Difference between revisions of "Gospel music" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:5a52171r.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Mahalia Jackson]]
|name=Gospel music
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|stylistic_origins=[[Hymn#Christian tradition|Christian hymns]],<BR>[[Negro spirituals]]
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'''Gospel music''' is a genre of mostly American music characterized by dominant vocals (often with strong use of [[harmony]]) drawn from [[Christian]] worship and often featuring Christian evangelical lyrics. Two major types of Gospel music have developed along basically racial lines. These include [[Urban gospel|Urban Gospel]] (sometimes referred to as "black Gospel") and its white counterparts, among them: [[Southern Gospel]] and modern, popularized Gospel (now more commonly known as "praise music" or [[Contemporary Christian music]]).
|cultural_origins=First quarter of [[twentieth century]]: [[US]] {{flagicon|USA}}
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|instruments=[[Vocal]]s, [[electric guitar]], [[drums]], and electric bass guitars
+
The creation, performance, significance, and even the definition of Gospel music varies according to culture and social context. It is composed and performed for many purposes, ranging from [[aesthetics|aesthetic]] pleasure, religious or ceremonial purposes, or as entertainment for the marketplace. However, a common theme is praise and thanks to God and/or Christ.
|popularity=
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{{toc}}
|derivatives=[[Rhythm and Blues]]
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Gospel music has played an anomalous role in American race relations. Black gospel was a synthesis of African-based musical idioms and traditional European Christian hymns, and came to maturity during the era of slavery. Southern gospel, in contrast, came to embrace some of the tempos and emotional freedoms of the black gospel tradition. While following largely separate paths, black and white gospel music have emphasized the spiritual, as opposed to secular, aspects of [[love]] and contributed to greater understanding and respect between the races, particularly during the American [[Civil Rights]] movement. Many millions of people around the world have been inspired by Gospel music. It has comforted those in times of trouble, guided lives thorough its inspirational message, and for some directly fulfilled a personal search for God.
|subgenrelist=
 
|subgenres=[[urban contemporary gospel]],<BR>[[Southern gospel]]
 
|fusiongenres=[[Christian country music]]
 
|regional_scenes=
 
|other_topics=
 
}}
 
'''Gospel music''' is a musical genre characterized by dominant vocals (often with strong use of harmony) referencing lyrics of a religious nature, particularly Christian. Subgenres include contemporary gospel, [[urban contemporary gospel]] (also known as black gospel), and modern Gospel music (now more commonly known as praise and worship or Contemporary Christian music). Most forms of gospel music use electric guitar, drums, and electric bass guitars.  
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
Gospel music is believed to have first come out of [[African-American]] churches in the first quarter of the twentieth century or more loosely, to both [[black gospel music]] and to the religious music composed and sung by predominately white [[Southern Gospel]] artists. The sharp division between black and white America, particularly black and white churches, kept the two apart. While those divisions have lessened slightly in the past fifty years, the two traditions are still distinct. In both traditions, some performers, such as [[Mahalia Jackson]] have limited themselves to appearing in religious contexts only, while others, such as [[Sister Rosetta Tharpe]], [[the Golden Gate Quartet]] and [[Clara Ward]], have performed gospel music in secular settings, even night clubs. Many performers, such as [[The Jordanaires]], [[The Blackwood Brothers]], [[Al Green]], and [[Solomon Burke]] have performed both secular and religious music. It is common for such performers to include gospel songs in otherwise secular performances, although the opposite almost never happens.
+
The relationship between the origins of white and African-American Gospel music is a matter of some controversy. Some argue that Gospel music is rooted in [[Africa]] and was brought to the Americas by [[slaves]]. However, Gospel harmonies and many of the hymns themselves also show a clear Scottish influence. Recent studies by Professor [[Willie Ruff]], an Afro-American ethno-[[musicology|musicologist]] at [[Yale University]], conclude that African American Gospel singing was in fact was encouraged by [[Scottish Gaelic]] speaking settlers from [[North Uist]]<ref name=line>Willie Ruff, The line connecting Gaelic psalm singing & American Music, Line Singing Conference at Yale, 2007.</ref> Thus, traditional [[Scottish Gaelic language|Scottish Gaelic]] [[psalm]] singing, in which the psalms are called out and the congregation sings a response, may have been the earliest form of congregational singing adopted by Africans in America. Call-and-response singing, however, has also been found among many African tribes, and it is certain that the southern slave culture adapted African traditions to the Christian songs they were taught by their [[slavery|slave]] owners.
 +
 
 +
Although white and black Gospel singing may have grown up side by side and cross-fertilized to a great extent in the south, the sharp racial division in the United States, particularly between black and white churches, has kept the two apart. While those divisions have lessened slightly in the past 50 years, the two traditions are still distinct.
  
Gospel singer, songwriter, guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe was the first great star of Gospel music, surfacing on the pop music charts in 1938. She remained popular through the 1940s, continuing to hit the charts and drawing tens of thousands of fans to see her perform live in venues across the United States. She lost the support of some of her church fans, now and then, when she performed in secular venues as well, as when she recorded songs not recognized as 'Christian'.  The fans she lost were somewhat forgiving, as she remained true to her faith, for the most part, throughout her recording career which spanned the remainder of her life.
+
In the early twentieth century, recordings of Gospel songs began to create a market for Gospel music in the emerging recording industry. Gospel and spiritual songs by white groups such as the [[Carter Family]] and Gospel blues by such performers as [[Blind Willie Johnson]] and others were among these. In the 1930s and 1940s, the [[Grand Ole Opry]] regularly featured [[bluegrass]] and traditional Gospel singing, while pioneer Urban Gospel performers began to gain popularity among black audiences.
  
Although predominantly an American phenomenon, gospel music has spread throughout the world including to Australia with choirs such as [[The Elementals]] and [[Jonah & The Whalers]] and festivals such as the [[Australian Gospel Music Festival]]. Norway is home to the popular [[Ansgar Gospel Choir]], the only true Norwegian Gospel choir. Gospel is also popular in the province of Quebec, Canada, where important gospel choirs such as [[Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir]] and [http://www.gospelcelebration.qc.ca Québec Celebration Gospel Choir] are famous.
+
By the mid-twentieth century, Gospel music had developed a major market. Soon, distinct sub-genres began to appear. Cross-over performers such as [[Amy Grant]] and [[Aretha Franklin]] brought their Gospel traditions with them into mainstream [[country music|country]] and [[R & B]], while occasional Gospel mega-hits such as "Oh Happy Day" by the Edwin Hawkins Singers reached the top of the pop charts. Today, Gospel music is no longer a Sunday-only affair, but a major part of the recording industry in the [[United States]].
 +
 
 +
Although predominantly an American phenomenon, Gospel music has also spread throughout the world including to [[Australia]], with choirs such as [[The Elementals]] and [[Jonah & The Whalers]] and festivals such as the [[Australian Gospel Music Festival]]. Norway is home to the popular [[Ansgar Gospel Choir]], the only true Norwegian Gospel choir. Gospel is also popular in the province of Quebec, Canada, where important gospel choirs such as [[Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir]] are famous.
  
 
==Gospel music genres==
 
==Gospel music genres==
===[[Black gospel|urban contemporary gospel]]===
 
The music popularized by urban contemporary gospel pioneers had its roots mostly in spirituals sung by southern slaves during the 18th and 19th century but also in the freewheeling forms of religious devotion of 'Sanctified' or 'Holiness' churches, who encouraged individual church members to 'testify', speaking or singing spontaneously about their faith and experience, sometimes while dancing in celebration. In the 1920s Sanctified artists, such as Arizona Dranes, many of whom were also traveling preachers, started making records in a style that melded traditional religious themes with barrelhouse, blues and boogie-woogie techniques and brought jazz instruments, such as drums and horns, into the church.
 
  
===Christian country music===
+
===Urban Gospel===
[[Christian country music]], a subgenre of gospel music with a country flair, is also known as Country Gospel or Inspirational Country.
+
 
 +
Urban Gospel had its roots mostly in spirituals sung by southern slaves during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. [[Thomas A. Dorsey]] ("Take My Hand, Precious Lord") and other pioneers popularized the more freewheeling form of religious devotion of "Sanctified" or "[[Holiness]]" churches. In the 1920s, artists such as Arizona Dranes, many of whom were also traveling preachers, started making records in a style that melded traditional religious themes with [[blues]] and boogie-woogie techniques and brought [[jazz]] instruments, such as drums and horns, into the church. Early Urban Gospel music of this nature was often frowned upon in more established black churches, which preferred traditional [[Baptist]] and [[Methodist]] [[hymns]] without [[rhythm]]ic accompaniment.
 +
 
 +
In the mid-twentieth century, groups such as [[the Dixie Hummingbirds]], [[Soul Stirrers]], [[Swan Silvertones]], the [[Five Blind Boys of Mississippi]], and the [[Mighty Clouds of Joy]] introduced even more stylistic freedom to the genre, often emulating R & B forms, and in turn influencing top popular performers such as [[Wilson Pickett]], [[James Brown]], and [[Sam Cooke]], who himself had been a member of the Soul Stirrers.
 +
 
 +
At the same time that these quartet groups were reaching their zenith, a number of female singers were achieving stardom. Some, such as [[Mahalia Jackson]] and [[Bessie Griffin]], were primarily soloists. Others, such as [[Clara Ward]] and [[The Caravans]] sang in small groups. [[Roberta Martin]] led groups that featured both men and women singers and sponsored a number of individual artists, such as [[James Cleveland]], who went on to change the face of Gospel in the decades that followed with his large choral arrangements in the Urban Gospel style.
 +
 
 +
In the 1960s, Urban Gospel started to break way from the traditional church setting. More artists emerged during these decades, and they often began to perform, more than to minister. More recently, younger artists such as BeBe (Benjamin) and CeCe (Cecilia) Winans and groups, such as Take 6, deliver music Gospel music with a [[hip hop]] flavor. Contemporary Gospel songs are usually written in the sub-genre of either "praise" or "worship"—the former being faster in tempo, stronger and louder, the latter being slower in tempo and more subtle so the message may be taken in.
  
 
===Southern Gospel===
 
===Southern Gospel===
  
'''[[Southern gospel]]''' or Country and [[shape note]] music publishing companies such as the A. J. Showalter Company ([[1879]]), the James D. Vaughan Publishing Company and the [[Stamps-Baxter Music Company|Stamps-Baxter Music and Printing Company]].
+
Southern Gospel's establishment as a distinct genre is generally dated to around 1910, when the first professional quartet was formed for the purpose of selling songbooks for the [[James David Vaughan|James D. Vaughan]] Music Publishing Company. However, the style of music itself had existed for at least 35 years prior.
 +
 
 +
Southern Gospel is sometimes called "quartet music" by fans due to the original all male, tenor-lead-baritone-bass quartet make-up. Early quartets were typically accompanied only by [[piano]] or [[guitar]], and in some cases a piano and banjo. Over time, full bands were added and even later, pre-record accompaniments were introduced.
 +
 
 +
Early Southern Gospel artists such as [[The Speer Family]], [[The Blackwood Family]], [[The Lefevre Trio]], and [[The Carter Family]] achieved wide popularity through their recordings and radio performances in the 1920s through the 1950s. Others, such as [[Homer Rodeheaver]], [[George Beverly Shea]], [[Cliff Barrows]], or the [[Cathedral Quartet]], became well-known through their association with popular [[Evangelism|evangelist]]s such as [[Billy Sunday]], [[Rex Humbard]], and [[Billy Graham]].
 +
 
 +
===Christian Country music===
 +
[[Christian Country music]], sometimes referred to as Country Gospel music, is a sub-genre of Gospel music with a country flair, is also known as Inspirational Country. It originated as a blend of early mountain music, cowboy music, and the music from the plantations of the Deep South. It was out of this blend of music that Southern Gospel music was birthed and was found primarily in the southern states. Today, Christian Country music has blended with a new brand of music called Positive Christian Country music.  
  
Early gospel artists such as [[The Speer Family]], [[The Blackwood Family]] ([[The Blackwood Brothers]]), [[The Lefevre Trio]] and [[The Carter Family]] achieved wide popularity through their recordings and radio performances in the [[1920s]], [[1930s]], [[1940s]] and [[1950s]]. Others such as [[Homer Rodeheaver]], [[George Beverly Shea]], [[Cliff Barrows]] or the [[Cathedral Quartet]], became well-known through their association with popular [[evangelist]]s such as [[Billy Sunday]], [[Rex Humbard]] and [[Billy Graham]].
+
Christian Country music was recorded by groups such as the [[Oak Ridge Boys]], [[The Cook Family Singers]], [[Ray Price (musician)|Ray Price]], [[Red Sovine]], [[The Louvin Brothers]], and [[The Carter Family]].
 +
 
 +
Many secular country music artists have recorded Country Gospel songs or have performed them on their radio and television programs. [[Tennessee Ernie Ford]] was known for including these types of songs at the conclusion of his weekly television show which in turn became one of the most successful segments. Other shows like, ''The Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters Show,'' and the [[Statler Brothers]] implemented the same programming style. ''[[The Grand Ole Opry]],'' one of country music's longest running and most popular shows, has always included Gospel music as a part of its program.
  
 
===Progressive Southern Gospel===
 
===Progressive Southern Gospel===
[[Progressive Southern Gospel]] is an American music genre that has grown out of Southern Gospel over the past couple of decades.
+
[[Progressive Southern Gospel]] grew out of Southern Gospel over the past couple of decades. The style can trace its roots to groups like the [[Nelons]] in the 1980s, who appeared regularly on events with traditional Southern Gospel groups despite their sound which was called "middle of the road" at the time.
 +
 
 +
Current Progressive Southern Gospel is characterized by its blend of traditional [[Southern Gospel]] instrumentation with elements of modern [[Country music|Country]] and [[pop music]]. Hints of other styles are frequently employed in the mix as well. In some Progressive Southern Gospel, you can hear a touch of [[Cajun]], [[Celtic music|Celtic]], [[Bluegrass music|Bluegrass]], or even [[Southern Rock]].
 +
 
 +
Where traditional Southern Gospel more often emphasizes blend and polish, Progressive Southern Gospel tends to be presented with a more emotional tone. Vocalists are known for experimenting, stretching, scooping, slurring, and over-accentuating melodies and diction.  
  
== Gospel music associations ==
+
Lyrically, Progressive Southern Gospel songs are patterned after traditional Southern Gospel in that they maintain a clear evangelistic and/or testimonial slant. In many cases, lyrical content and/or Country diction are the only elements separating a Progressive Southern Gospel artist from a pop oriented, [[Contemporary Christian music]] artist.
====Gospel Music Association====
 
The [[Gospel Music Association]] is a major group of gospel artists who maintain a hall of fame covering all aspects of gospel music.
 
  
====Southern Gospel Music Association====
+
===Contemporary Christian music===
The [[Southern Gospel Music Association]] (SGMA) focuses on Southern Gospel specifically and has a physical [[Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame]] located in the [[Dollywood|Dollywood theme park]] at [[Pigeon Forge, TN]].
+
Sometimes considered outside the realm of Gospel music, Contemporary Christian Music is a genre of [[popular music]] which is lyrically focused on matters concerned with the [[Christianity|Christian faith]]. The term is typically used to refer to the [[Nashville, Tennessee]]-based [[pop music|pop]], [[Rock music|rock]], and [[Contemporary Christian worship|worship]] Christian music industry, currently represented by artists such as [[Amy Grant]], [[Avalon (group)|Avalon]], [[Chris Tomlin]], [[Jars of Clay]], [[Jeremy Camp]], [[MercyMe]], [[Michael W. Smith]], [[Petra (band)|Petra]], [[Rebecca St. James]], and others. The industry is represented in [[Billboard Magazine]]'s "Top Christian Albums" and "Hot Christian Songs" charts, and by ''[[Radio & Records]]'' magazine's Christian AC (Adult Contemporary), Christian CHR (Contemporary Hit Radio), Christian Rock, and Inspirational (INSPO) airplay charts.
====Country Gospel Music Association====
 
Based in Branson, Missouri the [[Country Gospel Music Association]] promotes the genre's performers and songwriters, broadcasts music across the Internet and holds the annual [[Country Gospel Music Awards]].  
 
====Australian Gospel Music Association====
 
The [[Australian Gospel Music Association]] promotes the genre's performers and songwriters and holds the annual [[Australian Gospel Music Awards]].
 
====Gospel Music Association Canada====
 
Gospel Music Association Canada is a division of the GMA and promotes the genre's performers and songwriters in Canada.  The organization has some 2,000 members.
 
====Gospel Music Association of Japan====
 
The Gospel Music Association of Japan is a division of the GMA and promotes the genre's performers and songwriters in Japan.  The organization is based in Tokyo.
 
====Slavic Gospel Association of New Zealand====
 
The Slavic Gospel Association of New Zealand has a focus on praise music in various Slavonic languages on Gospel themes.  The organization is based in Auckland.
 
  
==Gospel choirs appearing in other music genres==
+
===Bluegrass gospel===
 +
Bluegrass Gospel music is simply Southern Gospel music performed by a [[Bluegrass music|bluegrass]] band, sometimes with bluegrass arrangements. Early bands such as those of [[Bill Monroe]] and the [[Stanley Brothers]] often set aside their [[banjo]]s and [[fiddle]]s to sing Southern Gospel quartet arrangements of both traditional and original songs. Later, Gospel singing was incorporated into normal bluegrass arrangements.
  
One trend in modern music is to use a gospel choir occasionally in the middle of a song in a different genre, such as [[alternative rock|alternative]] or [[Rock (music)|rock]]. The following are examples.
+
In the last quarter of the twentieth century, several groups emerged that specialized in bluegrass gospel, the best known being [[Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver]]. Most bluegrass groups still include one Gospel song in every set they perform on stage and include a Gospel track on every album.
  
* "[[The Gospel Truth]]" by [[Susan Werner]]
+
===Gospel blues===
* "[[Tender (song)|Tender]]" by [[Blur (band)|Blur]]
 
* "Downfall" by [[Matchbox Twenty]]
 
* "[[Under the Bridge]]" by [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]]
 
* "[[I'm Alright]]" by [[Jars of Clay]]
 
* "[[All These Things That I've Done]]" by [[The Killers (band)|The Killers]]
 
* "I'm Wrong About Everything" by [[John Wesley Harding (singer)|John Wesley Harding]]
 
* "Dead Soul Men" by [[Freak Kitchen]]
 
* "[[Cry Me A River]]" by [[Justin Timberlake]]
 
* "Through With Love" by [[Destiny's Child]]
 
* "[[I Want to Know What Love Is]]" by [[Foreigner (band)|Foreigner]]
 
* "[[Will You Be There]]" by [[Michael Jackson]]
 
* "[[Purple Rain (song)|Purple Rain]]" by [[Prince (singer)|Prince]]
 
* "[[Like a Prayer (song)|Like a Prayer]]" by [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]]
 
* "[[Somebody to Love (Queen song)|Somebody to Love]]" by [[Queen (band)|Queen]]
 
* "Ribcage" by [[Elbow (band)|Elbow]]
 
* "[[River of Dreams]]" by [[Billy Joel]]
 
* "Golden Boy" by [[Freddie Mercury]]
 
* "The Spirit Carries On" by [[Dream Theater]]
 
* "[[Let Me Live]]" by [[Queen (band)|Queen]]
 
  
==Further reading==
+
[[Gospel blues]] is a blues-based form of Gospel music featuring a combination of [[blues]] guitar and spiritual or Christian lyrics. Many early blues performers included Gospel blues in their repertoire. Some, like [[Son House]], [[Blind Willie Johnson]], and [[Skip James]] straddled the fence between religion and the blues, sometimes working as preachers and Gospel singers but also playing professionally as blues singers. Others, like the [[Reverend Gary Davis]], played Gospel blues only, considering traditional blues to be satanic. In these cases, it was usually a question of lyrical content rather than music form that was the issue. However, Gospel blues performers often steer clear of dance-oriented blues styles such as 12-bar shuffles-beat song and [[boogie-woogie]] dance tunes.
  
* Boyer, Horace Clarence, ''How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel'' Elliott and Clark, 1995, ISBN 0-252-06877-7.
+
== Legacy ==
* Albert E Brumley & Sons, ''The Best of Albert E Brumley,'' Gospel Songs, 1966, ISBN na-paperback Amazing Grace
+
Gospel music is a popular adaptation of [[sacred music]] that has advocated Christian beliefs and encouraged the practice of Christian ethical principles, both within the framework of worship services and as a form of musical entertainment. The black gospel tradition has borrowed heavily from secular blues, but many gospel artists, such as [[Mahalia Jackson]], refused to sing secular blues despite commercial incentives.
* Darden, Robert, ''People Get Ready: A New History of Black Gospel Music'' Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005, ISBN 0-8264-1752-3.
 
*[[Anthony Heilbut|Heilbut, Tony]], ''The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times'' Limelight Editions, 1997, ISBN 0-87910-034-6.
 
*[[Jerry Zolten|Zolten, Jerry]], ''Great God A' Mighty!:The Dixie Hummingbirds - Celebrating The Rise Of Soul Gospel Music,'' Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-19-515272-7.
 
  
==See also==
+
Gospel music has adapted to musical tastes through the development of a number of sub-genres, while retaining its moral and spiritual framework. It has also been important in the improvement of race relations in the United States, drawing on the biblical prophetic tradition to emphasize justice for the oppressed, particularly during the civil rights era. Jackson, for example, sang before 250,000 people at the 1963 [[March on Washington]], during which [[Martin Luther King, Jr.]] delivered his famous "I Have a Dream" speech.
*[[List of gospel musicians]]
+
 
*[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Gospel music]]
+
Some of the most popular recording artists of the twentieth century, most notably [[Elvis Presley]], also recorded gospel music out of admiration for the music and as an expression of personal faith. In the twentieth century, gospel music has resisted the near-ubiquitous emphasis on [[romantic love]] and [[sexuality]] among popular music genres and instead advanced a message of God's [[grace]] and [[love]], ordinarily within the context of Christian [[faith]].
 +
 
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
* Boyer, Horace C. ''How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel''. Elliott and Clark, 1995. ISBN 0252068777.
 +
* Broughton, Viv. ''Too Close To Heaven—The Illustrated History Of Gospel Music''. Midnight Books, 1996. ISBN 1900516004.
 +
* Brumley, Albert E. and Brumley, Goldie E. ''The Best of Albert E. Brumley.'' Powell, Mo: Albert E. Brumley and Sons, 1966. {{OCLC|51089914}}.
 +
* Darden, Robert. ''People Get Ready: A New History of Black Gospel Music''. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005. ISBN 0826417523.
 +
* Heilbut, Anthony. ''The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times''. Limelight Editions, 1997. ISBN 0879100346.
 +
* Zolten, Jerry. ''Great God A' Mighty!: The Dixie Hummingbirds - Celebrating The Rise Of Soul Gospel Music''. Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195152722
 +
 
 +
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved June 27, 2017.
 +
 
 +
*[http://www.gospelmusic.org Gospel Music Association] – Acknowledges all forms of Gospel Music. ''www.gospelmusic.org''
 +
*[http://pacificgospel.com Pacific Gospel Music Association] – Known for Southern Gospel. ''pacificgospel.com''
 +
*[http://www.sgma.org Southern Gospel Music Association] – Known for Southern Gospel. ''www.sgma.org''
 +
*[http://www.gospelwire.com Gospel Wire] – Primarily urban contemporary gospel. ''www.gospelwire.com''
  
 
{{Americanrootsmusic}}
 
{{Americanrootsmusic}}
  
[[Category:Gospel music|*]]
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[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Music]]
 
[[Category:Music]]
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
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[[Category:Religion]]
  
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Latest revision as of 00:04, 3 January 2024


Mahalia Jackson

Gospel music is a genre of mostly American music characterized by dominant vocals (often with strong use of harmony) drawn from Christian worship and often featuring Christian evangelical lyrics. Two major types of Gospel music have developed along basically racial lines. These include Urban Gospel (sometimes referred to as "black Gospel") and its white counterparts, among them: Southern Gospel and modern, popularized Gospel (now more commonly known as "praise music" or Contemporary Christian music).

The creation, performance, significance, and even the definition of Gospel music varies according to culture and social context. It is composed and performed for many purposes, ranging from aesthetic pleasure, religious or ceremonial purposes, or as entertainment for the marketplace. However, a common theme is praise and thanks to God and/or Christ.

Gospel music has played an anomalous role in American race relations. Black gospel was a synthesis of African-based musical idioms and traditional European Christian hymns, and came to maturity during the era of slavery. Southern gospel, in contrast, came to embrace some of the tempos and emotional freedoms of the black gospel tradition. While following largely separate paths, black and white gospel music have emphasized the spiritual, as opposed to secular, aspects of love and contributed to greater understanding and respect between the races, particularly during the American Civil Rights movement. Many millions of people around the world have been inspired by Gospel music. It has comforted those in times of trouble, guided lives thorough its inspirational message, and for some directly fulfilled a personal search for God.

History

The relationship between the origins of white and African-American Gospel music is a matter of some controversy. Some argue that Gospel music is rooted in Africa and was brought to the Americas by slaves. However, Gospel harmonies and many of the hymns themselves also show a clear Scottish influence. Recent studies by Professor Willie Ruff, an Afro-American ethno-musicologist at Yale University, conclude that African American Gospel singing was in fact was encouraged by Scottish Gaelic speaking settlers from North Uist[1] Thus, traditional Scottish Gaelic psalm singing, in which the psalms are called out and the congregation sings a response, may have been the earliest form of congregational singing adopted by Africans in America. Call-and-response singing, however, has also been found among many African tribes, and it is certain that the southern slave culture adapted African traditions to the Christian songs they were taught by their slave owners.

Although white and black Gospel singing may have grown up side by side and cross-fertilized to a great extent in the south, the sharp racial division in the United States, particularly between black and white churches, has kept the two apart. While those divisions have lessened slightly in the past 50 years, the two traditions are still distinct.

In the early twentieth century, recordings of Gospel songs began to create a market for Gospel music in the emerging recording industry. Gospel and spiritual songs by white groups such as the Carter Family and Gospel blues by such performers as Blind Willie Johnson and others were among these. In the 1930s and 1940s, the Grand Ole Opry regularly featured bluegrass and traditional Gospel singing, while pioneer Urban Gospel performers began to gain popularity among black audiences.

By the mid-twentieth century, Gospel music had developed a major market. Soon, distinct sub-genres began to appear. Cross-over performers such as Amy Grant and Aretha Franklin brought their Gospel traditions with them into mainstream country and R & B, while occasional Gospel mega-hits such as "Oh Happy Day" by the Edwin Hawkins Singers reached the top of the pop charts. Today, Gospel music is no longer a Sunday-only affair, but a major part of the recording industry in the United States.

Although predominantly an American phenomenon, Gospel music has also spread throughout the world including to Australia, with choirs such as The Elementals and Jonah & The Whalers and festivals such as the Australian Gospel Music Festival. Norway is home to the popular Ansgar Gospel Choir, the only true Norwegian Gospel choir. Gospel is also popular in the province of Quebec, Canada, where important gospel choirs such as Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir are famous.

Gospel music genres

Urban Gospel

Urban Gospel had its roots mostly in spirituals sung by southern slaves during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Thomas A. Dorsey ("Take My Hand, Precious Lord") and other pioneers popularized the more freewheeling form of religious devotion of "Sanctified" or "Holiness" churches. In the 1920s, artists such as Arizona Dranes, many of whom were also traveling preachers, started making records in a style that melded traditional religious themes with blues and boogie-woogie techniques and brought jazz instruments, such as drums and horns, into the church. Early Urban Gospel music of this nature was often frowned upon in more established black churches, which preferred traditional Baptist and Methodist hymns without rhythmic accompaniment.

In the mid-twentieth century, groups such as the Dixie Hummingbirds, Soul Stirrers, Swan Silvertones, the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, and the Mighty Clouds of Joy introduced even more stylistic freedom to the genre, often emulating R & B forms, and in turn influencing top popular performers such as Wilson Pickett, James Brown, and Sam Cooke, who himself had been a member of the Soul Stirrers.

At the same time that these quartet groups were reaching their zenith, a number of female singers were achieving stardom. Some, such as Mahalia Jackson and Bessie Griffin, were primarily soloists. Others, such as Clara Ward and The Caravans sang in small groups. Roberta Martin led groups that featured both men and women singers and sponsored a number of individual artists, such as James Cleveland, who went on to change the face of Gospel in the decades that followed with his large choral arrangements in the Urban Gospel style.

In the 1960s, Urban Gospel started to break way from the traditional church setting. More artists emerged during these decades, and they often began to perform, more than to minister. More recently, younger artists such as BeBe (Benjamin) and CeCe (Cecilia) Winans and groups, such as Take 6, deliver music Gospel music with a hip hop flavor. Contemporary Gospel songs are usually written in the sub-genre of either "praise" or "worship"—the former being faster in tempo, stronger and louder, the latter being slower in tempo and more subtle so the message may be taken in.

Southern Gospel

Southern Gospel's establishment as a distinct genre is generally dated to around 1910, when the first professional quartet was formed for the purpose of selling songbooks for the James D. Vaughan Music Publishing Company. However, the style of music itself had existed for at least 35 years prior.

Southern Gospel is sometimes called "quartet music" by fans due to the original all male, tenor-lead-baritone-bass quartet make-up. Early quartets were typically accompanied only by piano or guitar, and in some cases a piano and banjo. Over time, full bands were added and even later, pre-record accompaniments were introduced.

Early Southern Gospel artists such as The Speer Family, The Blackwood Family, The Lefevre Trio, and The Carter Family achieved wide popularity through their recordings and radio performances in the 1920s through the 1950s. Others, such as Homer Rodeheaver, George Beverly Shea, Cliff Barrows, or the Cathedral Quartet, became well-known through their association with popular evangelists such as Billy Sunday, Rex Humbard, and Billy Graham.

Christian Country music

Christian Country music, sometimes referred to as Country Gospel music, is a sub-genre of Gospel music with a country flair, is also known as Inspirational Country. It originated as a blend of early mountain music, cowboy music, and the music from the plantations of the Deep South. It was out of this blend of music that Southern Gospel music was birthed and was found primarily in the southern states. Today, Christian Country music has blended with a new brand of music called Positive Christian Country music.

Christian Country music was recorded by groups such as the Oak Ridge Boys, The Cook Family Singers, Ray Price, Red Sovine, The Louvin Brothers, and The Carter Family.

Many secular country music artists have recorded Country Gospel songs or have performed them on their radio and television programs. Tennessee Ernie Ford was known for including these types of songs at the conclusion of his weekly television show which in turn became one of the most successful segments. Other shows like, The Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters Show, and the Statler Brothers implemented the same programming style. The Grand Ole Opry, one of country music's longest running and most popular shows, has always included Gospel music as a part of its program.

Progressive Southern Gospel

Progressive Southern Gospel grew out of Southern Gospel over the past couple of decades. The style can trace its roots to groups like the Nelons in the 1980s, who appeared regularly on events with traditional Southern Gospel groups despite their sound which was called "middle of the road" at the time.

Current Progressive Southern Gospel is characterized by its blend of traditional Southern Gospel instrumentation with elements of modern Country and pop music. Hints of other styles are frequently employed in the mix as well. In some Progressive Southern Gospel, you can hear a touch of Cajun, Celtic, Bluegrass, or even Southern Rock.

Where traditional Southern Gospel more often emphasizes blend and polish, Progressive Southern Gospel tends to be presented with a more emotional tone. Vocalists are known for experimenting, stretching, scooping, slurring, and over-accentuating melodies and diction.

Lyrically, Progressive Southern Gospel songs are patterned after traditional Southern Gospel in that they maintain a clear evangelistic and/or testimonial slant. In many cases, lyrical content and/or Country diction are the only elements separating a Progressive Southern Gospel artist from a pop oriented, Contemporary Christian music artist.

Contemporary Christian music

Sometimes considered outside the realm of Gospel music, Contemporary Christian Music is a genre of popular music which is lyrically focused on matters concerned with the Christian faith. The term is typically used to refer to the Nashville, Tennessee-based pop, rock, and worship Christian music industry, currently represented by artists such as Amy Grant, Avalon, Chris Tomlin, Jars of Clay, Jeremy Camp, MercyMe, Michael W. Smith, Petra, Rebecca St. James, and others. The industry is represented in Billboard Magazine's "Top Christian Albums" and "Hot Christian Songs" charts, and by Radio & Records magazine's Christian AC (Adult Contemporary), Christian CHR (Contemporary Hit Radio), Christian Rock, and Inspirational (INSPO) airplay charts.

Bluegrass gospel

Bluegrass Gospel music is simply Southern Gospel music performed by a bluegrass band, sometimes with bluegrass arrangements. Early bands such as those of Bill Monroe and the Stanley Brothers often set aside their banjos and fiddles to sing Southern Gospel quartet arrangements of both traditional and original songs. Later, Gospel singing was incorporated into normal bluegrass arrangements.

In the last quarter of the twentieth century, several groups emerged that specialized in bluegrass gospel, the best known being Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver. Most bluegrass groups still include one Gospel song in every set they perform on stage and include a Gospel track on every album.

Gospel blues

Gospel blues is a blues-based form of Gospel music featuring a combination of blues guitar and spiritual or Christian lyrics. Many early blues performers included Gospel blues in their repertoire. Some, like Son House, Blind Willie Johnson, and Skip James straddled the fence between religion and the blues, sometimes working as preachers and Gospel singers but also playing professionally as blues singers. Others, like the Reverend Gary Davis, played Gospel blues only, considering traditional blues to be satanic. In these cases, it was usually a question of lyrical content rather than music form that was the issue. However, Gospel blues performers often steer clear of dance-oriented blues styles such as 12-bar shuffles-beat song and boogie-woogie dance tunes.

Legacy

Gospel music is a popular adaptation of sacred music that has advocated Christian beliefs and encouraged the practice of Christian ethical principles, both within the framework of worship services and as a form of musical entertainment. The black gospel tradition has borrowed heavily from secular blues, but many gospel artists, such as Mahalia Jackson, refused to sing secular blues despite commercial incentives.

Gospel music has adapted to musical tastes through the development of a number of sub-genres, while retaining its moral and spiritual framework. It has also been important in the improvement of race relations in the United States, drawing on the biblical prophetic tradition to emphasize justice for the oppressed, particularly during the civil rights era. Jackson, for example, sang before 250,000 people at the 1963 March on Washington, during which Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his famous "I Have a Dream" speech.

Some of the most popular recording artists of the twentieth century, most notably Elvis Presley, also recorded gospel music out of admiration for the music and as an expression of personal faith. In the twentieth century, gospel music has resisted the near-ubiquitous emphasis on romantic love and sexuality among popular music genres and instead advanced a message of God's grace and love, ordinarily within the context of Christian faith.

Notes

  1. Willie Ruff, The line connecting Gaelic psalm singing & American Music, Line Singing Conference at Yale, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Boyer, Horace C. How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel. Elliott and Clark, 1995. ISBN 0252068777.
  • Broughton, Viv. Too Close To Heaven—The Illustrated History Of Gospel Music. Midnight Books, 1996. ISBN 1900516004.
  • Brumley, Albert E. and Brumley, Goldie E. The Best of Albert E. Brumley. Powell, Mo: Albert E. Brumley and Sons, 1966. OCLC 51089914.
  • Darden, Robert. People Get Ready: A New History of Black Gospel Music. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005. ISBN 0826417523.
  • Heilbut, Anthony. The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times. Limelight Editions, 1997. ISBN 0879100346.
  • Zolten, Jerry. Great God A' Mighty!: The Dixie Hummingbirds - Celebrating The Rise Of Soul Gospel Music. Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195152722

External links

All links retrieved June 27, 2017.

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