Saturday, May 31, 2008

In Our Own Words—The Negro Spirituals Heritage Keepers


In Our Own Words — The Negro Spirituals Heritage Keepers: Celebrate the Completion of Oakland’s First Negro Spirituals Oral Histories

By Lily Kharrazi, Living Cultures Grants Manager, Alliance for California Traditional Arts

Sent to TBGB by Lyvonne Chrisman

“What they did not know was that a people who could not write their own name in any language were now writing for all time, one of the grandest pages in the history of the whole world of music.”

These are the words of Hall Johnson, who is described as a tenacious preserver of Negro Spirituals from the 1920’s to the 1970’s. They are printed in the program notes of an extraordinary project that has just been completed by the Friends of Negro Spirituals (FNS), a nonprofit educational organization based in Oakland, California.

On March 30, 2008, the Friends of Negro Spirituals presented to the public a project that began when co-founder Lyvonne Chrisman took an extension class at Mills College on the how-tos of oral history. Each time the class was offered, more members of FNS were in attendance. What resulted was collaboration with Mills College and librarian Nancy McKay and an ambitious plan to identify ten heritage keepers among the community and record their oral histories regarding the role of Negro spirituals in their lives.

The collected transcripts and interviews on DVDs are now available to the public through the Oakland Public Library’s History Room, the African American Museum and Library and Mills College. The project is supported in part by the Alliance’s Living Cultures Grants Program.

The importance of the spirituals is that they are connected vividly to the brutal shared history of enslaved ancestors and their lives. Preserving the integrity of the spirituals as the Black slaves sang them is an important link to the past. As versions of these songs are overshadowed by classical versions and offspring like gospel, blues, and jazz, the spirituals are in danger of losing their link to the past. In 2007, the Congress of the United States adopted a resolution that “the first expression of a unique American music was created by enslaved African-Americans.”

Doug Edwards, programmer and producer for the local Pacifica radio station KPFA, explains it this way: “Without going into the grisly detail, suffice it to say, only the strongest and hardiest survived the horrible and continuing shock to their mental and physical being,” referring to the boat ride his ancestors took from West Africa in slave ships to the new world. “We are, all of us, the descendents of those magnificent giants.” As one of the interviewed heritage keepers in this collection, Mr. Edwards continues to provide a look into the Black experience with his radio shows.

The presence of the ancestors was acknowledged by the pouring of libations to the ancestors and by the drumming of master Ghanaian drummer Pope Flynn. The future was well represented by the Oakland Youth Chorus, which sang spirituals. As a nod to the continuity of this genre, director Lanell Martin was presented with a check from the Friends of Negro Spirituals to support and continue her important work with youth.

The culmination of the day’s events brought the heritage keepers and their interviewers to the stage to receive certificates and acknowledgement from a crowd of more than 500 people. They are:

William “Bill” Bell, a jazz pianist known as The Jazz Professor and the conductor of The Oakland Bay Area Community Chorus;

Lyvonne Chrisman, vice president and co-founder of Friends of Negro Spirituals;

Marcella Conley, retired college professor;

Dr. Helen Dilworth, soprano and Professor of Music at San Francisco City College;

Doug Edwards, jazz programmer and producer, Pacifica radio station KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley;

Sam Edwards, president and co-founder of Friends of Negro Spirituals;

Jacqueline Hairston, pianist, composer, Spirituals arranger and educator;

Autris Paige, baritone and professional narrator;

Linda Tillery, cultural historian and Artistic Director of Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir;

Cleophas Williams, retired ILWU President; and his wife, Mrs. Sadie Williams.

To learn more about the ongoing events of Friends of Negro Spirituals, its recordings and journals, please visit the organization's website: www.dogonvillage.com/negrospirituals

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Gospel Memories - Live Broadcast Sunday, June 1

Tune to 88.7 WLUW Chicago Sunday morning, June 1, from 3:00 to 7:30 a.m. Central Time for this month’s live broadcast of “Gospel Memories” – the soundtrack to That Old Time Religion.

Not in Chicago? No problem. Go to http://www.wluw.org/, click the Listen Live button, and enjoy “Gospel Memories” from wherever you are!

In town for Chicago's Gospel Fest? Tune in Sunday morning and get your dose of traditional gospel before the day's events get started!

Highlights of the June 1 Broadcast:

Interview with Pastor Shirley Caesar on the release of After Forty Years – Still Sweeping Through the City (Shu-Bel Records/Light Records).




Benediction: “The Lord’s Prayer” – the Orioles


In Loving Memory: Elmo Franklin of the Mighty Clouds of Joy. Preacher Feature: snippet from “The World Series (a Sermon)” by Rev. Roy E. Easley, 1972 (photo below)

From the Vault: Sanctified singing: Elder Lightfoot Solomon Michaux of Washington DC; Elder Oscar Sanders, others.

Recordings by classic artists such as:
Gospel Solotones
Two Gospel Keys
Tyler Trio
Sunset Four
Spiritual Five
Six Trumpets
Seven Melody Men
Mt. Pisgah B.C. Choir of Chicago
Rev. W.M. Chambers
COGIC Holy Convocation Choir w/Mattie Moss Clark – September 1970
Kingdom Bound Singers
Thompson Community Singers (1964)
Margaret Allison and the Angelic Gospel Singers
Simmons-Akers Trio w/Helen Henderson
Caravans (States Records sessions)

...and much more!

So tune in and turn on to “Gospel Memories”…for music that moves you and makes you move.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Gospel singer Vuyo Mokoena dies


From an article published in the Mail & Guardian, Johannesburg, South Africa.

TBGB says: Mokoena's death is a tragic loss for the South African gospel community. For anyone unfamiliar with the South African gospel scene, Mokoena, Rebecca Malope and Sizwe Zako are the equivalent in prominence and popularity to America's Kirk Franklin, Vickie Winans and Yolanda Adams. Pure Magic albums from the 1990s are superb examples of South African gospel: exquisite harmonies joyfully sung and hypnotic repetition that builds in intensity to boiling pitch. Imagine the music of Ladysmith Black Mambazo with a Pentecostal beat.

23 May 2008 01:29

Award-winning gospel star Vuyo Mokoena has died, his record company, Big Fish Music, confirmed on Friday.

According to Big Fish Music, Mokoena died at 5.30am on Friday.

Mokoena was admitted to hospital after experiencing blinding headaches. Tests subsequently revealed that he had developed a brain tumour.

Before making an impact in the late 1990s, Mokoena was known as gospel diva Rebecca Malope's associate until he decided to embark on a solo career.

He began his music career with amateur Afro-pop group Melodi in Springs on the East Rand. He then became a professional musician, joining popular group Pure Magic in the 1990s.

Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) national chairperson Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi expressed sadness at the death of Mokoena.

"Today I am truly sad. Vuyo Mokoena was like a brother to me. He was a fantastic person. He was a great entertainer. He was an unashamed member and friend of the IFP. He will be truly missed."

She said Mokoena's family could be proud in the knowledge that he had lived out his calling.

"His Christian faith was the foundation of all he did. He was a great inspiration to all of us in the IFP." -- Sapa

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Chapter One - Dr. Charles G. Hayes & the Cosmopolitan Church of Prayer Choir (review)


Chapter One
Dr. Charles G. Hayes & the Cosmopolitan Church of Prayer Choir
MCG Records 2008
www.mcgrecords.com

New chapter, new label, same electrifying gospel chorus.

On their first project for gospel label legend James Bullard and MCG Records, the Mighty Warriors of Cosmopolitan demonstrate why they are one of today’s most outstanding traditional gospel choirs.

The project opens with “He’s Keeping Me,” a musical testimony from Dr. Hayes who sings with gratitude for being in full physical health “and in my right mind.” Equally impressive is Hayes’ distinctive and authoritative voice, which has every bit as much vitality as on his first record, released for Checker in the mid-1960s, when the church was called the Universal Kingdom of Christ. Hayes possesses one of the truly memorable voices in the African American church.

Hayes returns to the theme of thanksgiving for good health on “I’ll Never Forget.” He explains how he was sick in 2000 but came out all right, thanks to God. It’s clear that Hayes, the fresh new kid on the block in the late 1950s and now part of Chicago’s African American church cognoscenti, is witnessing the passing of the generation before him and considering his own humanity.

Chapter One offers a number of Warriors trademark choral workouts, including “Power” and “Redeemed,” the latter to which we’ll return in a moment. “Real Soon” has a Baptist line hymn flavor with contemporary overtones, led by a gospel-blues vocal, courtesy of the talented Yolanda Johnson.

Although many of the compositions are from the pens of Cosmopolitan music department members Tony Dyson and Tanabe Gatlin, the choir takes on Evangelist Rosie Wallace’s classic “Take It to the Lord in Prayer” and J.C. White's "You Can Make It." Longtime director Allen Cathey has a well-disciplined group – anyone who knows Dr. Hayes knows it would be no other way – and despite its wellspring of large and powerful voices, the choir blends well as an ensemble.

Three songs – “I Can’t Thank You Enough (Joy and Gladness),” “Hold Me Jesus,” and Darius Brooks’ “Say It” – are compositions with a contemporary flair that will find favor with younger listeners even though they don't stray far from the traditional gospel foundation.

Of course, no Cosmopolitan project would be complete without one Diane Williams workout, which is to a Warriors album like the toy prize is to a Cracker Jack box: you would enjoy the container’s contents but be disappointed if the prize wasn’t inside. On Chapter One, the “prize” is Williams’ thrilling performance on “Redeemed.” While the track ends just as Williams is in full evangelist mode, an equally long reprise at the end of the CD continues where the track left off, providing an additional four-plus minutes of Williams’ always compelling singing-preaching.

Recently I had the chance to see Williams and the Warriors perform “Redeemed” live. As Williams, in full spirit, was being escorted from the stage by fellow choir members, she was also being encouraged by the audience to return. She did return, and continued to vamp as the crowd gathered around her, clapping and shouting. The scene of Williams singing in the midst of a crowded ring of enthusiasts gave one the experience of being at an old time Pentecostal service or – further back – at a West African religious ceremony.

Needless to say, if all churches had a choir as powerful and inspiring as Cosmopolitan’s, there would be an upsurge of church membership.

Four of Four Stars

Saturday, May 24, 2008

The Light Gospel Legacy Series: The Mighty Clouds of Joy (review)


Light Gospel Legacy Series:
The Mighty Clouds of Joy
Light Records 2008
www.lightrecords.com

Released in February, prior to the passing of longtime Clouds member Elmo Franklin, this retrospective – part of the Light Gospel Legacy Series – showcases latter day recordings of the Mighty Clouds of Joy, specifically their projects for Koch (Power, 1995) and Intersound (Live in Charleston, 1996).

Although the retrospective does not include the Peacock hits that established the quartet as a force of reckoning in the early 1960s, it thankfully bypasses the Clouds’ “Mighty High” gospel crossover days of the 1970s and early 1980s. By the 1990s, as the Gospel Legacy project demonstrates, the Clouds were returning (like many musicians after the disco era) to its trademark traditional sound, albeit with fresh, contemporary instrumentation, and the powerful singing of founder Willie Joe Ligon. Ligon is a preaching singer: when he sings it, you know he means it.

The retrospective offers plenty of quartet “drive” songs, some recorded live and some done in the studio, including “Power of the Holy Ghost,” “Meeting Tonight,” and “I Want to Thank You.” “Steal Away” is a superb reading of the spiritual with “Troubled in Mind” interpolated in the lyrics and mood. “Living Testimony” pairs the Clouds with Doug and Melvin Williams of the Williams Brothers for a fine quartet outing. “Nearer My God to Thee” demonstrates the Clouds’ capacity for delivering on slow, moving hymns and showcases Ligon’s convincing preacher style.

Light Records’ Mighty Clouds of Joy retrospective is a chance for some to be reintroduced to Clouds recordings out of rotation for a while, and others to become familiar with tracks that may have eluded them the first time around.

Three of Four Stars

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Margaret "Babe" Allison & the Angelics: Touch Me Again (review)


Margaret “Babe” Allison & the Angelics
Touch Me Again
Malaco Records 2008
www.malaco.com

For 86 years old, Margaret Allison is remarkable. She’s still singing, and sounding pretty good, too. She still possesses much of that piercing, plaintive voice that was the force behind the Angelic Gospel Singers, the sweethearts of the gospel circuit. But the fact that Allison is still vibrant in the 21st century is not surprising. God has smiled on her and on the Angelic Gospel Singers since 1949, when the group’s very first record, “Touch Me Lord Jesus,” not only became an instant gospel hit, but a gospel classic.

The title of Allison and the Angelics’ latest project, Touch Me Again, seems a play on the title of that first hit single. The CD is packed with singable traditional songs ("Pass Me Not," for example), and new compositions by Darrell Luster that sound traditional, such as “Thank You for My Storms,” on which Allison asserts that “storms have made me what I am today.”

“When the Gates Swing Wide,” credited to Luster and Allison, puts a Dorsey bounce behind lyrics that portray heaven as a place where the saved will have “fifty miles of elbow room.” “God Has a Use for Me” pairs Allison with Luster on a song that is part tongue-in-cheek, part testimony as the legendary singer admits that while she “can’t do things like I used to do,” God still has a use for her. Touch Me Again is a tangible example.

Allison and the Angelics swing the quicker tempo numbers like “God Said It,” “Homecoming,” and “Work On Me” with such ease and familiarity that you’d swear you’d heard the songs years ago.

I learned that Ms. Allison was recently in the hospital but is doing okay, still on “the battlefield,” as the final song on the project attests. God bless Margaret Allison!

Three of Four Stars

NOTE: The Black Gospel Blog thanks its many readers for helping it surpass 100,000 hits since it began tracking its own traffic less than two years ago.

Monday, May 19, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: May 19, 2008


“Oh How Precious”
Kathy Taylor
From the CD The Worship Experience
Katco Music Group 2008
www.kathytaylorlive.com

Houston's own Kathy Taylor is already a familiar name to those who have followed her various projects with Favor, the group she founded, with the most recent being Taylormade on Al “The Bishop” Hobbs’ Aleho International label. She has been a featured soloist on GMWA recordings, shared the stage with Maya Angelou, and sang for Queen Elizabeth during Her Excellency's visit to Houston. Now how many people can claim that!

Taylor latest single, “Oh How Precious,” is a traditional piece reminiscent of the Pentecostal treatment of the gospel classic, “Jesus.” Taylor sings with an evangelist's fervor, a touch of blues in her voice. The backing choir (could it be Favor?) is at once powerful and harmonically steady. By the middle of the recording, a slowly pulsing gospel beat dares listeners to try and stay seated. And when the vamp comes, Taylor navigates it with the stamina and conviction of Dorothy Love Coates.

The album has an 11 minute extended version of the single, which must be quite something.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Light’s Gospel Legacy Series: The Winans & Vickie Winans

Among the first Gospel Legacy CDs Light Records released this year were tributes to the Winans, the Detroit family that was to the Eighties what Andrae Crouch and the Hawkins Family were to the Seventies. The Winans, like Crouch and Hawkins, employed the medium of contemporary music to express a spiritual message. Although disparaged at the time by some traditionalists, what these artists did was very much in keeping with gospel’s time-honored tradition of taking the mountain to Mohammed, instead of the other way around.


The Winans

The Winans brothers – Marvin, Carvin, Michael and Ronald – encapsulated lyrics of encouragement and inspiration with the smooth jazz-soul treatment that propelled artists such as the Commodores, Earth Wind & Fire, Kool & the Gang and Peabo Bryson to fame.

The brothers’ first album as the Testimonial Singers was introspective and musically complex, sounding nothing like the gospel music of the day. But when the group signed with Light Records in 1981, they commercialized their sound and hit the gospel charts with songs such as the quintessential call-and-response “The Question Is,” “Bring Back the Days of Yea and Nay,” and “Restoration.” Another hit, “Long Time Coming (Holdin’ On),” was a conscious or subconscious follow-up to Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come.” “For We May Never Know” was a pleasant surprise for me, as I had never heard this lovely ballad before, and was smitten with it.

Obviously the twelve songs on this CD are culled from the group’s Light Records days, with two from 1981’s Introducing the Winans, four from Long Time Comin’ (1983) and the remaining six from the Winans’ third and most popular Light LP, Tomorrow (1984), though ironically the title track and major hit is missing from the latter. Overall, however, Light offers up what amounts to an aural charting of the Winans’ rise to superstardom, which they achieved by juxtaposing lyrics about simpler times with musically complex arrangements, harmonies and instrumentation that pointed clearly toward the future.

Three of Four Stars


Vickie Winans

If the Winans men are a string section, Vickie is a one-woman brass section, capable of wrecking a church – steeple, cross, lightning rods and all – with her concrete-crushing voice. And that’s a good thing.

The Gospel Legacy CD devoted to her artistry is the finest of the lot, though similar to the 2005 Greatest Hits set, with Vickie’s version of the late Dottie Rambo’s “We Shall Behold Him” alone worth the price, right up to its heart-racing high note. A number of tracks on the CD come from Vickie’s two Live in Detroit CDs (1997 and 1999), including Darius Brooks’ hit for the Tommies, “Safe in His Arms,” which Vickie renders almost as marvelously as did the Tommies. Another live track is her Aretha-like gospel workout of hometown hero Bill Moss’ “Already Been to the Water.” Here, Vickie delivers lyrics with machine-gun force and with an authentic gospel rasp missing from her earlier material.

“Because He Lives” and “Oh What Love” are also live and vintage Vickie. They demonstrate her ability to pack ounces of charisma into every single line. Of course, the set would not be complete without her concert version of the late Calvin White’s “Long As I Got King Jesus,” introduced by White’s Gospel Wonders but popularized by James Cleveland.

The final two tracks are spoken word snippets, though the CD would have been even better if these tracks had been replaced with another Vickie special, such as “Victory” or “No Cross, No Crown.”

The liner notes – taken from Bill Carpenter’s Uncloudy Days – provide a dramatic summary of the ups and downs of the singer’s life. But like all good gospel songs, Vickie’s life and career are on the upswing. She’s looking and sounding good, and gospel music is all the better for it.

Three and a Half of Four Stars

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Regina Belle - Love Forever Shines: The Backstory


Special thanks to Jason Rubley (Rubes Marketing), Ruben Rodriguez and Pendulum Records for this well-written press release on Regina Belle's Love Forever Shines, released this past Tuesday (May 13).

It’s not without some measure of fear and trepidation that gospel music puts checks and balances on reverse crossover artists. After all, for every general-market hopeful with pure, Christ-honoring motives, there’s always a controversial artist—good-intentioned, but ultimately far from the integrity, character, and value system required to represent Jesus to the church and to the world.

Four-time GRAMMY®-winning R&B/Pop songstress Regina Belle is a different story. Even as the New Jersey native rode high in the urban charts throughout the ‘80s and ‘90s with such urban classics as “Baby Come to Me,” “Make It Like It Was” and “What Goes Around,” faith, churchgoing, and gospel music remained at the very core of her life in the spotlight. Today, Belle is a pastor’s wife and minister of music at New Shield of Faith Ministries in Atlanta, where her husband, John S. Battle III, is senior pastor.

“I still went to church,” says Belle, whose LOVE FOREVER SHINES, her lifetime-in-the-making gospel debut, is set to make a splash via Ruben Rodriguez’ Pendulum Records with Walker Davis Entertainment and distributed by Fontana. “I carried it with me. I wasn’t necessarily in a church because I traveled from city to city. But God is not something that you can box in a building. You have to take him with you. Even though I didn’t have the understanding that I have now, He was still covering me even at that stage of the game.”

LOVE FOREVER SHINES is a triumphant homage to God’s faithfulness through it all, a testament to how His goodness and mercy followed the vocalist all the days of her life, from the cradle all the way through her decorated music career. Most importantly, the album is a tribute to the singer’s gospel music heritage—14 songs that speak to the bedrock of Belle’s faith, never more evident in the disc’s stunning centerpiece, the stirring traditional first single, “God Is Good.”

A precocious singer since a young age, Belle launched her music career with a bang when, as an 8-year-old, she performed her first church solo—a take-no-prisoners rendition of the gospel standard “Don’t Drive Your Mama Away,” originally by none other than Shirley Caesar, one of Belle’s early influences. Such was Belle’s talent that, by age 12, the budding songbird had her first professional gig, and, come high school, she received a full scholarship to attend the prestigious Manhattan School of Music.

Her stint at the school was instrumental in laying the groundwork for Belle’s future endeavors. There, she was mentored by the tireless Inga Wolfe, a diligent voice teacher who believed in Belle’s unpolished gift so much that she was moved to tutor her in private. Unlike her musically inclined schoolmates, Belle actually had to work hard to bring out the best in her. “When I came into the school, I never really thought I was going to make it,” Belle says.

While she cherishes the lessons learned there, something was amiss: the school’s rigid music-only curriculum left her wanting something more, namely, a better grasp on her identity as a singer. “While that was a great experience, it was something that I really didn’t want for four years of college,” Belle says. “I wanted to have a broader sense of things. I wanted to get a broader idea of who I was…a better understanding of how the world works.”

That desire to expand her horizons drove Belle to Rutgers University, where she majored in history and accounting, two careers she complemented with music courses at what is now the state college’s famed Mason Gross School of the Arts. Once there, she was mentored by professors William Fielder and Kenny Barron, two greats who built on Belle’s raw talent and previous schooling and provided the tools that prepared her for the national stage.

Only 12 credits shy of graduation, Belle got the break of her lifetime when she received a call to audition for the Manhattans, an R&B group that soon asked her to record a duet with them and be their opening act. “At that moment, it was like, goodbye school,” says Belle with a laugh. “What I wanted to do was handed to me on a platter. All I had to do was walk through that door. I had to grow up real quick. That was my real training. The life work started to happen.”

It wasn’t long until Belle scored for herself a solo deal with Columbia Records, a successful partnership that yielded the albums ALL BY MYSELF, STAY WITH ME, PASSION and REACHING BACK. STAY WITH ME, in particular, catapulted Belle to the No. 1 slot of Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums tally, a feat driven in part by two chart-topping singles, “Baby Come to Me” and “Make It Like It Was”—the latter a soulful ballad originally passed on by the Winans.

The whirlwind of activity, accolades, and media attention eventually got the best of the singer, to the point that her gospel foundation was put on the backburner—no more testifying like Pastor Caesar anymore.

“I don’t think it was time for gospel music,” Belle explains. “I think that when God had me in a place to do gospel, that my life was going to be very different. I don’t believe that the Lord just wanted for me to do a gospel album. He wanted it to be a testimony as to where I am in my life. He wanted to put me in a place where I could share things, intimate things with my audience, to help them get through.”

“I know 10 years ago I wasn’t ready for gospel. I had way too much pride for that. Maybe in confidence I would share with someone that I tripped up on some different things, but I wasn’t going to tell that to anybody in public. But He put me in a place now where I’m not bound by that. I’m not bound by the things that I used to do because I don’t do them anymore.”

In a chapter that Belle isn’t afraid to recount, the singer candidly tells of the time when, behind the scenes, she was dealing with demons of her own—brought about by her pride, her long days on the road, the limelight, and the lack of accountability. “I wasn’t an alcoholic, but I drank socially,” Belle says. “It came to a point when I really started having a little bit too much to drink.”

Soon enough, hitting the bottle began to take a toll on other areas of Belle’s life, eventually leading her to believe that it was she—not God—who was at the helm of her life. “I had a bad attitude—wanting things when I wanted them, not having a good attitude about life in general,” Belle says. “I had money, and my money made me who I was.”

Slowly but surely, God began smoothing Belle’s rough edges, showing her that His power could be made perfect in even her darkest weakness—in her case, her ongoing bout with pride and self-sufficiency. “The Lord had to deal with me in that aspect because He allowed me to know that I needed a little bit more humility in my life, that everyday that I get to be on this planet is because of Him, not me,” she says.

As soon as that realization hit her, brought about by the realization that she needed to model Christ for her own children, Belle says that, little by little, “the whole drinking issue, even socially, began to dwindle to nothing. It was a major turning in my life. I began to see differently. It was a serious awakening.”

She continues: “That’s when I really started to sit down and study the Word. All the sermons that I heard before were really just sermons that I heard—I had never really received the Word. I began to see not only who Christ was, but I also got a better understanding of who I was.”

With her identity in Christ now firmly in place, Belle set out to record LOVE FOREVER SHINES, a disc that showcases her soulful, elegant alto set to the two styles that make up her musical persona: contemporary R&B and gospel music. Leave it to Belle to perform an early ‘90s quiet-storm number like the title track, only to switch gears and deliver a fiery, Sunday morning delight like the hand-clapper “Can’t Nobody.”

In the vein of great gospel storytellers, Belle recounts the story of the woman who touched the hem of Jesus’ garment in the heartfelt “Who Touched Me,” a song that slowly builds from a gently caressed keyboard to an impassioned cry of heart. That song is the perfect segue for one of LOVE FOREVER SHINES’s early climaxes, the sprawling, take-it-to-the-old-school “God Is Good,” a song that is both an acknowledgement of God’s never-ending goodness and a testament to the influence Belle’s grandfather had on the singer growing up.

Ultimately, Regina Belle wants to communicate both sides of the spectrum: that life is not just about the mountaintop experiences, but that it’s also about the valley of the shadow of death, that dark place of despair where, above all, love forever shines.

“There’s nothing on this side of this earth you can commit that you can’t be saved from,” Belle says. “There isn’t anything Jesus didn’t die for. That’s one of the devil’s greatest tricks—to make you feel that God won’t own you. But that’s a lie. God will own you. No matter what we do, he still owns us. If He did it for me, He’ll do it for you.”

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Joyce "Dottie" Rambo Dies in Tour Bus Crash


Gospel music singer and songwriter Joyce “Dottie” Rambo was killed Sunday morning, May 11, when her tour bus crashed on Interstate 44 near Mount Vernon, Missouri.

Rambo was on her way to a Mother’s Day performance in Texas at the time of the crash.

According to www.dottierambo.net, the force of high winds pushed the bus off the road, down an embankment and into a median. The singer-songwriter was accompanied on the bus by her manager, Larry Ferguson and his wife Judy, their two sons Pierce and Christian, the bus driver Ronnie Meadows and Chris Barnes, Larry's assistant. The survivors sustained multiple injuries. Rambo was the only fatality in the crash. She was 74.

Rambo’s compositions have been recorded by gospel artists such as Vickie Winans (“We Shall Behold Him” – 1982 GMA Song of the Year) and Danniebelle Hall (“I Go to the Rock” – also performed by Whitney Houston and the Georgia Mass Choir in the film The Preacher’s Wife).

“We Shall Behold Him” and “He Looked Beyond My Fault” have become so popular among African American churches that they were included in the African American Heritage Hymnal (GIA Publications, 2001).

Monday, May 19, 1:00 PM - MEMORIAL SERVICE
Dottie Rambo home-going celebration service:
Christ Church
15354 Old Hickory Blvd.
Nashville, TN 37211

Saturday, May 17, 4-8 PM - VISITATION
Sunday, May 18 from 2-4 PM - VISITATION
Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home
660 Thompson Lane
Nashville, TN 37204

Visitations and memorial service: open to the public.
There will be a private reception for close friends and relatives at the church on Monday, May 19 from 11 AM - 12:30 PM.

Private entombment: mausoleum at Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Memorial Park will be for family only immediately following her Home-going Celebration.

Donations in Dottie's memory may be made to the:
Dottie Rambo Memorial Fund
P. O. Box 50508
Nashville, TN 37205

Monday, May 12, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: May 12, 2008


“Lead Me to the Rock”
Rev. Stefanie R. Minatee & Jubilation
From the CD The Launch Out Project
http://www.jubilationinc.com/

When I reviewed Rev. Stefanie R. Minatee and Jubilation’s The Launch Out Project in November 2006, I commented that “Lead Me to the Rock,” featuring soloist and Stellar Award nominee Min. Nancey Jackson-Johnson, was the crème-de-la-crème of the album. To quote: “I didn’t know this much emotional energy could be expended in a single song. This track and its reprise are alone worth the price of the CD.”

“Lead Me to the Rock” has not only been chosen as the project’s debut radio single, but also greets the ears upon entry to Jubilation’s website (www.jubilationinc.com/aud_samples.htm). It’s a great gospel performance, propelled by an enthusiastic live audience.

Rev. Minatee’s spiritual advisor is the legendary Rev. Lawrence Roberts, former gospel producer for Savoy Records and pastor of the First Baptist Church of Nutley, NJ, from whence came the Angelic Choir who accompanied James Cleveland on the historic 1963 “Peace Be Still” recording. The soloist, Min. Jackson-Johnson (right), is a “PK” from Newark who has garnered stacks of accolades as a gospel artist, songwriter, background vocalist, and theatrical performer. Her gospel albums produced a pile of radio hits, including “My Soul,” “Set Time of the Hour,” and “Crazy Praise.”

Saturday, May 10, 2008

When the Church Becomes Your Party - Deborah Smith Pollard


Deborah Smith Pollard, associate professor of English literature and humanities at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, is also a successful gospel concert producer and host of a popular Sunday morning gospel show on Detroit's FM 98 WJLB.

Add "author" to her list of accolades.

When the Church Becomes Your Party is Pollard's behind-the-scenes look at contemporary gospel music, the first book (to my knowledge) to focus its lens exclusively on the multi-faceted gospel scene of today.

According to the press release, "Although the flashy clothing, informal language, and elaborate stage presentation found in some of the newest gospel music may surprise some worshippers, author Deborah Smith Pollard argues that this new aesthetic rests on the same Christian principles as more traditional forms and successfuly extends gospel's message to a wider and younger audience."

Pollard "draws on Detroit's thriving gospel scene as well as her knowledge of the national gospel music industry to identify important trends in each area and trace the cultural transformation that brought them about. In addition, Pollard includes interviews with contemporary gospel artists, allowing them to explain why they rap, make particular choices in attire, or participate in gospel radio, praise and worship, or gospel musical plays."

Gospel music legend and historian Horace Clarence Boyer commented, "There is no doubt that 'today's gospel is not your mother's gospel' so we should be thankful that we have Deborah Smith Pollard's When the Church Becomes Your Party to serve as our interpreter...."

Pollard's book is an important companion for gospel music historians, announcers, and enthusiasts who want to better understand the connection between today's gospel music and its antecedents. In other words, the link between the artistry of Thomas Dorsey and Tye Tribbett is stronger than one might suspect.

For more information about When the Church Becomes Your Party, go to:

www.myspace.com/dsp313

or contact Dr. Pollard directly at: DRDSP313@gmail.com

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Lighten the Load Gospel Contest - deadline looms: May 13


As the Helen Robinson Youth Chorus sang, "Time is Winding Up!"

The 2008 Lighten the Load Gospel Contest is seeking Gospel Choirs that are affiliated with a church and would be interested in submitting music for the contest. The areas in the program are as follows:

* Atlanta, GA
* Birmingham, AL
* Chicago, IL
* Philadelphia, PA
* Jacksonville, FL
* Los Angeles, CA
* St. Louis, MO

It's not to late to enter the 2008 Lighten The Load Gospel Contest. Your church can win one of fourteen $2000 cash awards plus the opportunity to be featured on the inspirational CD which inspires and raises awareness about sickle cell disease.

The entry process is very simple. Log onto www.askaboutiron.com/music read and download the complete rules and submission forms. Fax the entry form to 973-326-8824 with hard copy to be received no later than Tuesday, May 13th. YOU CAN SEND AN MP3 FILE; HOWEVER, A HARD COPY MUST BE SUBMITTED, ALSO.

The recorded song, lyrics and completed submission form must be received no later than Tuesday May 13, 2008 at:

Attn: David Cheek
Be Sickle Smart
Lighten the Load Gospel CD Contest
Submission Department
1 High Street Court
Morristown, NJ 07960

Visit www.AskAboutIron.com/Music

The CD will be launched in September or October at festive parties for Sickle Cell Disease patients, caregivers, and loved ones-and the winning choirs. It is distributed FREE to uplift and educate those who experience sickle cell disease. This powerful CD will feature inspirational music from some of the finest church choirs and musical ensembles in the country.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Elmo Franklin of the Mighty Clouds of Joy Passes Away


Gospel music authorities Rev. Lawrence Roberts and Gregory Gay informed TBGB that Elmo Franklin, an original member of the Mighty Clouds of Joy of Los Angeles, California, passed from labor to reward last week.

Franklin, Willie Joe Ligon, Richard Wallace and Johnny Martin were the four founding members of the Mighty Clouds of Joy. The quartet formed in the mid-1950s as a hard-shouting quartet in keeping with the style of the times, and through the intercession of RnB artist turned gospel DJ Brother Henderson, came to the attention of Peacock Records. There the quartet churned out hit after hit.

Working with the hitmaking production team of Gamble and Huff, the Clouds changed their sound in the mid 1970s to stay relevant in a genre moving toward a softer, jazzier vibe. The decision may have perplexed gospel music enthusiasts at the time, but proved ultimately to be a wise business decision. The Clouds were the first gospel quartet to appear on "Soul Train" and eventually became one of the most popular and best-known gospel quartets of all time, earning Grammy Awards, appearances on major television shows and motion pictures, and the opportunity to sing before U.S. Presidents.

Franklin, born October 8, 1936, was originally from Louisiana.

Homegoing services are scheduled to take place in Los Angeles. As additional information is available, TBGB will let you know.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Light’s Gospel Legacy Series: The Hawkins Family & Tramaine Hawkins

Light Records released two more Gospel Legacy reissue CDs last week, and this time the focus was on the Hawkins Family.

In 1968, Edwin Hawkins single-handedly, though quite unexpectedly, changed the sound and expanded the popularity of gospel music with the release of the Northern California State Youth Choir (COGIC) vanity album, Let Us Go Into the House of the Lord. Local radio picked up on one of the album’s tracks, a thoroughly modern arrangement of the old hymn, “Oh Happy Day,” and the rest is history.

As Bernice Johnson Reagon expressed simply but profoundly in the final segment of her 26-episode Smithsonian Institution radio series, “Wade in the Water,” every new generation embraces gospel music in a way that is uniquely its own. While lyrically the songs are grounded in Scripture, the music tends to reflect the current musical fashion. In the 1970s, that sound was smooth jazz with a touch of singer-songwriter folk. That is the milieu in which the Hawkins Family worked, and that is what Light –a maypole of recording activity during the dawn of the contemporary era – provides here.


The Hawkins Family
Five of the twelve tracks on the Gospel Legacy compilation were culled from the acclaimed 1980 live LP The Hawkins Family whose cover art adorns the reissue CD cover. The tracks are prefaced, as they are on the vinyl LP, with a brief introduction by RnB/soul artist Philip Bailey. The CD goes on to feature the LP’s two Walter Hawkins and Maurice White duets (the latter of Earth, Wind & Fire fame), and the family’s contemporary version of Willie Morganfield’s 1959 gospel hit, “What is This.” The remainder of the compilation comes from the same basic time period, give or take a few years.

What struck me while listening to the CD is how well the Hawkins oeuvre has held up over nearly thirty years. This is, no doubt, a tribute to the musically intelligent jazz- and funk-infused instrumentation, cool harmonies, and the emotionally-charged vocals of Tramaine Hawkins. This volume in the series will help introduce younger listeners to some of the classic Hawkins tracks from their Light Records period. Particularly astute listeners will be able to trace some of today’s gospel music to Hawkins’ innovations.

Three of Four Stars


Tramaine Hawkins
Speaking of Tramaine, Light has dedicated another CD highlighting her Light Records career. The prior compilation was released in 2004 as part of the Classic Gold series and was reviewed by TBGB. Of the twelve tracks on the Gospel Legacy Series volume, half are from the 2004 comp, and half are not. The new volume focuses more on Tramaine’s most dramatic moments as a Hawkins Family member and solo artist, and less on her dance-beat era, which to my ears wasn’t her strongest period. Not because the music was edgy – I am in favor of artists pushing the envelope – but because the instrumentation and beats buried her vocal talent.

To my ears, Tramaine is at her best when she is given plenty of room in the music to stretch out, turn up the vocal heat like a skilled preacher, and improvise all the way to the coda. Key examples provided here are the slower, waltz-tempo pieces such as “Changed” from Love Alive I and “He’s That Kind of Friend” from Love Alive II. Fear not: Tramaine's epic performance on “Goin’ Up Yonder” from Love Alive I is included, as are two of her many gospel hits, “Jesus Christ is the Way,” and “Highway,” the latter a slow and bluesy variant of Dorsey’s “Highway to Heaven.”

Three of Four Stars

Postscript: Earlier in the year, Gospel Legacy released a separate retrospective on Edwin Hawkins that will be reviewed separately.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Gospel Memories - 7th Anniversary Show Sunday, May 4

Tune to 88.7 WLUW Chicago Sunday morning, May 4, from 3:00 to 7:30 a.m. Central Time for this month’s live broadcast of “Gospel Memories” – the soundtrack to That Old Time Religion.

Not in Chicago? No problem. Go to http://www.wluw.org/, click the Listen Live button, and enjoy “Gospel Memories” from wherever you are!

Highlights of the May 4 Broadcast:

“Gospel Memories” celebrates its seventh anniversary on the air with no theme other than great gospel music all morning long!

Benediction: “The Lord’s Prayer” – Voices of Victory of Los Angeles (directed by gospel choir legend, the late Thurston Frazier)

Preacher Feature: “I Heard a Prayer” – by Rev. Elijah Thurston of the New Covenant M.B. Church, Chicago – one of Mahalia’s favorite preachers! (Note: the disc you will hear once belonged to gospel legend and friend of Mahalia, Louise Overall Weaver).

Recordings by classic artists such as:

Pilgrim Jubilee Singers (early recordings, courtesy of Al Young)



Edna Gallmon Cooke

Martin and Morris Singers


Alpha-Omega Singers
Brother John Sellers
Tabernacle Baptist Church Choir of Chicago
Simmons-Akers Trio
Nathaniel Cooper Gospel Choir (gorgeous!)

Sensational Nightingales






Jessy Dixon and the Chicago Community Choir
Hendrix Singers of Detroit
Rev. Frank L. McSwain & McSwain Singers (incredible!)
Supreme Angels Singers (feat. Howard “Slim” Hunt)
Spiritual Five

…and much more!

So tune in and turn on to “Gospel Memories”…for music that moves you and makes you move.