Saturday, August 26, 2006

John Work Singers Adopt Style, Name of Spiritual Icon






TBGB received the link below for the John Work Singers from Dr. Nate Thomas, former vocal group bass.

John Work was instrumental in revitalizing the Fisk University Jubilee Singers in the early 20th Century and led the ensemble through their first recordings for the Victor and Columbia labels.

Go to the link to hear classically-rendered Spirituals in the John Work style.

www.alcurtismanagement.com/work.htm

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Indie Artists Deserve Love, Too!

From The Belle Report, by way of Bil Carpenter. TBGB congratulates all the winners of the En Sound Music Awards, but most especially Margaret Allison of the Angelic Gospel Singers, who was a guest on TBGB's "Gospel Memories" radio show (www.gospelmemories.com) and June Rochelle, a former TBGB "Pick of the Week."

Newark, NJ -- The 1st Annual En Sound Music Awards was a complete success this past Saturday evening. Held at the Robert Treat Hotel and hosted by comedian RodZ , the evening celebrated independent gospel artists – who are often ignored by other awards shows that cater to major-label artists. Independent gospel artist, who founded the En Sound online radio network, came up with the awards concept and bankrolled the event himself.

Lifetime Achievement Awards were handed out to Margaret Allison of the Angelic Gospel Singers who cracked the audience up with her humorous acceptance speech before delivering an astounding performance that had everyone on their feet. The Rev. Timothy Wright received the same award but was a no-show, but legendary radio announcer, Brother Don, was there to scoop his up.

The big winners of the evening were Patrick Lundy & The Ministers of Music (left) who garnered three awards for Artist of the Year, Album of the Year and Song of the Year. Chiquita Green walked away with two awards for Best Urban Soul Album and Best Jazz Performance, the latter being a tie with Jazz Guitarist, Kevin Turner. "I Love New York" jingle singer, Roz Esposito, won best inspirational song of the year for "Healer of Hearts." Her co-writer, Steve "Hollywood" Gaspar sent Souden a note of praise afterwards. "I just wanted to send you a quick note to congratulate you on a wonderful event Saturday evening," he wrote. "You should be very proud."

Below are the winners highlighted in bold yellow. If you missed it...you in fact missed the indie star-studded event of the year and one of the best gospel music events of 2006. Congratulations to all! A full report of the evening is forthcoming.

Album of The Year- (In The Fellowship) - Patrick Lundy & Ministers of Music
Artist of The Year- Patrick Lundy & The Ministers of Music
Best Urban Soul Album- (Let Go) - Chiquita Green
Best Female Vocalist- June Rochelle
Best Group or duo, Female- Witherspoon
Best Group/Duo, Male- Ordained Praise
Best Holy Hip Hop Recording- (Crossing The Jordan) - God's Fam
Best Jazz Performance (A tie)- (Full Circle) - Chiquita - (His Eye Is On The Sparrow) - Kevin Turner
Best Male Vocalist - Ernest Pugh
Best Reggae Album- (His Way) - Chevelle Franklin
Choir of The Year- John Tillery & Living Sacrifice
Best Inspirational Song- (Healer of Hearts/Written By: Roz Esposito & Steve Gaspar ) - Roz Esposito
Song of the Year_- (In The fellowship/Written by: Patrick Lundy) - Patrick Lundy & Ministers of Music
Traditional Gospel Performance_- (No Doubt In My Mind) - Bubba Johnson & The Omega Singers

Media contact: Bill Carpenter at carpbil@aol.com or 202-636-7028

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

International Gospel Music Hall of Fame and Museum® Announces its 2006 Inductees

DETROIT (August 21, 2006) - Joe Bagby, Bishop P.A. Brooks, Kurt Carr, the late Davis Sisters, Merdean Fielding Gales, Bishop Albert Jamison, Dr Curtis Lewis, Professor Iris Stevenson, Take 6, and Rodena Preston are this year's inductees to the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame and Museum® (IGMHFM).

The 2006 inductees, nominated from around the world and selected by the IGMHFM board, were announced by founder David Gough. This year marks the tenth anniversary of the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame awards.

This year's induction and awards celebration will be held at the Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center on Saturday, October 21. Pastor Marvin L. Winans, a 2002 inductee, will serve as Master of Ceremonies. The program will be preceded a Red Carpet Extravaganza with live entertainment and photo opportunities with gospel greats.

"For a decade, we have successfully achieved our goal - the furtherance of gospel music worldwide," said Gough. "The awards event is our annual centerpiece, but our work to celebrate the contributions of influential individuals and groups, and to increase awareness of gospel music, takes place year-round."

Nominees to the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame and Museum® must have been involved in gospel music activities for at least 25 years. Individuals, groups, choirs, quartets, broadcast personalities and promoters are among past years' inductees. Among the previous inductees are Aretha Franklin, The Mighty Clouds of Joy, Dr. Bobby Jones, Della Reese, CeCe Winans, The Fairfield Four, Shirley Caesar, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Luther Barnes & The Sunset Jubilaires and Dr. Myles Munroe. Brief bios of all inductees can be found at www.igmhf.org.

Monday, August 14, 2006

TBGB Pick of the Week: August 14, 2006


“I’ve Got a Feeling”
Andrea Barnes
From the album Just Andrea
J&A Productions 2003

On most of her debut CD Just Andrea, Ms. Andrea Barnes sings sweetly and lightly. When it comes to interpreting Albertina Walker’s “I’ve Got a Feeling,” however, Andrea does an about-face, puts on her shouting shoes, and unveils a mature gospel blues alto that doesn’t just invite you to church, it opens the doors for you.

The classic piano/organ ad-lib intro on “I’ve Got a Feeling” telegraphs that the next few minutes are going to be traditional. Once the energetic quartet rhythm, female choir, and playful riffs from Jeremy Medkiff’s electric guitar enter the fray, you know you are in church for good.

Given this taste of Andrea Barnes’s gospel blues side, we can only hope that her next project is 100 percent traditional.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

The Soul (and Gospel) Plumber - Birmingham's Neal Hemphill



The following article was written by Bob Mehr and featured in the Chicago Reader, August 11, 2006.

Roscoe Robinson is a quartet icon, having sung with the likes of the Silver Quintette, Southern Sons (Trumpet), Original Five Blind Boys, and Blind Boys of Ohio.

In addition to recording soul, RnB, and other musical styles, Neal Hemphill brought local gospel artists such as the Birmingham Spirituals and Elizabeth D. Williams into his studio.

Finally, John Ciba (photographed with 45 rpm records - photo courtesy of Flynn) is a good friend of, and contributor to, TBGB Host Bob Marovich's "Gospel Memories" vintage gospel music show on Chicago's 88.7 WLUW (www.gospelmemories.com).
Congratulations to John on the release of his reissue CD (see story below).

The Soul Plumber

Local DJ John Ciba introduces the world to Neal Hemphill, an Alabama recording hobbyist who gave a host of southern R & B musicians their first chance.

Bob Mehr
August 11, 2006

John Ciba used to have a pretty jaundiced view of Birmingham, Alabama. "Growing up in Chicago all I ever learned about was the racism and violence of the place from the civil rights era -- blacks having fire hoses and dogs set loose on them," he says. "That stuff really has stained the city in most people's eyes. While all those negative things are part of the history of the place, there's a real duality to the south and Birmingham in particular. So while the city was known for people like Bull Connor, it also had people like Neal Hemphill."

Hemphill's name probably won't ring a bell unless you're a hard-core crate digger or soul fanatic -- but Ciba, half of the DJ duo East of Edens Soul Express, is both. Hemphill ran a plumbing company by day, but from 1966 to '76 he also owned and operated a modest studio called Sound of Birmingham that served as an incubator for a vibrant community of southern soul and rock musicians, many of whom would go on to have long and successful careers. For the past two years Ciba has been regularly visiting Alabama, piecing together the story of Hemphill and his studio, and this week he's launching his own Rabbit Factory label with the release of a compilation CD called The Birmingham Sound: The Soul of Neal Hemphill, Vol. 1.

Back in 2002, Ciba turned up an odd-looking 45 at Out of the Past on the west side -- a version of the 1972 Frederick Knight hit "I've Been Lonely for So Long" by a group called the Birmingham Rhythm Section. "It was kind of a cool grungy-looking label called Black Kat," he says. "I knew the Frederick Knight song, which was a superclean soul song, but this version was real rough with a horrible out-of-tune voice singing." What intrigued him was that both versions credited the same producer: Neal Hemphill. "I got a burr in my saddle to figure out who this guy was. I didn't have any leads, so I blindly started calling record shops in Birmingham."

A native of Mobile, Alabama, Hemphill had been an aspiring white gospel singer with the Commander's Quartet in the late 50s. By the mid-60s he was living in Birmingham with his wife and children and making his living as a plumber, but he hadn't gotten music out of his system. "Around 1966 he basically decided to build a studio in the basement of his plumbing shop," says Ciba. "He just kind of opened its doors to everyone."




Hemphill, circa 1972. Photo courtesy of Roger Hallmark

Hemphill let local musicians have the run of the place during the day -- he subsidized the studio with money from his plumbing business, rarely charging hourly rates but instead hoping his open-door policy would help somebody luck into a hit. He released much of the studio's output himself, on in-house labels like Black Kat and Crown Ltd. Among the young artists who got an early break at Sound of Birmingham were guitarist Wayne Perkins, who'd go on to play with Bob Marley and the Gap Band, and future million-selling songwriters Frederick Knight and Sam Dees. "That was the early career of all those people," says Ciba. "Hemphill gave all of them their first chance."

Hemphill liked to tinker with electronics, and with his idiosyncratic amateur's ear he developed a signature sound for the studio. He experimented with odd mike placements and homemade echo chambers, and in overdubs he might "play" a vacuum cleaner or thwack a two-by-four against the seat of a drum throne. Within a few years the studio's reputation for creativity began attracting southern R & B vets like Roscoe Robinson and Ralph "Soul" Jackson.

Most of Hemphill's releases were minor regional successes at best, but in 1972 the studio struck gold with Knight's "I've Been Lonely for So Long," which was licensed to Stax Records and became a hit on both the R & B and pop charts. Knight later launched his own label, which had a number one smash in 1979 with Anita Ward's "Ring My Bell," a disco number he'd written. Other Sound of Birmingham alumni did well for themselves too: Sam Dees wrote hits for Gladys Knight and Whitney Houston, Roger Hallmark signed to Stax subsidiary Enterprise as a songwriter, and Jerry Weaver played guitar for Aretha Franklin and produced Janet Jackson's 1982 debut.

In 1975 Hemphill opened a bigger studio next to the plumbing shop, but within a year he suffered a heart attack and sold the studio to his engineer Don Moseley. Moseley moved it to the other side of town, where he still operates it today. Hemphill died in 1985 at age 55.

When Ciba began trying in earnest to track Hemphill down in late 2004, he didn't even know the man was dead. In April 2005 he reached his son Neal Jr., who now runs the plumbing business, after talking on the phone with the secretary at the church Hemphill's late wife had attended. "I called him out of the blue and he was a little put off at first, like, 'Who are you and why are you calling me?'" says Ciba. "As it turned out his mother had just passed away, and he and his sisters had been going through the family's stuff and had found all these boxes from the studio."

Ciba met with Neal Jr. in Birmingham and sorted through his father's things, including studio logs and about 500 reels of tape. He struck a deal with the family to license the material -- they'll get a cut of the profits after he covers the release expenses. For the past year Ciba's been cataloging the music, mastering tracks, researching liner notes, and getting permission from the artists. "I had so much luck with people who wanted to be supportive of the project," says Ciba. "Mainly because they wanted to honor Neal's spirit. Through talking to everyone I came to really understand what a great and generous guy he was, and how much he'd meant to the lives and careers of so many people."

Volume one of The Birmingham Sound includes many previously unreleased tracks, and even the songs that were released haven't gotten much exposure. Longtime Hemphill crew members like Knight and Dees are represented, as are Roscoe Robinson, Ralph "Soul" Jackson, Eddie Steele, and David Sea; in addition to straight-up soul and R & B, there's a bit of country soul and even a pair of psych-tinged tracks.

Ciba's throwing two release parties for the comp: one's in Birmingham later this month and the other's at the Hideout on Saturday. Robinson and Jackson will make rare live appearances alongside local soul cover band Todd Hembrook & the Hemispheres; Atlanta soul DJ Brian Poust will spin, as will local DJ MLE and Ciba's own East of Edens crew.

While working on this project Ciba has become close with a community of older R & B musicians and singers in Birmingham. He's acting as a sort of volunteer manager for Robinson and Jackson, helping set up UK gigs and arranging recording sessions. "They want to do new stuff, but they're limited in their resources," says Ciba. He also plans to release a second compilation from Hemphill's archives by the end of the year. "There's a world of people out there who need to hear these guys -- I'm just trying to facilitate that." In his own way he's carrying on the legacy of Neal Hemphill. "He was just a guy who loved music, and saw talent around him, and wanted to help. If I can do the same, I'd be very proud."

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Essential Gospel – Classic Recordings: No. 138

“Death Gonna Straighten Him”
Trumpeteers
Score 5056
1953

The Trumpeteers were one of many early quartets that emulated the famed Golden Gate Quartet, but one of only a few that stayed true to jubilee-style singing long after most of its competitors adopted a harder, Pentecostal performance style. Although best known for putting “Milky White Way,” their first recording and biggest hit, on the gospel map, the Trumpeteers made dozens of fine records for Score (Aladdin subsidiary), King, Okeh, Gotham, Grand, Nashboro, and Jubilee.

“Death Gonna Straighten Him” was the quartet’s final side for Score, recorded June 29, 1953 at the RCA Studio in New York City. It is a variation on the “church saints as sinners” theme: God as final inspector on a celestial conveyor belt of passed-away passive aggressives, liars, cheaters, and smiling phonies. “Death” is also a marvelous example of the Trumpeteers’ close harmony and precise call-and-response delivery, jubilee music dressed in black tie and tails.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Rev. Lawrence Roberts, Tracy Worth on Sunday's "Gospel Memories"

Hello, gospel music fans!

Just a reminder that "Gospel Memories" comes at you again live Sunday, August 6 from 3:00 to 7:30 a.m. Central Time US on Chicago's WLUW 88.7 FM and via live global webcast at www.wluw.org.

Highlights of Sunday's Broadcast:

-- Words and Music with Rev. Lawrence Roberts, iconic gospel producer at Savoy Records and director of the famous Angelic Choir of Nutley, NJ. With James Cleveland, Roberts and the Angelic Choir produced the 1963 "Peace Be Still" album that not only was one of the biggest selling hits for Savoy, but earned its rightful place in the Library of Congress Archive. The interview will run approximately 5:00 a.m. Sunday.

-- Live in the WLUW studio: Stellar-nominated artist Tracy Worth! While Tracy is better known as a contemporary gospel performer, she loves traditional gospel and will perform some of it for you. Believe me when I tell you that I heard Tracy tear up a Gospel Announcers Guild meeting with her rendition of "Christ is All," with Bro. Nash Shaffer on organ. She'll be singing live approximately 7:00 a.m. Sunday.

-- Rare acetate of Chicago's Mt. Herman Baptist Church Choir, featuring Bro. Crawford (Jan. 4, 1953).

-- Preacher Feature: Who else? Rev. Lawrence Roberts! (1979).

And original recordings by artists such as:

Dorothy Norwood and James Herndon (1960s)
Roberta Martin Singers
Andrew Rowe and the Crusaders
Sensational Williams Brothers
Dixie Hummingbirds (pre-Peacock)
Evelyn Gay w/the Pilgrim Outlets
Rev. Gary Davis
Barrett Sisters
Gospel Hummingbirds feat. Roy Tyler
Thomas A. Dorsey (1940s)
Elder Beck
Bethel Singers of Detroit
Cincinnatians
Arnold Laws Singers

...and much more!

So tune in and turn on the great gospel, spiritual and jubilee sounds of "Gospel Memories," because we've got Tracy Worth and Reverend Roberts! What more can you ask for? I mean, really!

A special bon voyage to everyone attending the Gospel Music Workshop of America in Dallas!