountain Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won
2005 There Will Be a Light Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won
2006 Atom Bomb Traditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won
2009 Down in New Orleans Traditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won
"Free At Last" Traditional Gospel Recorded Song of the Year Dove Award Won
Down in New Orleans Best Traditional Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won
The Blind Boys of Alabama Lifetime Achievement Award Grammy Awards Won
2016 God Don't Never Change: The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson Best Roots Gospel Album Grammy Awards Nominated
2016 "Mother's Children Have a Hard Time", from the album God Don't Never Change: The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated
2017 "Let My Mother Live", from their album Almost Home Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated
2021 "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free", with Béla Fleck Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated
2022 "The Message", with Black Violin Best Americana Performance Grammy Awards Nominated
2023 Echoes of the South Best Roots Gospel Album Grammy Awards TBA
"Heaven Help Us All" Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards TBA
"Friendship" Best Americana Performance Grammy Awards TBA

Other honors edit

Year Honor Presenter
1994 National Heritage Fellowship National Endowment for the Arts
2003 Hall of fame inductees Gospel Music Hall of Fame
2005 Helen Keller Personal Achievement Award American Foundation for the Blind
2005 First Niarchos Prize for Survivorship Queen Noor of Jordan on behalf of the Landmine Survivors Network
2010 Hall of fame inductees Alabama Music Hall of Fame

Members edit

Current members edit

Name Years active Instruments
Ricky McKinnie (c. 1952)[5] 1990–present[28][87] Vocals, percussion
Joey Williams ?–present[87] Vocals, lead guitar
Julius Love ?-Present Vocals
Peter Levin ?–present[87] Organ
Stephen Raynard Ladson ?–present[87] Bass

Founding members edit

Name Years active Instruments Notes
Clarence Fountain (November 28, 1929–June 3, 2018)[63] 1939–2007, 2017–2018 Vocals
George Scott (1929–2005)[46][88] 1939–2005 Vocals
Vel Bozman Traylor (1923–1947)[88] 1939–1947 Vocals
Johnny Fields (1927–2009)[88][89] 1939–? Vocals
Olice Thomas (b. 1926, deceased)[88] 1939–? Vocals Date of death unknown.
J. T. Hutton (c. 1924–July 27, 2012)[90] 1939–? Vocals The only sighted original member.

Former members edit

Name Years active Instruments Notes
Jimmy Carter (c. 1932)[91] 1982–2023[26][86] Vocals
Bishop Billy Bowers (c. 1942, d. July 2, 2013)[53] 1968–2011[53] Vocals
Caleb "Bobby" Butler 1979–2008[26] Vocalist, bass[26][23] Butler is sighted.[23] No relation to Samuel Butler Jr.[26]
Samuel Butler Jr. 1972–1994[26] Vocals, rhythm guitar, songwriter, arranger, manager[citation needed] No relation to Caleb "Bobby" Butler.[26]
Ben Moore (b. August 7, 1941, d. May 12, 2022)[80] 2006–2022[47][87] Vocals
Paul Beasley (b. December 11, 1944, d. March 13, 2023)[85] 2013–2023[85] Vocals
Roscoe Robinson[citation needed] Vocals
Charles Porter[citation needed] Vocals
Dwight Fields (deceased)[citation needed] Vocals

Discography edit

As main artists edit

  • 1949 – I Can See Everybody's Mother But Mine – Coleman Records
  • 1950 – Sweet Honey in the Rocks – Palda Records
  • 1950 – Livin' On Mother's Prayers – Palda Records
  • 1950 – Come Over Here The Table Spread – Palda Records
  • 1953 – The Sermon
  • 1953 – When I Lost My MotherSpecialty Records
  • 1954 – Marching Up To Zion – Specialty Records
  • 1954 – Oh Lord, Stand By Me – Specialty Records
  • 1958 – My Mother's TrainVee-Jay Records
  • 1959 – God is On the ThroneSavoy Records
  • 1959 – The Original Blind Boys – Savoy Records
  • 1963 – (1957) You'll Never Walk Alone – HOB Records
  • 1963 – Old Time Religion – HOB Records
  • 1963 – True Convictions – HOB Records
  • 1965 – Can I Get a Witness? – HOB Records
  • 1967 – Church Concert in New Orleans (Live) – HOB Records
  • 1969 – Fix it Jesus Like You Said You WouldKeen Records
  • 1969 – Jesus Will Be Waiting
  • 1970 – In the Gospel Light
  • 1970 – The Five Blind Boys From Alabama
  • 1970 – The Soul of Clarence Fountain
  • 1973 – Best of Five Blind Boys of Alabama
  • 1974 – Precious Memories
  • 1974 – There's a God Somewhere – ABC Records
  • 1978 – The Soldier Album – PIR Records
  • 1981 – Faith Moves Mountains – Messiah Records
  • 1982 – I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord
  • 1987 – In the Hands of the Lord
  • 1989 – I'm a Changed Man – Wajji Records
  • 1989 – The Five Blind Boys of Alabama
  • 1990 – Brand New – Wajji Records
  • 1990 – I'm Not That Way Anymore – Atlanta International Records
  • 1991 – I am a Soldier
  • 1991 – Oh Lord, Stand By Me / Marching Up to Zion
  • 1991 – The Best of the Five Blind Boys
  • 1992 – Deep RiverElektra/Nonesuch Records
  • 1993 – Bridge Over Troubled Waters
  • 1994 – Alive in Person
  • 1994 – Blessed Assurance
  • 1994 – Don't Forget To Pray
  • 1994 – In the Gospel Light
  • 1994 – Soul Gospel
  • 1994 – Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
  • 1995 – 1948–51
  • 1995 – I Brought Him With Me – House of Blues Music Company
  • 1996 – All Things Are Possible
  • 1996 – Golden Moments in Gospel
  • 1997 – Holdin' On – House of Blues Music Company
  • 1998 – Have Faith: The Very Best of the Five Blind Boys of Alabama
  • 1999 – Best of Clarence Fountain and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama
  • 1999 – Hallelujah: A Collection of Their Finest
  • 2000 – My Lord What a Morning
  • 2001 – Spirit of the CenturyReal World Records
  • 2001 – You'll Never Walk Alone / True Convictions (reissue)
  • 2002 – Higher Ground – Real World Records
  • 2003 – Amazing Grace
  • 2003 – Go Tell It on the Mountain – Real World Records
  • 2004 – There Will Be a Light (with Ben Harper) – Virgin Records
  • 2005 – Live at the Apollo (with Ben Harper)
  • 2005 – Atom Bomb – Real World Records
  • 2006 – Just a Closer Walk with Thee, a compilation of work ranging from the years 1963–1965
  • 2008 – Down in New OrleansTime LifeGrammy winner
  • 2009 – Enlightenment – The Great American Music Co. (2 CDs)
  • 2009 – Duets (compilation of collaborations with other artists) – Saguaro Road Records
  • 2010 – Faith Moves Mountains (reissue)
  • 2011 – Take the High Road – Saguaro Road Records
  • 2013 – I'll Find a WaySony Masterworks
  • 2014 – Talkin' Christmas! (with Taj Mahal) – Sony Masterworks
  • 2017 – Almost Home – BBOA Records/Single Lock Records
  • 2019 – Work To Do (with Marc Cohn) – BMG Records
  • 2021 – I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free (with Bela Fleck) – Single Lock Records
  • 2023 – Echoes Of The SouthSingle Lock Records

As featured or guest artists edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ While current band member Jimmy Carter is often credited as being the only remaining "original" or "founding" member of the group, he was actually too young to join the group when they began touring, but he was attending the Alabama Institute for the Negro Blind when the group was originally formed.[16][17][18] He did not officially join the group until the 1980s, having previously worked with the Dixieland Blind Boys as well as Five Blind Boys of Mississippi.[16][19] Carter's first recorded performance with the Blind Boys was on their 1982 record I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Butler, Harry D. "Gadsden's Julius Love newest member of Blind Boys of Alabama". Gadsden Times. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Kenneth Roberts, Charles (June 5, 2018). "Blind Boys of Alabama". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Alabama Humanities Foundation. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Catlin, Roger (March 17, 2017). "After 75 years of touring, the Blind Boys of Alabama are still reaping blessings". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  4. ^ a b Aiges, Scott (April 7, 2001). "Blind Boys and Real World Give Contemporary Voice to Old-time Gospel". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Ruggieri, Melissa (July 9, 2012). . The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Levintova, Hannah (November 21, 2011). "2-Stepping With the Blind Boys of Alabama". Mother Jones. San Francisco, California. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d "Picks and Pans Review: I Brought Him with Me". People. United States. September 25, 1995. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Clarence Fountain, Founding Member of Blind Boys of Alabama, Dies at 88". Billboard. New York City. Associated Press. June 4, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d e Denselow, Robin (July 14, 2019). "Amadou and Mariam; the Blind Boys of Alabama review – soulful energy". The Guardian. London, United Kingdom. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d Kreps, Daniel (June 5, 2018). "Clarence Fountain, Blind Boys of Alabama Leader, Dead at 88". Rolling Stone. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  11. ^ "Clarence Fountain & the Blind Boys: African-American Gospel Singers". National Endowment for the Arts. n.d. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  12. ^ "2003 Inductees Blind Boys of Alabama". Gospel Music Hall of Fame. January 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  13. ^ a b "Inductees". Alabama Music Hall of Fame. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  14. ^ a b "The Blind Boys of Alabama perform in the East Room". The White House. February 14, 2002. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e Kohn, David (August 4, 2003). "Five Blind Boys Of Alabama". CBS News. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  16. ^ a b Hildebrand, Lee (June 29, 2008). "Blind Boys of Alabama battling". SF Gate. San Francisco, California. Retrieved December 1, 2019. Dispute over origins: Fountain is also disturbed by claims made by Carter that he was an original member of the Alabama Blind Boys and, hence, the only original still performing with the group. Carter was, in fact, a student at the school when the group was formed in 1938. According to Fountain, he did sing with other members of the group in the school's choir, but not with the group itself. "We didn't like his voice, so we didn't invite him in," Fountain said. "I was an original Blind Boy of Alabama, but when they left school in 1944, I didn't go," Carter, 77, said after a concert in Modesto. "I was too young. I went back to school." Carter's first recorded appearance with the Blind Boys of Alabama was in 1982 on "I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord." Before joining them for that album, he had spent more than a dozen years with the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and, before that, sang with the Dixieland Blind Boys.
  17. ^ a b c d Kenneth Roberts, Charles (June 5, 2018). "Blind Boys of Alabama". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Alabama Humanities Foundation. Retrieved December 1, 2019. Jimmy Carter is billed as the only founding member of the band still performing. Although he was enrolled at the school and a member of the chorus, he was too young at the time to join when the group first began touring. Despite some controversy, Carter is still described as a founding member of the band, though he did not appear in a recorded performance with the Blind Boys until the 1982 record I'm a Soldier in the Army of the Lord.
  18. ^ Ruggieri, Melissa (July 9, 2012). . The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 1, 2019. Jimmy Carter, billed as an original member since he was enrolled in the Alabama institute when the group started performing, but was too young to join them, is the elder statesman and lead singer.
  19. ^ Larkin, Colin (2011). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. London, United Kingdom: Omnibus Press. pp. 1143–1146. ISBN 9780857125958. Jimmy Carter finally became a permanent fifth member of the group in the early 1980s (again after an apprenticeship with the Mississippi 5.)
  20. ^ a b c d e Larkin, Colin (2011). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. London, United Kingdom: Omnibus Press. pp. 1143–1146. ISBN 9780857125958.
  21. ^ a b Moore, Allan (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Blues and Gospel Music. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 105–112. ISBN 978-0511998713.
  22. ^ a b c d e "The Blind Boys of Alabama Perform at Library of Congress June 5" (Press release). Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. May 23, 2002. ISSN 0731-3527. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Gilbert, Marsha (June 2003). . Ebony. Los Angeles, California: Johnson Publishing Company. Archived from the original on December 5, 2019.
  24. ^ a b Kernodle, Tammy Lynn; Maxile, Horace Joseph (2011). Encyclopedia of African American Music, Volume 1. Asheville, North Carolina: ABC-CLIO. p. 892. ISBN 9780313341991. Soul originally was used by gospel quartets in the 1950s to identify the spiritual nature of their music. In the 1960s, it was used by jazz musicians to categorize contemporary hard bop, also linked to spiritual expression. Its use over the years led to the term being used more commonly to describe all popular music by African Americans. Billboard magazine, who had in 1949 changed the music category it used for black popular music from race music to rhythm and blues, now changed rhythm and blues to soul in 1969.
  25. ^ Flanagan, Andrew (June 4, 2018). "Clarence Fountain, Leader And Founding Member Of Blind Boys Of Alabama, Dies At 88". KTEP. University of Texas at El Paso. NPR. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hildebrand, Lee (June 29, 2008). "Blind Boys of Alabama battling". SF Gate. San Francisco, California. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  27. ^ "The Gospel at Colonus". Playbill. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  28. ^ a b c d e Kocher, Chris (February 21, 2017). "Blind Boys of Alabama bring 8 decades of gospel to Corning". Star-Gazette. Elmira, New York. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  29. ^ "36th Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  30. ^ a b c The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb
  31. ^ . Arts.gov. National Endowment for the Arts. Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  32. ^ a b c d "Blind Boys of Alabama". The World. Coos Bay, Oregon. March 27, 1999. p. C1. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com. In 1994, the group was awarded the NEA National Heritage Fellowship, presented by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. . . . They even performed on the popular Fox Television show, "Beverly Hills 90210." That year also broth the group's debut on the House of Blues Music Company. A live album, "I Brought Him With Me," showcased the group's ability to musically change with the times, while remaining true to their basic style, That is obvious on the latest HOB Music Company release, Holdin' On." From cut to cut, it takes the listener on a new inspirational experience. Beginning with the encouraging title track, from the funky "Sacrifice." to the closing tune, "The Spirit of the Lord is Coming Down," it promises to bless hearts and soul. Of "Holdin' On," Fountain says, "We tried to get all phases of the music on the album. We've got tunes that I think will fit any audience."
  33. ^ The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb
  34. ^ "New Album Releases". The Atlanta Voice. Atlanta, Georgia. August 30, 1997. p. 12A. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com. "Holdin' On" is the latest release by The Blind Boys of Alabama. It continues the group's gospel tradition of gospel music while encompassing a broad range of styles such as reggae.
  35. ^ "In Performance at the White House: A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement" (Press release). Washington, D.C.: WETA-TV. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
  36. ^ "44th Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  37. ^ "45th Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  38. ^ a b c "GMA Dove Awards – Past Winners". doveawards.com. Gospel Music Association. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  39. ^ a b Hicks, Robert (December 16, 2003). "Blind Boys of Alabama keep gospel spirit in Christmas". Daily Record. Morristown, New Jersey. p. D5. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com. For its 2003 Christmas project, the group worked with producer John Cherlew and executive producer Chris Goldsmith, who recruited a stellar cast of guest singers and musicians, including Solomon Burke, Tom Waits, Michael Franti, Chrissie Hynde, Richard Thompson, Aaron Neville, Mavis Staples, Shelby Lynne, George Clinton, Robert Randolph, Me'shell Ndegeocello and Les McCann, for its Grammy-nominated recording "Go Tell It on the Mountain". On Thursday at the Community Theatre in Morristown and on Friday at the Beacon Theatre in New York City, the Blind Boys of Alabama will perform Christmas songs as well as songs from their two previous Grammy-winning albums, 2001's "Spirit of the Century" and 2002's "Higher Ground."
  40. ^ "46th Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  41. ^ Turner, Gustavo (January 21, 2010). "Screw Coco! We're With Jesus, Lou Reed, the Blind Boys of Alabama, and David Letterman!". LA Weekly. Los Angeles, California. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  42. ^ a b c Kuipers, Dean (November 14, 2004). "Ben and the Boys go soul searching". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. p. E68. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com. But when Harper lent that guitar to gospel hybridizers the Blind Boys of Alabama on two of their albums, Higher Ground and Spirit of the Century. . . .the majority of the album's songs are Harper originals. . . . subtly shifts into the Bob Dylan-Danny O'Keefe tune Well, Well, Well.
  43. ^ "47th Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  44. ^ Rashbaum, Alyssa (October 13, 2004). "Ben Harper And The Blind Boys Of Alabama Bring The Gospel To The Apollo". mtv.com. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  45. ^ a b Wild, David (May 5, 2005). . Rolling Stone. New York City. Archived from the original on May 21, 2008. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  46. ^ a b . The Crisis. Vol. 112, no. 3. Baltimore, Maryland: NAACP. May–June 2005. Archived from the original on December 9, 2019. George Scott, 75, singer, died of complications from diabetes and a heart condition March 9 in Durham, N.C. Scott was a founding member of the Grammy-award winning Blind Boys of Alabama gospel group.
  47. ^ a b c Capouya, John (April 14, 2014). "How one of the Blind Boys of Alabama regained his soul (w/video)". Tampa Bay Times. Tampa Bay, Florida. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  48. ^ a b c d Denselow, Robin (January 25, 2008). "The Blind Boys of Alabama, Down in New Orleans". The Guardian. London, United Kingdom. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  49. ^ Gill, Andy (February 1, 2008). "Album: The Blind Boys of Alabama, Down in New Orleans (Proper)". The Independent. London, United Kingdom. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  50. ^ a b Orshoski, Wes (November 6, 2009). "The Blind Boys of Alabama, "Duets"". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  51. ^ a b Bambarge, Bradley (October 29, 2009). "Duets – Blind Boys of Alabama". NJ.com. Iselin, New Jersey: Advance Publications. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  52. ^ "52nd Annual Grammy Awards". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  53. ^ a b c d e Harmon, Rick (July 16, 2013). "Vocalist Billy Bowers of Blind Boys of Alabama dead at 71". USA Today. McLean, Virginia. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  54. ^ Everett, Todd (August 22, 1995). "Five Blind Boys of Alabama". Variety. Los Angeles, California. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  55. ^ a b Decurtis, Anthony (November 1, 2013). "The Blind Boys of Alabama 'I'll Find a Way' Review". Rolling Stone. New York, New York. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  56. ^ Marchand, Francois (December 17, 2014). "Album of the Week: Blind Boys of Alabama & Taj Mahal, Talkin' Christmas!". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  57. ^ Miles, Milo (August 29, 2016). "Musicians Pay Tribute To Blind Willie Johnson On 'God Don't Never Change'". NPR. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  58. ^ a b Unterberger, Andrew (December 6, 2016). "Here Is the Complete List of Nominees for the 2017 Grammys". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  59. ^ a b Allen, Jim (August 10, 2017). "Review: The Blind Boys Of Alabama, 'Almost Home'". NPR. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  60. ^ Horn, Rachel (June 23, 2017). "Blind Boys Of Alabama Announce 'Almost Home' — Hear Four Songs". NPR. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  61. ^ a b c Dauphin, Chuck (August 11, 2017). "The Blind Boys of Alabama Reflect on Their 7-Decade History & What's Left for Them to Achieve". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  62. ^ Lynch, Joe (November 28, 2017). "Grammys 2018: See the Complete List of Nominees". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  63. ^ a b c "Obituaries". The Advocate. Baton Rouge, Louisiana. June 9, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  64. ^ a b c Ginsberg, Gab (August 30, 2018). "Album to Feature Steven Tyler, Willie Nelson, Grace Potter & More: Exclusive". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  65. ^ "Marc Cohn with Special Guests The Blind Boys of Alabama!". Kate.tv. PBS. December 4, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  66. ^ "Season 4, Episode 403: Marc Cohn with Blind Boys of Alabama (Full Episode)". Kate.tv. PBS. May 24, 2019. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  67. ^ a b c Beaudoin, Jedd (August 8, 2019). "Marc Cohn and Blind Boys of Alabama Have "Work to Do" (album stream) (premiere)". PopMatters. Chicago, Illinois. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  68. ^ a b Horowitz, Hal (August 7, 2019). "Marc Cohn & Blind Boys of Alabama: Work To Do". American Songwriter. Nashville, Tennessee: ForASong Media. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  69. ^ "Marc Cohn, Blind Boys of Alabama sing 'Work to Do' on TODAY". Today.com. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  70. ^ Milano, Brett (August 10, 2021). "Oldest Bands In Music: 37 Acts That Defy The Laws Of Age And Time". Udiscovermusic.com. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  71. ^ Freeman, Jon (September 18, 2019). "Jason Isbell Adds Christone 'Kingfish' Ingram, Blind Boys of Alabama as Ryman Residency Openers". Rollingstone.com. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  72. ^ "Irishman's epic road trip involving former KKK leader, infamous Mexican wall and pageant training". IrishCentral.com. November 1, 2019. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  73. ^ "The Blind Boys Of Alabama". The New Yorker. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  74. ^ "WOMADelaide on Sunday — Rhiannon Giddens & Francesco Turrisi, PNG rapper Sprigga Mek and the Blind Boys of Alabama". ABC Online. Sydney, Australia. March 8, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  75. ^ van Dongen, Yvonne (March 29, 2020). "Womad was the last hurrah". Stuff. Wellington, New Zealand. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  76. ^ "Wavy Gravy's 84th Birthday Quarantine Concert For Seva May 14 – May 17". Sonoma County Gazette. Forestville, California. May 14, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  77. ^ "Positive Vibes Only: Blind Boys Of Alabama". Grammy.com. January 31, 2021. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  78. ^ "Home | RECORD STORE DAY". Recordstoreday.com. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  79. ^ "2022 GRAMMYs Awards: Complete Nominations List". Grammy.com. November 23, 2021. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  80. ^ a b c Blistein, Jon (May 18, 2022). "Blind Boys of Alabama Singer Benjamin Moore, Jr. Dead at 80". Rolling Stone. New York City. Retrieved May 19, 2022.
  81. ^ "Lionel Richie Joins Performer Lineup for the Music of the World Games 2022 | IWGA".
  82. ^ "Listen: Blind Boys of Alabama, "The Message" (Feat. Black Violin)". The Bluegrass Situation. September 9, 2022. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
  83. ^ Colurso, Mary (November 15, 2022). "Grammy Awards 2023: Nominees include Blind Boys of Alabama, Sam Hunt". AL.com. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
  84. ^ "Blind Boys of Alabama Perform | the View". YouTube. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
  85. ^ a b c d e Grow, Korey (March 16, 2023). "Blind Boys of Alabama's Paul Beasley Dead at 78". Rolling Stone. New York City. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  86. ^ a b c d Colurso, Mary (November 10, 2023). "Blind Boys of Alabama earn 3 Grammy nominations for album recorded in the Shoals". AL.com. Retrieved November 10, 2023.
  87. ^ a b c d e Faith, Blind (December 12, 2019). "Blind Faith". Tucson Weekly. Tucson, Arizona. Retrieved December 14, 2019. Carter, and fellow Blind Boys Eric "Ricky" McKinnie, Ben Moore and Paul Beasley (who are also blind), and Joey Williams, Stephen Raynard Ladson and Peter Levin will be hitting Tucson to spread some holiday cheer next week.
  88. ^ a b c d Boyer, Horace C. (1995). How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel. Montgomery, Alabama: Elliott & Clark. p. 201. ISBN 9781880216194. In 1937 Clarence Fountain (b. 1929) was an elementary school student singing in the Talladega Institute for the Deaf and Blind Glee Club. Fountain and a friend, Johnny Fields (b. 1927), selected George Scott (b. 1929), Olice Thomas (b. 1926), and Velma Bozman Traylor (1923–47) from the Glee Club and formed the Happy Land Jubilee Singers.
  89. ^ Irvine, David (November 19, 2009). "Fields' funeral today". The Daily Dispatch. Vol. XCV, no. 271. Henderson, North Carolina. p. 1A. Retrieved December 1, 2019. Henderson lost one of its shining stars when Johnny Fields died on Nov 12.
  90. ^ "Obituaries". AL.com. Alabama Media Group. 2012. Retrieved December 1, 2019. J. T. Hutton, age 88, a native of Birmingham, passed away July 27, 2012.
  91. ^ Dauphin, Chuck (August 11, 2017). "The Blind Boys of Alabama Reflect on Their 7-Decade History & What's Left for Them to Achieve". Billboard. New York City. Retrieved December 1, 2019. "It's something that we've never done before," stresses the group's Jimmy Carter, 85, to Billboard.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb

blind, boys, alabama, also, billed, five, blind, boys, alabama, clarence, fountain, blind, boys, alabama, american, gospel, group, group, founded, 1939, talladega, alabama, featured, changing, roster, musicians, over, history, majority, whom, were, vision, imp. The Blind Boys of Alabama also billed as The Five Blind Boys of Alabama and Clarence Fountain and the Blind Boys of Alabama 2 is an American gospel group The group was founded in 1939 in Talladega Alabama and has featured a changing roster of musicians over its history the majority of whom are or were vision impaired 2 3 4 5 The Blind Boys of AlabamaThe Blind Boys of Alabama performing at Cosmopolite Scene Oslo in 2018 Background informationOriginTalladega Alabama U S GenresGospel traditional black gospel blues soulYears active1939 presentMembersRicky McKinnie Joey Williams Reverend Julius Love 1 Past membersBen Moore Clarence Fountain Johnny Fields George Scott Olice Thomas Vel Bozman Traylor Reverend J T Hutton Bishop Billy Bowers Caleb Butler Samuel Butler Jr Roscoe Robinson Charles Porter Dwight Fields Paul Beasley Jimmy CarterWebsiteblindboys wbr comThe Blind Boys found mainstream success following their appearance in the 1983 Obie Award winning musical The Gospel at Colonus 2 6 7 Since then the group has toured internationally and has performed and recorded with such artists as Prince Lou Reed Peter Gabriel Bonnie Raitt Ben Harper Bon Iver and Amadou amp Mariam 2 3 6 8 9 The group s cover of the Tom Waits song Way Down in the Hole was used as the theme song for the first season of the HBO series The Wire 3 8 The Blind Boys have won five Grammy Awards in addition to being presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009 10 They were endowed with a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1994 11 they were inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2003 12 and they were inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 2010 13 The group was also invited to the White House during the Bill Clinton George W Bush and Barack Obama administrations 6 14 Group member Ricky McKinnie said in a 2011 interview with the magazine Mother Jones Our disability doesn t have to be a handicap It s not about what you can t do It s about what you do And what we do is sing good gospel music 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 1930s and 1940s 1 2 1950s 1 3 1960s and 1970s 1 4 1980s and 1990s 1 5 2000s 1 6 2010s 1 7 2020s 2 Awards and nominations 3 Other honors 4 Members 4 1 Current members 4 2 Founding members 4 3 Former members 5 Discography 5 1 As main artists 5 2 As featured or guest artists 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit1930s and 1940s edit The Blind Boys of Alabama first sang together in 1939 as part of the school chorus at the Alabama Institute for the Negro Deaf and Blind in Talladega Alabama 2 The founding members were Clarence Fountain 1929 2018 George Scott 1929 2005 Velma Bozman Traylor 1923 1947 Johnny Fields 1927 2009 Olice Thomas b 1926 d unknown and the only sighted member J T Hutton c 1924 2012 2 15 note 1 Early influences of the Blind Boys include the Golden Gate Quartet The Soul Stirrers and The Heavenly Gospel Singers 20 While the boys were not allowed to sing black gospel music at their school which was run by an all white faculty they were able to hear it on the radio 20 The earliest version of the group was known as The Happy Land Jubilee Singers and their first performances were for World War II soldiers at nearby encampments where the boys sung for pocket change 8 15 20 The group s first professional performance was on June 10 1944 during a broadcast from radio station WSGN currently WAGG in Birmingham Alabama 3 The following year the members dropped out of school and began touring the gospel circuit 15 In 1947 lead vocalist Traylor died in a gun accident 2 8 In 1948 a Newark New Jersey promoter booked the Happy Land Jubilee Singers along with a gospel act from Mississippi known as the Jackson Harmoneers whose members were also visually impaired and advertised the program as the Battle of the Blind Boys 2 8 The two acts soon changed their names to the Five Blind Boys of Alabama and the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and often toured together 2 The Blind Boys early sound was also influenced by the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi who were singing in the hard gospel style that was becoming popular at the time 8 21 Hard gospel often involved a shrieking and screaming style of singing and during performances some audience members reportedly would get so excited that some would have to be sent to the hospital 8 21 The Blind Boys made their first recordings in 1948 on the Coleman label and their first national hit was I Can See Everybody s Mother But Mine released in 1949 22 Their success led to a series of recordings on various record labels 22 Reverend Paul Exkano of the King Solomon Baptist Church in New Orleans joined the group shortly after they changed their name to Five Blind Boys of Alabama and was present during the group s first recordings in 1948 and 1949 but he left the group after two years and was replaced by Percell Perkins of the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi later replaced by Joe Watson 20 1950s edit During the 1950s black gospel music was popular and the Blind Boys were one of the better known groups 2 Artists from pop and rock genres began to include aspects of black gospel music in their arrangements and black gospel artists such as Ray Charles and Sam Cooke began crossing over to pop and rock music 2 15 Ray Charles s manager offered the Blind Boys a big touring deal if they would cross over to other genres but the group decided to stick to their gospel roots 8 15 They signed with Specialty Records in 1953 but left five years later after again being pressured to sing secular music 8 While the Blind Boys were selling records in the 1950s they did not make much money In an interview with Ebony magazine in 2003 Fountain stated that they signed contracts that took advantage of them and that they were each paid 50 per album side and the record company kept the rest 23 By 1953 each member made 100 per side and as per Fountain That was good money in that day We didn t know what we were worth 23 1960s and 1970s edit Into the 1960s the popularity of traditional gospel music was on the decline and soul music gained favor as a new type of secular black music 2 10 At the same time rhythm and blues and rock musicians began to incorporate traditional gospel sounds into their music 2 3 The term soul was originally used by gospel musicians in the 1950s to identify the spiritual nature of their music 24 By the late 1960s the term being used more commonly to describe all popular music by African Americans 24 During the 1960s the Blind Boys performed at benefits for Martin Luther King Jr and the civil rights movement 10 They continued to resist offers to sing more secular music Fountain attributed their resistance to selling out to their lack of need noting that they were happy and well fed as they were and wanted to enjoy performing the music they sought to perform as opposed to recording popular music solely for a paycheck 25 In 1969 Fountain left the group in order to pursue a solo career 2 Neither the Blind Boys nor Fountain found much success into the 1970s 2 In 1972 guitarist Samuel Butler Jr son of the guitarist of the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi joined the group 26 Fountain returned to the group in 1977 2 1980s and 1990s edit During their first 40 years the Blind Boys had primarily played for black gospel audiences mainly in churches and school auditoriums 3 6 The 1980s would mark the group s exposure to a wider audience 2 6 By the early 1980s singer Clarence Fountain had taken the role as the group s frontman 2 22 It was at this time that the group was joined by vocalist Jimmy Carter whose first recording with the group was on their 1982 record I m a Soldier in the Army of the Lord 17 26 Carter sang with the Dixieland Blind Boys as well as the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi prior to his work with The Blind Boys of Alabama 26 Carter was a student of the Alabama Institute for the Negro Blind when the group was originally formed but was too young to join the group when they began touring 26 17 In 1983 the group billed as Clarence Fountain and The Five Blind Boys of Alabama was cast in the theatrical production The Gospel at Colonus an African American musical version of Sophocles tragedy Oedipus at Colonus 2 6 In the play the Blind Boys collectively played the part of blinded Oedipus 8 The cast included Morgan Freeman as well as members of The Soul Stirrers 8 27 The Gospel at Colonus won an Obie for Best Musical in 1984 and the production moved to Broadway in 1988 2 8 The play s success led to the Blind Boys exposure to a wider mainstream audience and marked a turning point for the group 2 6 7 In 1990 vocalist and percussionist Ricky McKinnie was invited by Fountain to join the Blind Boys 5 28 McKinnie had actually met the Blind Boys when he was about five years old 5 28 McKinnie s mother Sarah McKinnie Shivers was a singer who would often cross paths with the Blind Boys while she was on tour 5 28 McKinnie lost his sight due to glaucoma at age 23 but had been playing drums for over a decade prior 5 28 The Blind Boys released Deep River in 1992 which was nominated for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album at the 36th Annual Grammy Awards 29 The album was produced by Booker T Jones and featured a version of Bob Dylan s I Believe In You 2 10 In 1993 they appeared as musical guests on Late Night with Conan O Brien 6 30 In 1994 the National Endowment for the Arts awarded a National Heritage Fellowship to Clarence Fountain and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama 31 The award was presented to the Blind Boys by First Lady Hillary Clinton 32 In 1995 the Blind Boys became the first artists to be signed to the new House of Blues gospel label for which they recorded their first live album I Brought Him with Me 7 22 The album featured appearances from blues singers Koko Taylor and Solomon Burke 7 In December 1996 the group appeared in the Christmas episode of TV series Beverly Hills 90210 titled Gift Wrapped 32 33 The Blind Boys continued experimenting with contemporary popular music on their 1997 release Holding On also released on the House of Blues label 32 The album contained elements of funk and reggae 32 34 2000s edit nbsp Free at last 2 40 source source source source source source source track The Blind Boys of Alabama perform Free at Last at the White House on February 9 2010 Problems playing this file See media help The Blind Boys of Alabama enjoyed further exposure and success in the 2000s and 2010s including collaborations with many high profile musical artists Their songs were featured on soundtracks of television series such as Boston Public Lost and Criminal Minds as well as films such as Madea Goes to Jail Alpha and Omega and Hop 30 The Blind Boys made an appearance in the film The Fighting Temptations and were featured on such television series as 60 Minutes II and The Colbert Report as well as on multiple episodes of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Late Night with David Letterman 30 They were invited to perform at the White House in both 2002 during the presidency of George W Bush for a celebration of gospel music and in 2010 during the presidency of Barack Obama for a celebration of music from the civil rights movement 14 35 In 2001 the Blind Boys released Spirit of the Century on Peter Gabriel s Real World Records 2 The album won the award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album at the 44th Annual Grammy Awards 36 The album included a version of I Just Want to See His Face by The Rolling Stones as well as a version of the song Amazing Grace arranged to the tune of The House of the Rising Sun 4 In 2002 they released Higher Ground an album that combines traditional gospel lyrics with the music of other artists 23 The title song is a rendition of the Stevie Wonder hit but some of the lyrics were changed to make it a gospel song for example the line Lovers keep on lovin became Prayers keep on prayin 23 Other songs covered on the album include People Get Ready by Curtis Mayfield Spirit in the Dark by Aretha Franklin The Cross by Prince and You and Your Folks Me and My Folks by Funkadelic 23 The album won the Blind Boys another Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album and also won them a GMA Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year 37 38 The Blind Boys also performed on the steps of the Library of Congress in 2002 22 In 2003 the Blind Boys released Go Tell It on the Mountain 39 The album contains renditions of mostly Christmas related gospel songs and features guest artists Solomon Burke Tom Waits Michael Franti Chrissie Hynde Richard Thompson Aaron Neville Mavis Staples Shelby Lynne George Clinton Robert Randolph Meshell Ndegeocello and Les McCann 39 The album went on to win the Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album 40 The Blind Boys performed live twice with Lou Reed In 2004 they performed together at a private concert on the floor of the UN General Assembly for the Landmine Survivors Network and in 2010 they appeared on Late Night with David Letterman and performed Jesus a song originally released by The Velvet Underground on their eponymous album 41 The Blind Boys collaborated several times with Ben Harper Harper played guitar on the Blind Boys albums Higher Ground and Spirit of the Century 42 The Blind Boys again collaborated with Harper on his 2004 album There Will Be a Light and toured with him throughout Europe that year 6 20 42 The majority of the songs were Harper originals but the album also included a cover of Bob Dylan and Danny O Keefe s Well Well Well 42 There Will Be a Light also won the Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album 43 The following year Harper and the Blind Boys released Live at the Apollo a recording of their live performance from the Apollo Theater in October 2004 44 The Blind Boys released the album Atom Bomb in 2005 45 The album features cover versions of songs such as Demons by Fatboy Slim and Macy Gray a track that also featured a guest appearance by rapper Gift of Gab Blind Faith s Presence of the Lord featuring soul musician Billy Preston and a cover of Norman Greenbaum s Spirit in the Sky featuring David Hidalgo of Los Lobos and blues musician Charlie Musselwhite 45 The album was awarded the prize for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year at the 37th GMA Dove Awards 38 On March 9 2005 at the age of 75 vocalist George Scott died of complications from diabetes and a heart condition 46 In 2006 vocalist Ben Moore was invited to join the group by Carter 47 Moore had previously performed under the name Bobby Purify as part of the R amp B duo James amp Bobby Purify and continued to use the name as a solo artist after the duo broke up in the 1980s 47 In 2007 Fountain stopped touring with the group due to complications from diabetes 8 In 2008 the Blind Boys released the album Down in New Orleans 48 The album was recorded in New Orleans which was a first for the group 49 and includes songs written by or made famous by New Orleans musicians along with updated gospel standards 48 Many tracks also feature guest musicians from the city 48 Tracks include a jazzy version of the popular gospel song Uncloudy Day backed by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band blues song Make a Better World written by musician Earl King backed by the Hot 8 Brass Band as well as a bluesy version of If I Could Help Somebody by Mahalia Jackson with Allen Toussaint on piano 48 The album also won the GMA Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Album of the Year 38 The Blind Boys released their album Duets in 2009 50 51 Each song features a duet between the Blind Boys and another artist some of these artists include Susan Tedeschi Bonnie Raitt and John Hammond 50 51 Earlier that same year the group was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards 2010s edit In 2010 the Blind Boys were inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame 13 52 nbsp The Blind Boys of Alabama performing at the West Coast Blues amp Roots Festival in 2011 In 2011 the group appeared in the live action animated feature film Hop Vocalist Billy Bowers left the group in 2011 when he was injured and underwent back surgery 5 53 Bowers role as vocalist was filled by Ricky McKinnie who was also the groups percussionist for many years 5 53 54 Bowers died July 2 2013 of heart failure in Montgomery Alabama at the age of 71 53 In 2013 the Blind Boys released I ll Find a Way produced by Justin Vernon of Bon Iver 55 The album also features guest appearances by Sam Amidon and Merrill Garbus of Tune Yards 55 The following year the Blind Boys released Talkin Christmas in collaboration with blues musician Taj Mahal 56 In 2016 the Blind Boys contributed to God Don t Never Change The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson a tribute album recorded in honor of gospel musician Blind Willie Johnson 57 The Blind Boys performed the song Mother s Children Have a Hard Time a performance that was nominated for Best American Roots Performance at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards 58 The album was also nominated in the category of Best Roots Gospel Album 58 nbsp The Blind Boys of Alabama make a surprise appearance at the Newport Folk Festival in 2016 In 2017 the Blind Boys released the album Almost Home on BBOA Records in collaboration with Amazon Music 59 60 Fountain also rejoined the group for the album s recording 8 The songs on the album were written for the Blind Boys by writers including Marc Cohn Phil Cook John Leventhal and Valerie June 59 61 The Blind Boys manager Charles Driebe recorded interviews with the members of the group then shared them with the songwriters who wrote songs reflecting the Blind Boys personal stories 61 The song Let My Mother Live from the album was nominated for Best American Roots Performance at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards 62 Written by Leventhal the song is about Carter as a young boy at the Alabama Institute and how scared I was and that I wanted my mother to live until I got grown 61 On August 28 2020 Single Lock Records released the Blind Boys album Almost Home to all platforms including a bonus track previously unreleased Bob Dylan song See By Faith On June 3 2018 Clarence Fountain died of complications from diabetes at the age of 88 in Baton Rouge Louisiana 63 His final performance with the Blind Boys of Alabama was on May 16 2018 at the Manship Theatre there 63 September 2018 saw the release of the Muscle Shoals tribute album Small Town Big Sound 64 The Blind Boys along with blues musician Mike Farris performed a cover of the song Respect Yourself 64 The album also featured cover songs by such artists as Steven Tyler Willie Nelson Grace Potter Chris Stapleton and Kid Rock 64 In January 2019 the Blind Boys performed with Marc Cohn at the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center 65 The performance was broadcast on the PBS live music series The Kate that spring 66 Over the summer of 2019 the Blind Boys toured Europe with blind Afro pop duo Amadou amp Mariam 9 Similar to the Blind Boys the husband and wife duo originally met in 1975 at the Bamako Institute for the Blind in Mali 9 During the tour the two groups of vocalists would provide vocal accompaniment to performances of each group s songs 9 They would also perform original material that they had created together such as the songs Bamako to Birmingham and Two Cultures One Beat 9 In August of that same year the Blind Boys released a collaborative album with Marc Cohn titled Work To Do 67 The album features Cohn and the Blind Boys performing new and older material by Cohn in addition to renditions of traditional gospel songs 67 68 Seven of the tracks are recordings from their performance on The Kate earlier that same year including Cohn s hit Walking in Memphis as well the Blind Boys version of Amazing Grace to the melody of The House of the Rising Sun 67 68 On October 15 2019 the group appeared on Today to perform the title track alongside Marc Cohn 69 Music blog UDiscoverMusic named Blind Boys the longest standing music group as they are still touring and writing recording music after being founded in 1939 70 In 2019 Jason Isbell selected the Blind Boys to join him for his October residency at the Ryman Auditorium 71 Shortly after they were featured with Irish TV host Hector o hEochagain for his show Hector USA 72 The Blind Boys 2019 Christmas Tour earned the praise of The New Yorker which commented The beloved gospel ensemble the Blind Boys of Alabama remains perennially fresh whether it s interjecting godliness into unexpected songs or as in this case saluting Christmas 73 2020s edit In March 2020 the group toured Australia and New Zealand performing at the Womadelaide and Womad NZ festivals 74 75 In May 2020 Woodstock legend Wavy Gravy included the Blind Boys in his virtual music festival celebrating his 84th birthday 76 To kick off 2021 the Recording Academy featured the Blind Boys performing If I Had a Hammer on their Positive Vibes Only series 77 Later that year the Blind Boys teamed up with Bela Fleck to release a new version of I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free for Record Store Day 78 The song went on to be nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best American Roots Performance category 79 Singer Ben Moore Benjamin Moore Jr died of natural causes on May 12 2022 80 He was 80 years old 80 In July 2022 the Blind Boys were featured as performers at the closing ceremonies of the World Games at the Protective Stadium in Birmingham Alabama They performed with Jamey Johnson and a 75 piece orchestra led by Dr Henry Panion on a bill headlined by Lionel Richie 81 In September 2022 the Blind Boys released two collaborative tracks with Black Violin titled We Are One and The Message the latter of which was nominated for a Grammy for Best Americana Performance 82 83 The View featured the Blind Boys on Martin Luther King Jr Day 2023 including an interview and multiple performances 84 Tenor Paul Beasley died on March 13 2023 at the age of 78 85 Beasley was previously a member of such groups as Gospel Keynotes and the Mighty Clouds of Joy 85 He joined the Blind Boys in 2013 after losing his eyesight 85 In 2023 the Blind Boys album Echoes of the South earned three Grammy Award nominations including Best Roots Gospel Album as well as Best American Roots Performance for the song Heaven Help Us All and Best Americana Performance for the song Friendship 86 The album was named after the Birmingham radio program that hosted the group s first professional performance in 1944 86 Jimmy Carter retired from the Blind Boys after recording the album at the age of 91 86 Awards and nominations editYear Nominee work Category Award Result1994 Deep River Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Nominated2002 Spirit of the Century Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won2003 Higher Ground Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards WonTraditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won2004 Go Tell It on the Mountain Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won2005 There Will Be a Light Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album Grammy Awards Won2006 Atom Bomb Traditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won2009 Down in New Orleans Traditional Gospel Album of the Year Dove Award Won Free At Last Traditional Gospel Recorded Song of the Year Dove Award WonDown in New Orleans Best Traditional Gospel Album Grammy Awards WonThe Blind Boys of Alabama Lifetime Achievement Award Grammy Awards Won2016 God Don t Never Change The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson Best Roots Gospel Album Grammy Awards Nominated2016 Mother s Children Have a Hard Time from the album God Don t Never Change The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated2017 Let My Mother Live from their album Almost Home Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated2021 I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free with Bela Fleck Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards Nominated2022 The Message with Black Violin Best Americana Performance Grammy Awards Nominated2023 Echoes of the South Best Roots Gospel Album Grammy Awards TBA Heaven Help Us All Best American Roots Performance Grammy Awards TBA Friendship Best Americana Performance Grammy Awards TBAOther honors editYear Honor Presenter1994 National Heritage Fellowship National Endowment for the Arts2003 Hall of fame inductees Gospel Music Hall of Fame2005 Helen Keller Personal Achievement Award American Foundation for the Blind2005 First Niarchos Prize for Survivorship Queen Noor of Jordan on behalf of the Landmine Survivors Network2010 Hall of fame inductees Alabama Music Hall of FameMembers editCurrent members edit Name Years active InstrumentsRicky McKinnie c 1952 5 1990 present 28 87 Vocals percussionJoey Williams present 87 Vocals lead guitarJulius Love Present VocalsPeter Levin present 87 OrganStephen Raynard Ladson present 87 BassFounding members edit Name Years active Instruments NotesClarence Fountain November 28 1929 June 3 2018 63 1939 2007 2017 2018 VocalsGeorge Scott 1929 2005 46 88 1939 2005 VocalsVel Bozman Traylor 1923 1947 88 1939 1947 VocalsJohnny Fields 1927 2009 88 89 1939 VocalsOlice Thomas b 1926 deceased 88 1939 Vocals Date of death unknown J T Hutton c 1924 July 27 2012 90 1939 Vocals The only sighted original member Former members edit Name Years active Instruments NotesJimmy Carter c 1932 91 1982 2023 26 86 VocalsBishop Billy Bowers c 1942 d July 2 2013 53 1968 2011 53 VocalsCaleb Bobby Butler 1979 2008 26 Vocalist bass 26 23 Butler is sighted 23 No relation to Samuel Butler Jr 26 Samuel Butler Jr 1972 1994 26 Vocals rhythm guitar songwriter arranger manager citation needed No relation to Caleb Bobby Butler 26 Ben Moore b August 7 1941 d May 12 2022 80 2006 2022 47 87 VocalsPaul Beasley b December 11 1944 d March 13 2023 85 2013 2023 85 VocalsRoscoe Robinson citation needed VocalsCharles Porter citation needed VocalsDwight Fields deceased citation needed VocalsDiscography editAs main artists edit 1949 I Can See Everybody s Mother But Mine Coleman Records 1950 Sweet Honey in the Rocks Palda Records 1950 Livin On Mother s Prayers Palda Records 1950 Come Over Here The Table Spread Palda Records 1953 The Sermon 1953 When I Lost My Mother Specialty Records 1954 Marching Up To Zion Specialty Records 1954 Oh Lord Stand By Me Specialty Records 1958 My Mother s Train Vee Jay Records 1959 God is On the Throne Savoy Records 1959 The Original Blind Boys Savoy Records 1963 1957 You ll Never Walk Alone HOB Records 1963 Old Time Religion HOB Records 1963 True Convictions HOB Records 1965 Can I Get a Witness HOB Records 1967 Church Concert in New Orleans Live HOB Records 1969 Fix it Jesus Like You Said You Would Keen Records 1969 Jesus Will Be Waiting 1970 In the Gospel Light 1970 The Five Blind Boys From Alabama 1970 The Soul of Clarence Fountain 1973 Best of Five Blind Boys of Alabama 1974 Precious Memories 1974 There s a God Somewhere ABC Records 1978 The Soldier Album PIR Records 1981 Faith Moves Mountains Messiah Records 1982 I m a Soldier in the Army of the Lord 1987 In the Hands of the Lord 1989 I m a Changed Man Wajji Records 1989 The Five Blind Boys of Alabama 1990 Brand New Wajji Records 1990 I m Not That Way Anymore Atlanta International Records 1991 I am a Soldier 1991 Oh Lord Stand By Me Marching Up to Zion 1991 The Best of the Five Blind Boys 1992 Deep River Elektra Nonesuch Records 1993 Bridge Over Troubled Waters 1994 Alive in Person 1994 Blessed Assurance 1994 Don t Forget To Pray 1994 In the Gospel Light 1994 Soul Gospel 1994 Swing Low Sweet Chariot 1995 1948 51 1995 I Brought Him With Me House of Blues Music Company 1996 All Things Are Possible 1996 Golden Moments in Gospel 1997 Holdin On House of Blues Music Company 1998 Have Faith The Very Best of the Five Blind Boys of Alabama 1999 Best of Clarence Fountain and the Five Blind Boys of Alabama 1999 Hallelujah A Collection of Their Finest 2000 My Lord What a Morning 2001 Spirit of the Century Real World Records 2001 You ll Never Walk Alone True Convictions reissue 2002 Higher Ground Real World Records 2003 Amazing Grace 2003 Go Tell It on the Mountain Real World Records 2004 There Will Be a Light with Ben Harper Virgin Records 2005 Live at the Apollo with Ben Harper 2005 Atom Bomb Real World Records 2006 Just a Closer Walk with Thee a compilation of work ranging from the years 1963 1965 2008 Down in New Orleans Time Life Grammy winner 2009 Enlightenment The Great American Music Co 2 CDs 2009 Duets compilation of collaborations with other artists Saguaro Road Records 2010 Faith Moves Mountains reissue 2011 Take the High Road Saguaro Road Records 2013 I ll Find a Way Sony Masterworks 2014 Talkin Christmas with Taj Mahal Sony Masterworks 2017 Almost Home BBOA Records Single Lock Records 2019 Work To Do with Marc Cohn BMG Records 2021 I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free with Bela Fleck Single Lock Records 2023 Echoes Of The South Single Lock Records As featured or guest artists edit 2002 Up by Peter Gabriel on his song Sky Blue 2002 Lifted Songs of the Spirit Freedom Road 2002 WYEP Live and Direct Volume 4 On Air Performances Amazing Grace 2002 Don t Give Up on Me by Solomon Burke on his song None of Us Are Free 2003 Brother Bear An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack Welcome with Phil Collins and Oren Waters 2005 Redemption Songs Nothing But The Blood 2007 Song of America Let Us Break Bread Together 2014 Songs from a Stolen Spring Freedom 2016 God Don t Never Change The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson Mother s Children Have a Hard Time Notes edit While current band member Jimmy Carter is often credited as being the only remaining original or founding member of the group he was actually too young to join the group when they began touring but he was attending the Alabama Institute for the Negro Blind when the group was originally formed 16 17 18 He did not officially join the group until the 1980s having previously worked with the Dixieland Blind Boys as well as Five Blind Boys of Mississippi 16 19 Carter s first recorded performance with the Blind Boys was on their 1982 record I m a Soldier in the Army of the Lord 17 References edit Butler Harry D Gadsden s Julius Love newest member of Blind Boys of Alabama Gadsden Times Retrieved January 3 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Kenneth Roberts Charles June 5 2018 Blind Boys of Alabama Encyclopedia of Alabama Alabama Humanities Foundation Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f Catlin Roger March 17 2017 After 75 years of touring the Blind Boys of Alabama are still reaping blessings The Washington Post Washington D C Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Aiges Scott April 7 2001 Blind Boys and Real World Give Contemporary Voice to Old time Gospel Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g h Ruggieri Melissa July 9 2012 Ricky McKinnie is keeping the faith with the Blind Boys of Alabama The Atlanta Journal Constitution Atlanta Georgia Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Levintova Hannah November 21 2011 2 Stepping With the Blind Boys of Alabama Mother Jones San Francisco California Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d Picks and Pans Review I Brought Him with Me People United States September 25 1995 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Clarence Fountain Founding Member of Blind Boys of Alabama Dies at 88 Billboard New York City Associated Press June 4 2018 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e Denselow Robin July 14 2019 Amadou and Mariam the Blind Boys of Alabama review soulful energy The Guardian London United Kingdom Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d Kreps Daniel June 5 2018 Clarence Fountain Blind Boys of Alabama Leader Dead at 88 Rolling Stone New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 Clarence Fountain amp the Blind Boys African American Gospel Singers National Endowment for the Arts n d Retrieved December 15 2020 2003 Inductees Blind Boys of Alabama Gospel Music Hall of Fame January 2018 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Inductees Alabama Music Hall of Fame Retrieved December 1 2019 a b The Blind Boys of Alabama perform in the East Room The White House February 14 2002 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e Kohn David August 4 2003 Five Blind Boys Of Alabama CBS News New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Hildebrand Lee June 29 2008 Blind Boys of Alabama battling SF Gate San Francisco California Retrieved December 1 2019 Dispute over origins Fountain is also disturbed by claims made by Carter that he was an original member of the Alabama Blind Boys and hence the only original still performing with the group Carter was in fact a student at the school when the group was formed in 1938 According to Fountain he did sing with other members of the group in the school s choir but not with the group itself We didn t like his voice so we didn t invite him in Fountain said I was an original Blind Boy of Alabama but when they left school in 1944 I didn t go Carter 77 said after a concert in Modesto I was too young I went back to school Carter s first recorded appearance with the Blind Boys of Alabama was in 1982 on I m a Soldier in the Army of the Lord Before joining them for that album he had spent more than a dozen years with the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi and before that sang with the Dixieland Blind Boys a b c d Kenneth Roberts Charles June 5 2018 Blind Boys of Alabama Encyclopedia of Alabama Alabama Humanities Foundation Retrieved December 1 2019 Jimmy Carter is billed as the only founding member of the band still performing Although he was enrolled at the school and a member of the chorus he was too young at the time to join when the group first began touring Despite some controversy Carter is still described as a founding member of the band though he did not appear in a recorded performance with the Blind Boys until the 1982 record I m a Soldier in the Army of the Lord Ruggieri Melissa July 9 2012 Ricky McKinnie is keeping the faith with the Blind Boys of Alabama The Atlanta Journal Constitution Atlanta Georgia Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 1 2019 Jimmy Carter billed as an original member since he was enrolled in the Alabama institute when the group started performing but was too young to join them is the elder statesman and lead singer Larkin Colin 2011 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music London United Kingdom Omnibus Press pp 1143 1146 ISBN 9780857125958 Jimmy Carter finally became a permanent fifth member of the group in the early 1980s again after an apprenticeship with the Mississippi 5 a b c d e Larkin Colin 2011 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music London United Kingdom Omnibus Press pp 1143 1146 ISBN 9780857125958 a b Moore Allan 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Blues and Gospel Music Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 105 112 ISBN 978 0511998713 a b c d e The Blind Boys of Alabama Perform at Library of Congress June 5 Press release Washington D C Library of Congress May 23 2002 ISSN 0731 3527 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g Gilbert Marsha June 2003 The Blind Boys of Alabama Still Thrilling Audiences and Winning Awards after 66 Years Ebony Los Angeles California Johnson Publishing Company Archived from the original on December 5 2019 a b Kernodle Tammy Lynn Maxile Horace Joseph 2011 Encyclopedia of African American Music Volume 1 Asheville North Carolina ABC CLIO p 892 ISBN 9780313341991 Soul originally was used by gospel quartets in the 1950s to identify the spiritual nature of their music In the 1960s it was used by jazz musicians to categorize contemporary hard bop also linked to spiritual expression Its use over the years led to the term being used more commonly to describe all popular music by African Americans Billboard magazine who had in 1949 changed the music category it used for black popular music from race music to rhythm and blues now changed rhythm and blues to soul in 1969 Flanagan Andrew June 4 2018 Clarence Fountain Leader And Founding Member Of Blind Boys Of Alabama Dies At 88 KTEP University of Texas at El Paso NPR Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Hildebrand Lee June 29 2008 Blind Boys of Alabama battling SF Gate San Francisco California Retrieved December 1 2019 The Gospel at Colonus Playbill Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e Kocher Chris February 21 2017 Blind Boys of Alabama bring 8 decades of gospel to Corning Star Gazette Elmira New York Retrieved December 1 2019 36th Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb NEA National Heritage Fellowships 1994 Arts gov National Endowment for the Arts Archived from the original on September 25 2020 Retrieved December 15 2020 a b c d Blind Boys of Alabama The World Coos Bay Oregon March 27 1999 p C1 Retrieved December 1 2019 via Newspapers com In 1994 the group was awarded the NEA National Heritage Fellowship presented by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton They even performed on the popular Fox Television show Beverly Hills 90210 That year also broth the group s debut on the House of Blues Music Company A live album I Brought Him With Me showcased the group s ability to musically change with the times while remaining true to their basic style That is obvious on the latest HOB Music Company release Holdin On From cut to cut it takes the listener on a new inspirational experience Beginning with the encouraging title track from the funky Sacrifice to the closing tune The Spirit of the Lord is Coming Down it promises to bless hearts and soul Of Holdin On Fountain says We tried to get all phases of the music on the album We ve got tunes that I think will fit any audience The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb New Album Releases The Atlanta Voice Atlanta Georgia August 30 1997 p 12A Retrieved December 1 2019 via Newspapers com Holdin On is the latest release by The Blind Boys of Alabama It continues the group s gospel tradition of gospel music while encompassing a broad range of styles such as reggae In Performance at the White House A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement Press release Washington D C WETA TV Retrieved December 14 2019 44th Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 45th Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c GMA Dove Awards Past Winners doveawards com Gospel Music Association Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Hicks Robert December 16 2003 Blind Boys of Alabama keep gospel spirit in Christmas Daily Record Morristown New Jersey p D5 Retrieved December 1 2019 via Newspapers com For its 2003 Christmas project the group worked with producer John Cherlew and executive producer Chris Goldsmith who recruited a stellar cast of guest singers and musicians including Solomon Burke Tom Waits Michael Franti Chrissie Hynde Richard Thompson Aaron Neville Mavis Staples Shelby Lynne George Clinton Robert Randolph Me shell Ndegeocello and Les McCann for its Grammy nominated recording Go Tell It on the Mountain On Thursday at the Community Theatre in Morristown and on Friday at the Beacon Theatre in New York City the Blind Boys of Alabama will perform Christmas songs as well as songs from their two previous Grammy winning albums 2001 s Spirit of the Century and 2002 s Higher Ground 46th Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 Turner Gustavo January 21 2010 Screw Coco We re With Jesus Lou Reed the Blind Boys of Alabama and David Letterman LA Weekly Los Angeles California Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c Kuipers Dean November 14 2004 Ben and the Boys go soul searching Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California p E68 Retrieved December 1 2019 via Newspapers com But when Harper lent that guitar to gospel hybridizers the Blind Boys of Alabama on two of their albums Higher Ground and Spirit of the Century the majority of the album s songs are Harper originals subtly shifts into the Bob Dylan Danny O Keefe tune Well Well Well 47th Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 Rashbaum Alyssa October 13 2004 Ben Harper And The Blind Boys Of Alabama Bring The Gospel To The Apollo mtv com Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Wild David May 5 2005 Clarence Fountain Blind Boys of Alabama Leader Dead at 88 Rolling Stone New York City Archived from the original on May 21 2008 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Obituaries The Crisis Vol 112 no 3 Baltimore Maryland NAACP May June 2005 Archived from the original on December 9 2019 George Scott 75 singer died of complications from diabetes and a heart condition March 9 in Durham N C Scott was a founding member of the Grammy award winning Blind Boys of Alabama gospel group a b c Capouya John April 14 2014 How one of the Blind Boys of Alabama regained his soul w video Tampa Bay Times Tampa Bay Florida Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d Denselow Robin January 25 2008 The Blind Boys of Alabama Down in New Orleans The Guardian London United Kingdom Retrieved December 1 2019 Gill Andy February 1 2008 Album The Blind Boys of Alabama Down in New Orleans Proper The Independent London United Kingdom Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Orshoski Wes November 6 2009 The Blind Boys of Alabama Duets Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Bambarge Bradley October 29 2009 Duets Blind Boys of Alabama NJ com Iselin New Jersey Advance Publications Retrieved December 1 2019 52nd Annual Grammy Awards grammy com Recording Academy Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e Harmon Rick July 16 2013 Vocalist Billy Bowers of Blind Boys of Alabama dead at 71 USA Today McLean Virginia Retrieved December 1 2019 Everett Todd August 22 1995 Five Blind Boys of Alabama Variety Los Angeles California Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Decurtis Anthony November 1 2013 The Blind Boys of Alabama I ll Find a Way Review Rolling Stone New York New York Retrieved December 1 2019 Marchand Francois December 17 2014 Album of the Week Blind Boys of Alabama amp Taj Mahal Talkin Christmas Vancouver Sun Vancouver British Columbia Retrieved December 1 2019 Miles Milo August 29 2016 Musicians Pay Tribute To Blind Willie Johnson On God Don t Never Change NPR Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Unterberger Andrew December 6 2016 Here Is the Complete List of Nominees for the 2017 Grammys Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Allen Jim August 10 2017 Review The Blind Boys Of Alabama Almost Home NPR Retrieved December 1 2019 Horn Rachel June 23 2017 Blind Boys Of Alabama Announce Almost Home Hear Four Songs NPR Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c Dauphin Chuck August 11 2017 The Blind Boys of Alabama Reflect on Their 7 Decade History amp What s Left for Them to Achieve Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 Lynch Joe November 28 2017 Grammys 2018 See the Complete List of Nominees Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c Obituaries The Advocate Baton Rouge Louisiana June 9 2018 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c Ginsberg Gab August 30 2018 Album to Feature Steven Tyler Willie Nelson Grace Potter amp More Exclusive Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 Marc Cohn with Special Guests The Blind Boys of Alabama Kate tv PBS December 4 2018 Retrieved December 1 2019 Season 4 Episode 403 Marc Cohn with Blind Boys of Alabama Full Episode Kate tv PBS May 24 2019 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c Beaudoin Jedd August 8 2019 Marc Cohn and Blind Boys of Alabama Have Work to Do album stream premiere PopMatters Chicago Illinois Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Horowitz Hal August 7 2019 Marc Cohn amp Blind Boys of Alabama Work To Do American Songwriter Nashville Tennessee ForASong Media Retrieved December 1 2019 Marc Cohn Blind Boys of Alabama sing Work to Do on TODAY Today com Retrieved January 3 2022 Milano Brett August 10 2021 Oldest Bands In Music 37 Acts That Defy The Laws Of Age And Time Udiscovermusic com Retrieved January 3 2022 Freeman Jon September 18 2019 Jason Isbell Adds Christone Kingfish Ingram Blind Boys of Alabama as Ryman Residency Openers Rollingstone com Retrieved January 3 2022 Irishman s epic road trip involving former KKK leader infamous Mexican wall and pageant training IrishCentral com November 1 2019 Retrieved January 3 2022 The Blind Boys Of Alabama The New Yorker Retrieved January 3 2022 WOMADelaide on Sunday Rhiannon Giddens amp Francesco Turrisi PNG rapper Sprigga Mek and the Blind Boys of Alabama ABC Online Sydney Australia March 8 2020 Retrieved December 15 2020 van Dongen Yvonne March 29 2020 Womad was the last hurrah Stuff Wellington New Zealand Retrieved December 15 2020 Wavy Gravy s 84th Birthday Quarantine Concert For Seva May 14 May 17 Sonoma County Gazette Forestville California May 14 2020 Retrieved December 15 2020 Positive Vibes Only Blind Boys Of Alabama Grammy com January 31 2021 Retrieved January 3 2022 Home RECORD STORE DAY Recordstoreday com Retrieved January 3 2022 2022 GRAMMYs Awards Complete Nominations List Grammy com November 23 2021 Retrieved January 3 2022 a b c Blistein Jon May 18 2022 Blind Boys of Alabama Singer Benjamin Moore Jr Dead at 80 Rolling Stone New York City Retrieved May 19 2022 Lionel Richie Joins Performer Lineup for the Music of the World Games 2022 IWGA Listen Blind Boys of Alabama The Message Feat Black Violin The Bluegrass Situation September 9 2022 Retrieved February 24 2023 Colurso Mary November 15 2022 Grammy Awards 2023 Nominees include Blind Boys of Alabama Sam Hunt AL com Retrieved February 24 2023 Blind Boys of Alabama Perform the View YouTube Retrieved February 24 2023 a b c d e Grow Korey March 16 2023 Blind Boys of Alabama s Paul Beasley Dead at 78 Rolling Stone New York City Retrieved September 23 2023 a b c d Colurso Mary November 10 2023 Blind Boys of Alabama earn 3 Grammy nominations for album recorded in the Shoals AL com Retrieved November 10 2023 a b c d e Faith Blind December 12 2019 Blind Faith Tucson Weekly Tucson Arizona Retrieved December 14 2019 Carter and fellow Blind Boys Eric Ricky McKinnie Ben Moore and Paul Beasley who are also blind and Joey Williams Stephen Raynard Ladson and Peter Levin will be hitting Tucson to spread some holiday cheer next week a b c d Boyer Horace C 1995 How Sweet the Sound The Golden Age of Gospel Montgomery Alabama Elliott amp Clark p 201 ISBN 9781880216194 In 1937 Clarence Fountain b 1929 was an elementary school student singing in the Talladega Institute for the Deaf and Blind Glee Club Fountain and a friend Johnny Fields b 1927 selected George Scott b 1929 Olice Thomas b 1926 and Velma Bozman Traylor 1923 47 from the Glee Club and formed the Happy Land Jubilee Singers Irvine David November 19 2009 Fields funeral today The Daily Dispatch Vol XCV no 271 Henderson North Carolina p 1A Retrieved December 1 2019 Henderson lost one of its shining stars when Johnny Fields died on Nov 12 Obituaries AL com Alabama Media Group 2012 Retrieved December 1 2019 J T Hutton age 88 a native of Birmingham passed away July 27 2012 Dauphin Chuck August 11 2017 The Blind Boys of Alabama Reflect on Their 7 Decade History amp What s Left for Them to Achieve Billboard New York City Retrieved December 1 2019 It s something that we ve never done before stresses the group s Jimmy Carter 85 to Billboard External links editOfficial website nbsp The Blind Boys of Alabama at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Blind Boys of Alabama amp oldid 1186863126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.