Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Kevin LeVar & One Sound - Let's Come Together (Habakkuk Music 2008)

Let’s Come Together
Kevin LeVar & One Sound
Habakkuk Music/Universal Music Christian Group 2008
www.habakkukmusic.com

Lyrically, musically and philosophically, singer/songwriter Kevin LeVar is about breaking down barriers. Just listen to his national debut CD, Let’s Come Together, on April Washington-Essex’s Habakkuk Music imprint.

Embracing cultural diversity is evident in the lyrics of the title track, but it’s in the grooves, too, particularly on the reggae-flavored “Heaven Have Your Way” and “Hiding Place” (“King J.C. will take care of me” sounds like a Jamaican folk lyric). “My Everything” has a pronounced Latin feel. And by blending CCM’s characteristic power-pop melodies with soulful gospel vocals, LeVar hammers home his message even further. No surprise, then, that he has won fans in Europe, Australia and across the globe, and was invited to sing as far away as Colombo, Sri Lanka, at the site of the Tsunami Memorial.

Overall, LeVar’s performances are cheerfully tuneful and bright, aided by his lithe tenor. His musicians provide an energetic, optimistic beat, reminiscent of Israel & New Breed. Even the slower pieces have a compressed energy, thanks to the ebullience of LeVar’s ensemble, One Sound.

“A Heart that Forgives” is a lovely song emotionally rendered by LeVar, and Evangelist Myrna Summers (“God Gave Me a Song”, “Uncloudy Day”) cameos on “Just Like You,” but the finest composition on the album is the bonus track, “You Are Not Alone.” LeVar wrote the song in response to the Virginia Tech tragedy, though it could encourage anyone who has suffered a personal or natural catastrophe in their life.

Kevin LeVar & One Sound is among the many inspirational artists who are stirring a variety of world sounds into their musical gumbo. Strains of Middle Eastern, Latin, Caribbean, and African influences can now be heard on sacred music recordings, particularly those by praise and worship practitioners such as LeVar. It’s gospel fusion, a new sound for a new age and a new generation of worshippers whose world has been made smaller and more accessible through technology.

Three of Four Stars

Monday, December 29, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: December 29, 2008


“Back II Eden”
Donald Lawrence & Co.
From the forthcoming Verity/Zomba Gospel album The Law of Confession, Part I (available January 20, 2009)
www.zombagospel.com

“An Eden mindset is a Kingdom mindset,” exclaims gospel music mensch Donald Lawrence, reminding us in his new single, “Back II Eden,” that before the “tempter” made a mess of everything, we were all children of Eden and worthy of riches untold.

With their characteristic “coming-atcha” music style, Lawrence & Co. encourage everyone to adopt the Eden mindset and things will be alright – finances, mind, spirit, the works. To reinforce the message, the singers chant out an infectiously bouncy chorus: “Let’s get back to Eden/Live on top of the world!”

Happy New Year! May 2009 be your Eden, your time to live on top of the world.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

TBGB's Top Ten Gospel Records of 2008

TBGB presents its pick of the top ten gospel records of 2008.

Not scientific, not based on radio spins, downloads or ringtone sales. These are TBGB’s opinion of the best singles of the year by simple gospel music aesthetics.

1. “Never Would Have Made It” – Marvin Sapp (Zomba/Verity)
Former member of Commissioned, Pastor Marvin Sapp of Grand Rapids, Michigan delivers a plaintive acknowledgement of the saving power of God’s grace in a masterpiece written and sung spontaneously as part of a sermon he delivered the Sunday after his father’s death. Not only does the song deserve top position for 2008, but it ranks among the most influential gospel music records of all time.


2. “Somebody Somewhere” – V.O.W. (JDI Records)
JDI Records' new recording artist V.O.W. covers Andrew Gouche’s splendid composition originally recorded by Los Angeles Voices of Watts in 1996 and again in 2002 by Brenda Lowe. The simple and memorable melody and lyrics have the timeless quality of a hymn, and LaToya Williams’ plaintive lead could melt the polar ice cap. This is a song just itching for gospel singers to put in their standard repertory.


3. “You Never Let Me Down” - Marvin Winans, Jr. (M2 Entertainment)
Cool and modern, in keeping with the Winans’ mission statement to make sacred music universal. It’s been the family’s M.O. since debuting as the Testimonial Singers. Here, Marvin Jr.’s vocoder-drenched voice is hip and happening, the song as youthful and charismatic as it is hat-in-hand respectful and humble. An instantly memorable melody.


4. “Cry Your Last Tear” – Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir (Tehillah/Light)
A modern classic from a beautifully-paced album, aided in large part by Bishop Paul Morton’s achingly soulful lead vocals, like James Cleveland without the throaty rasp. Simple lyrics and a simple message from the pen of talented VaShawn Mitchell, “Cry Your Last Tear” harkens the return of the gospel mass choir.


5. “God is Good” – Regina Belle (Pendulum Records)
Accomplished RnB singer Regina Belle puts on her shoutin’ shoes to deliver this neo-traditional Baptist congregational song that sounds straight out of an old wooden church. Melvin Williams and Alvin Darling lead a kaleidoscope of hallelujahs and other acclamations that swirl around Belle like shouts from a disembodied Amen Corner.


6. “Sweeping Through the City” – Pastor Shirley Caesar (Light/Shu-Bel)
Celebrating the fortieth anniversary of her first solo album (1967’s I’ll Go on HOB Records), Pastor Caesar lets loose on a number she helped make famous while a member of the famous Caravans, and one she very possibly sang as early as the early 1950s, when she was known simply as “Baby Shirley.” Caesar has the uncanny ability to sound as if she hasn’t aged a day since her Caravans debut.


7. “Hater Day” – Canton Jones (Arrow Records)
Canton Jones is taking his rightful place among the most influential and fascinating gospel stars in the industry today. “Hater Day” makes its Christ-centered “love everybody, no exceptions” message go down like a spoonful of sugar with a humorous take on being kind even to life’s most annoying people.


8. “Serve Nobody But You” – Nathaniel & Necy (WOGG Records)
The simpatico married couple Nathaniel & Necy (The Anointed Drinkards) celebrates the lusciously groovy 1970s on a tuneful, accessible record that sounds like the Hues Corporation meets TSOP. From their debut CD, and a most auspicious one at that.


9. “Did It All for Me” – Aaron Sledge (Sky High Entertainment)
The year’s sleeper. Chicagoan Aaron Sledge takes a break from his smartly-rendered holy hip hop to deliver a brilliant performance of a song timeless in melody, lyric and arrangement. Textbook songwriting on a beautiful record.


10. “I Will Dwell” – Eric Spooner (PureStream Music Group)
Melodies by Eric Spooner of Baton Rouge, Louisiana are beignet-sweet, and his lyrics and laid-back arrangement ripe for praise and worship moments in church and fellowship hall. "I Will Dwell" is an excellent example of what Spooner can do. He is a songwriter deserving of much greater attention in 2009.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Shekinah Glory Ministry - Jesus (Kingdom Records 2007)

Shekinah Glory Ministry
Jesus
Kingdom Records 2007
www.kingdomrecordsinc.com

Praise (and worship) is what Shekinah Glory Ministry does. On record and video, and in live performance, they are praise and worship’s current gold standard.

Visual as well as aural, the troupe from Valley Kingdom Ministries International in south suburban Chicago contains a cast of exalters, standard bearers, minstrels, kingdom horn players, karar dancers, the talented Daniel Weatherspoon as music director, psalmist Phil Tarver and Senior Pastor Apostle H. Daniel Wilson as master of ceremonies. The group’s auspicious debut, Praise Is What I Do (2001), was followed by a succession of single-title hits, namely the breathtaking “Yes” (with Minister Valencia Lacy) from their sophomore release Shekinah Glory Ministry Live! in 2004 and “Jesus” and “Stomp” from this, their third CD, recorded on “Resurrection Sunday Night,” April 8, 2007.

The first of the two-disc Jesus is the finer of the two, as its musical and emotional pacing is nigh perfect. The introductory music, lapping and gently encouraging, gives way to a slowly building barrage of military metaphors, as worship warriors get psyched up to wage war with the devil and gain victory over the enemy.

The apex of this activity is the hit single “Stomp,” with its irrepressible rhythm (imagine Morris Day meets House of Pain) and effective call-and-response between leader and choir. The Devil’s Head is thoroughly pulverized underneath the thundering march-like beat of lock-step feet. Mission accomplished, the troupe holds a praise party for much of the remainder of Disc One, singing one high-energy song after another. Among this mix, “Worthy” is particularly memorable because of a curious Middle Eastern motif woven within. The disc concludes with a three minute peaceful storm of a cappella praise from the assembly.

Disc Two picks up where the final cut of Disc One left off. That is, it is an extended cool-down during which passionate praying alternates with subtle but emotional personal release. An elongated new age jam session by the Minstrels on “Enthroned” sets the musical mood, and the choir’s lovely praise piece, “I Need More,” provides vocal structure that leads into the hit single “Jesus.” “Jesus” is a hypnotic affirmation that eventually dissolves into a whisper that, during the “Final Release,” fades away completely. Never before on a gospel disc has sound so thoroughly evaporated as on Jesus. Energy evaporates like the blinking dot of light on an old television set.

In many respects, the audio CD Jesus feels like an original soundtrack recording, one that integrates both the sacred performance art of Shekinah Glory Ministry and the audience’s extemporaneous participation in the program.

Honestly, whether you are into praise and worship music or not, there’s nothing quite like Shekinah Glory Ministry. It’s a spectacular exhibition of concurrent color, light, sound, movement and rapture that praises God while it inspires and entertains the multitudes. View the video for maximum effect.

Three and a Half of Four Stars

Friday, December 26, 2008

God Will Take Care of His Own - Pleasant Green MB Church Choir (JR Murray Group 2005)

God Will Take Care of His Own
Pastor Walter W. Matthews, Sr. presents
The Pleasant Green Missionary Baptist Church Choir
JR Murray Group 2005
www.pleasantgreenmbc.info

What better time than Christmas to talk about gospel choirs?

This CD, created in 2005, comes from one of the city’s older African American churches, the Pleasant Green Missionary Baptist Church, founded in 1918 toward the beginning of the Great Migration.

Located at 7545 South Vincennes since 1972 – a cool four miles south of Ebenezer MB Church and gospel choir Ground Zero – Pleasant Green is alive and well, with Pastor Walter W. Matthews, Sr. the angel currently in charge.

God Will Take Care of His Own is a something-for-everybody release, equal parts contemporary, praise & worship, and traditional. The project opens with several mostly contemporary choir performances, but by “God’s Been Good,” a bluesy piece led by the talented Percy Gray, the choir gets in touch with its churchy Chicago self. The thunderous “Shelter” and gospel waltz “See His Face” also fall squarely within the Chicago choir tradition. Joey Woolfalk, a Chicago artist steeped in the traditional sound, renders ample guitar licks throughout.

Praise & Worship enthusiasts will enjoy “In His Presence,” “He’s Worthy,” and the junior choir’s hypnotic “I’m A Child of the King.”

The title track is the project’s top attention-grabber, a bass-heavy antiphonal piece that but for being on a self-produced CD and not a major label, could easily have become a popular radio hit. Well, no time like the present.

The great thing about gospel music recordings – and why it seems as if the discography is infinite – is that churches such as Pleasant Green invest their own money to share their musical gifts with their congregations and the greater public. While not all of these vanity recordings hit the mark – many don’t hit it by a Kansas mile – projects such as Pleasant Green’s make it worth the pursuit.

Three of Four Stars

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Gabriel Hardeman to Undergo Single-Lung Transplant


From Bill Carpenter:

Atlanta:
Gospel singer-songwriter Gabriel S. Hardeman is best-known for co-writing Stephanie Mills’ “I Feel Good All Over” which was a #1 R&B smash for three weeks in 1987 and also for penning Mikki Howard’s #2 1990 R&B hit “Love Under New Management” which was originally a gospel song (recorded later on by Kurt Carr). He’s also a respected pastor at the Bellview Circuit AME Churches outside of Atlanta, GA.

Now, Hardeman is in the fight for his life.

Hardeman is scheduled to have a single-lung transplant on January 12, 2009 at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. The College Park, Georgia native lived in Philadelphia for most of his adult life until he and his wife Annette returned to Georgia in 2003 to care for his aging parents. He’s moving back to Philly to take advantage of the city’s superior medical facilities. “It’s one of the best hospitals for lung transplants,” he says. “No hospital in the Atlanta area could measure up to my situation.”

“I was diagnosed with interstitial fibrosis in May 2000,” says Hardeman. “One year before the To the Chief Musician project was released. It is an idiopathic illness meaning the exact cause cannot be determined. It was probably caused by environmental factors. I will be put on the waiting list around January 12th. My condition is top priority so there won’t be an extensive wait. I’ve been on and off of oxygen for about three years now. I just praise God that I’ve been able to pastor and sing a little but I won’t complain.”

In fact, Hardeman has joy as one of the new songs he’s written suggests. He wrote and performed on the dramatic ballad “Joy” and the funky track “Rock My Soul” from the Philadelphia-based Sharon Baptist Church Choir’s forthcoming Sing Unto the Lord A New Song CD that will be released in January 2009.

The Gabriel Hardeman Delegation’s self-titled 1979 Savoy Records LP featured the radio hit “Feels Like Fire.” Aside from writing songs for gospel acts such as Edwin Hawkins and the Wilmington-Chester Mass Choir, Hardeman has recorded his own albums for the Messiah and Birthright labels before making a comeback with the Stellar Award nominated To the Chief Musician CD in 2001. “My situation has been getting worse since 2000 when I was I was diagnosed,” he explains. “I want to let my supporters and the music industry know that I solicit their prayers. If it’s God’s will, I will be back stronger than ever and after I pull through this one, the Devil’s gonna catch all hell.”

Media Contact: Bill Carpenter at (202) 506-5051 or carpbil@aol.com

Monday, December 22, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: December 22, 2008


“I Believe”
R. Kelly
Zomba Recording 2008
(available on iTunes)

R. Kelly is not an artist you might expect to occupy TBGB’s Pick of the Week, but think about this:

a) His “I Believe I Can Fly” (similar name, different song) has been gospelized so often that many have forgotten it was once included in a Warner Brothers cartoon film;

b) R. Kelly’s high school music teacher was Rev. Dr. Lena McLin, niece of the Father of Gospel Music Prof. Thomas A. Dorsey; and

c) "I Believe" is a stirring inspirational single.

Opening with the voice of President-Elect Obama, “I Believe” is about the power of possibilities. “The night Obama was elected I was inspired to write this song,” Kelly said. “Hopefully it touches anyone trying to accomplish something special in their life.”

This track ranks up there with Kelly's 1998 neo-soul “If I Could Turn Back the Hands of Time” as among his best work.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Gifted - I've Learned (Quartet Boyz 2007)

Gifted
I’ve Learned
Quartet Boyz Records 2007
www.myspace.com/giftedofbatonrouge

Although not new to the quartet scene (they will celebrate ten years together in ‘09), Gifted is a group of young men from Baton Rouge, Louisiana that belts out old-fashioned church rousers one moment and more contemporary sounds with modern harmonies the next. And that’s exactly what you hear on their CD, I’ve Learned, released on Dwight Gordon’s Tyler, Texas-based Quartet Boyz label.

The opening hand-clapper, “God is Worthy to be Praised,” invites listeners to put down their brooms and vacuum cleaners and praise the Lord (they don’t have to ask me twice). Other Gifted tracks in the traditional quartet groove are the mid-tempo “Walk With Me,” and a slow-brewing, bluesy “Lord (You Been So Good).”

Contemporary quartet enthusiasts will prefer “Didn’t Have to Do It” and “Do You Know Him,” and fans in both camps will enjoy the concluding piece, “Crown of Life,” a soulful ballad on life after death. In heaven, the singer exhorts, he’ll see Auntie and Uncle but wants to make certain to see Jesus.

During the Golden Age of Gospel, many popular quartets like the Soul Stirrers and Sensational Nightingales had young members (especially lead singers) who were full of energy, vibrancy and tuneful testosterone. They took the walking-rhythm jubilee quartet tradition to a whole new, more sanctified, level. That’s why it’s a special pleasure to hear a young quartet like Gifted perform foot-stomping quartet music alongside the more current sounds in this day and age.

Gifted is Trelvis Griffin, Sr.; James Walker; Charleston Clay and Marcus Fisher. Cleveland Vinning, Darvell Williams, Lester Murphy, Germaria “Bubba” Gross and Charlie Fisher, Jr. provide the group’s instrumental accompaniment.

Two and a Half of Four Stars

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Husband of Barrett Singer Passes Away


Dennis Cole and Prof. L. Stanley Davis of the Chicago Area Gospel Announcers Guild reported this afternoon that Mr. William Greenbey, husband of Billie Barrett Greenbey, passed away this week.

His homegoing service was today, Saturday, December 19, at Greater Bethel Apostolic Church in Chicago.

Billie Greenbey is a member of the world famous Barrett Sisters.

If anyone wants to send a letter or card of condolence, hit TBGB offline at bob@gospelmemories.com and we can provide you with an address to send your message.

Do keep Ms. Greenbey in your prayers. She and her husband, who was a real estate executive in Chicago, were married for many years and it is always hard to lose a spouse.

Worth It All - The Charlotte Chapter of GMWA (2008)


The Charlotte Chapter of the Gospel Music Workshop of America
Worth It All
Self-Released 2008
www.cdbaby.com/cd/tccotgmwa

Not long after James Cleveland and a cartel of religious and music industry leaders established the Gospel Music Workshop of America in 1967, and staged its first convention in Detroit, the performances of the mass choir and other ensembles at these annual gatherings were recorded on double-album sets.

Directly, the annual GMWA recordings made it possible for thousands more choirs and singers around the world to learn the new gospel songs introduced at the convention. Indirectly, the discs promoted Prof. Thomas A. Dorsey’s concept of the gospel choir as a democratic group of music amateurs – Everymen and Everywomen – who loved spirited singing in the church and wanted to sound their very best doing it.

The early GMWA albums – released by Savoy Records, which was to choirs what Peacock Records was to quartets – paved the way for specially-talented chapter choirs to release their own projects. The sum total of GMWA-based recorded output helped make the 1970s and 1980s a Golden Age of the mass choir.

Chapter choirs are still recording, as demonstrated by Worth It All from the 26 year-old Charlotte (NC) Chapter of the Gospel Music Workshop of America.

First impressions are everything, and on the first track, “Bless Your Name,” the impression is of a tidal wave of sound from the Charlotte ensemble. The group blends traditional gospel choir harmonies with contemporary arrangements and instrumentation, and reprise key phrases so often and so thoroughly that you will be singing along well before you realize it.

The finest moments on Worth It All include the churchy “I’m Free” that sounds like a Mississippi Mass Choir piece. “There is a Fountain” (aka “There is a Fountain Filled with Blood”) is given an appropriately formal, serious reading. The title track is another song that will get the blood running warm in your veins.

Among hard-core collectors and the general gospel music fan base, gospel choirs have somehow fallen behind gospel soloists, small ensembles and quartets in terms of popularity. But I still contend that some of the most bone-chilling and heart-palpitating sounds come from the gospel choir.

Two and a Half of Four Stars

Friday, December 19, 2008

Pilgrim Jubilees Say "Amen" at Historic Chicago Folk Venue

On Wednesday, December 17, the Pilgrim Jubilees did something they had not done in their sixty-four years of performing before audiences young and old.

They sang on the stage of Chicago’s venerable roots music venue, The Old Town School of Folk Music.

It made sense: both the “Jubes” and the Old Town School are Chicago institutions and national treasures. Both have been around a long while: the Old Town School for fifty years and the Jubes since 1944. And brothers Cleave and Clay Graham, who were the spiritual foci of Wednesday’s show, have been with the Jubes since the mid ‘40s and the early ‘50s, respectively.

Despite a history of recording for Southern-based record labels such as Peacock, Nashboro and now Malaco, the Jubes are a Chicago-based quartet and have been since the Graham family migrated from Mississippi to Chicago in the early 1950s.

Known originally as the Pilgrim Jubilee Singers, the quartet soared to national prominence in 1959 by turning lemons into lemonade. When their bass singer failed to appear for an important recording session at Chicago’s Universal Studios, legendary Willie Dixon was called to service, playing stand-up bass. Dixon’s driving bass lines, coupled with the Jubes’ urgent vocals, turned “Stretch Out” into a major hit and changed gospel quartet singing forever. Suddenly the bass guitar – and eventually the electric bass – replaced the thumping bass singer in quartets from coast to coast.

But a half-century has passed since then, and a number of original members of the Jubes have gone on. Another longtime member, Major Roberson, is struggling with illness and not able to perform regularly. “It’s just Cleave and Clay, Clay and Cleave,” Cleave Graham told the Old Town School crowd ruefully.

Cleave and Clay then proceeded to play off one another like a saved and sanctified version of Memphis superstars Sam and Dave, delivering soulful and mellow harmonies on quartet numbers from their vast repertory, and launching into an extended version of “Hold On,” a take-the-house number that brought the audience to its feet, clapping and dancing gleefully in place.

The Jubes are adding theater venues to their schedule of singing in churches, festivals and traditional quartet cavalcades to attract a more diverse audience. It has worked beautifully for their comrades the Dixie Hummingbirds, the Fairfield Four and the Blind Boys of Alabama. If the crowd yesterday has anything to say about it, the Jubes are on their way.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

U-M Dearborn Prof's book on gospel music makes notable books list

From Metromodemedia.com:

When people mention music in the Motor City, a number of images come to mind, ranging from Motown supergroups to sonic thrash of The White Stripes' garage rock to Eminem's fist-pumping hip-hop.

The white (or purple) robes of gospel aren't usually one of musical images associated with the Motor City, but it has been a underrated and all-too-important cog in Michigan's long-time thriving music scene. A new book by a University of Michigan-Dearborn professor dives into that genre and its impact both locally and nationally.

U-M Dearborn English Prof. Deborah Smith Pollard wrote "When the Church Becomes Your Party: Contemporary Gospel Music," which has been named one of this year's 20 "Michigan Notable Books" by the Library of Michigan.

The book is a collection of essays on topics in gospel music, including praise and worship and the clothing worn by gospel artists. It made the Library of Michigan's annual list because of detail of the state's cultural heritage in gospel music. It's a subject Pollard is well acquainted with since she is the gospel music program director on Detroit radio station WJLB-FM.

Source: University of Michigan-Dearborn
Writer: Jon Zemke

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Sister Rosetta’s Stone: Gospel Music Legend Memorialized after 35 Years

From Bob Merz:

Philadelphia, PA – Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the pioneering gospel musician and instrumentalist, finally has a gravestone marking her resting place at Northwood Cemetery in Philadelphia.

Since her passing in 1973, the gravesite of Sister Rosetta had been a barren plot lacking any memorial. Today, a beautiful, rose-colored monument bears respect to one of America ’s most influential artists of the 20th Century.

Sister Rosetta’s monument was partially funded by a benefit concert at the Keswick Theatre in Glenside, PA on January 11, 2008, that featured performances by gospel and spiritual music legends—The Dixie Hummingbirds, Odetta, Marie Knight, Willa Ward, The Johnny Thompson Singers, and The Huff Singers. Additional financial contributions were provided by Philadelphia ’s Rhythm & Blues Foundation, and the Blues Foundation in Memphis.

It is noteworthy that the placement of Sister Rosetta’s monument coincides with the recent passing of two groundbreaking musicians she deeply influenced—Ira Tucker of The Dixie Hummingbirds, and Odetta, the Queen of American Folk Music. In an interview prior to the benefit concert with the Northeast Times, Odetta talked about the road Rosetta paved: “She is a part of that history that was so valuable and is so valuable to young blacks as we were coming along. She is certainly a champion where the guitar is concerned. My playing was a fair rhythm guitar, but that woman could play the guitar.”

The fund-raising effort to provide for Sister Rosetta’s memorial was initiated by Gayle Wald, a Philadelphia area native, and Professor of English at George Washington University , who authored the biography, Shout, Sister, Shout! The Untold Story of Rock-And-Roll Trailblazer Sister Rosetta Tharpe. Gayle Wald’s vision was realized when Robert Merz, a local entrepreneur, heard her PBS interview on Radio Times, and set out to organize and promote the benefit show with co-production from Penn State Musicologist Jerry Zolten, WRDV-FM Radio Host David April, and acclaimed choreographer LaDeva Davis.

Pennsylvania Governor Rendell proclaimed the date of the concert as “Sister Rosetta Tharpe Day” in the State, paying tribute to a “truly amazing and inspirational musician.” Sister Rosetta was gospel’s first superstar who brought spiritual music into the mainstream with a blend of blues, jazz, big band, and rhythm & blues. Her ringing soprano voice and guitar virtuosity set her apart from other greats of gospel’s Golden Age. In 1998, the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp in her honor. She is a member of the International Gospel Music Hall of Fame, and the Blues Hall of Fame.

In 1957, Rosetta Tharpe and her husband, Russell Morrison, moved to Philadelphia, joining the lively local gospel scene. She was a first-generation resident in the historic Yorktown neighborhood, and a member of Bright Hope Baptist Church. From Philadelphia, she did some of her finest recordings, releasing five LP’s and gaining a Grammy nomination with her 1968 album, Precious Memories. Her tours of Europe in the late 1950’s helped to spark the British blues revival and onset of 1960’s popular music.

In 2008, The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission approved the placement of a Historical Marker at the Philadelphia home of Sister Rosetta (1102 Master Street). A funding drive is currently in the works to finance this Marker. In addition, plans for a memorial service to commemorate the monument at Northwood Cemetery are being set for Spring, 2009.

Editor’s Note:
The inscription on the gravestone is from the eulogy by Roxie Moore (living in Baltimore), and the stone was produced by Wertheimer-Liberty Monuments of Southampton, PA. The text reads:

ROSETTA ATKINS THARPE MORRISON

March 20, 1915 – October 9, 1973
“Sister Rosetta”
Gospel Music Legend

SHE WOULD SING UNTIL YOU CRIED, AND THEN
SHE WOULD SING UNTIL YOU DANCED FOR JOY
SHE HELPED TO KEEP THE CHURCH ALIVE
AND THE SAINTS REJOICING

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Flashback: The Cotton Brothers (2001)


100% Cotton: The Family Pack Volume 1
The Cotton Family
100% Cotton Ministries 2001

Ever wonder what happened to the Cotton Brothers?

The quartet whose independently recorded single, “Remember Me, O Lord,” received so much attention in the early 1960s (including from Otis Redding) that the group landed a recording contract with Don Robey’s Song Bird label?

Guess what: the Cotton Brothers are still active…still singing…still in Macon, Georgia, but the Cotton Family is a little bigger now.

And the proof is in the jewel box. That is, in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S., the Cotton Family banded together to create a reunion-style CD that pays tribute to those who lost their lives in the attacks, as well as to the family matriarch and patriarch, Helen and Pop Cotton. It’s called 100% Cotton: The Family Pack Volume 1.

The album covers a variety of gospel sounds, traditional to contemporary. In addition to contributions by the Cotton Brothers as a collective, husband-and-wife team James & Faye Cotton, and Terrence Cotton “The Psalmist” offer their talents to the project, which is in some ways similar to the Barnes Family Reunion presentations, though not quite as extensive.

“Remember Me” is featured near the beginning of the CD to set the mood. The combination of old-school doo-wops and modern instrumentation of synth, bass and drums sounds straight out of a T.J. Lubinsky PBS oldies special. Faye, Tommy and Terrence trade leads, Terrence bringing it home with an acutely urgent vocal.

James Cotton’s “The Last Days” takes on a special poignancy because in 2001, at the time of this recording, it felt like the last days were just beyond the horizon.

“The Hebrew Boys” is a new reading of the Norfleet Brothers' 1963 “Shadrack,” but with a western “Rawhide” beat, giving me pause to imagine Shadrack, Meshack and Abednego riding out of the fiery furnace together on horseback, a la the opening scene from “Bonanza.” (I have such a warped sense of humor...)

The finest track on the CD comes from the latest iteration of the Cotton Brothers. “Rock Me Jesus,” with lead vocals by Tommy Cotton, is a classic quartet uptempo song reminiscent of the group’s 1960s recordings and programs. A whole CD of hard-driving performances like this one would simply be outstanding.

A gospel medley dedicated to Mom and Pop Cotton runs through a hymnbook of congregational songs and hymns, many of them quartet standards, which makes sense given the Cotton Brothers’ long history in the genre.

This isn’t the only post-Song Bird project the Cotton Brothers have released. In 1985, the group recorded Having Church in Georgia, which includes the perennial radio favorite "Another New Year."

It’s great to know that groups who sang on those little records with the big hole are still with us and still singing the glory down.

Two of Four Stars

Monday, December 15, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: December 15, 2008


“Hope Is Born”
Desmond Pringle
From the forthcoming CD Fidelity (scheduled release: Spring 2009)
www.desmondpringle.com

“We’ve already won/Look at how far we’ve come/Let’s fully embrace/This change that is taking place.”

From the opening lines, Desmond Pringle’s “Hope is Born” is more than a canticle of personal empowerment. The song resonates with the excitement and anticipation of political and social change personified by President-Elect Barack Obama.

Pringle confirms this message later in the song when he sings that hope is, “Not only in the White House/But in my house.”

Hope is born. It is the air. It is in the people. It is in the music. Pringle’s energetic singing, the soaring background vocals, and the ebullient instrumentation make this an anthem for the New Year.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

James Ingram Stands in the Light

“Just Once.” “One Hundred Ways.” “Baby, Come to Me.” “Somewhere Out There.”

Unless you’re Rip Van Winkle and slept through the Eighties and Nineties, chances are you’ve heard one or all of these songs by Grammy Award-winning balladeer James Ingram. Ingram’s instantly recognizable crooning melts butter on contact.

On January 27, 2009, he will unveil his new project, an inspirational album called Stand (In the Light).

Earlier this week, James Ingram discussed the new project, and his music roots, with The Black Gospel Blog.

An “Accidental Singer”
Born in Akron, Ohio in 1956, Ingram traveled to Los Angeles in 1973 with a group called Revelation Funk. After about a year, the group broke up, but Ingram stayed on in L.A., establishing himself as a versatile session musician. He played drums, guitar, piano and organ for the likes of Ray Charles, Carl Carlton, Leon Haywood and Shalimar.

Later Ingram began singing demos at a studio on Sunset Boulevard for $50 per song. One of the songs he demoed was “Just Once.” The studio gave the song to Quincy Jones, who wanted to know the name of the singer. Hearing that Ingram was Ray Charles’ piano player and not a professional vocalist made no difference to Jones. He wanted the unknown singer’s phone number anyway.

“So Quincy called me and I couldn’t believe it,” Ingram recalled. “I said, ‘You don’t want me to play on the song?’ He said, ‘No, I want you to come sing.’ I said, ‘You sure?’

“That was the first time someone of Quincy’s stature approached me as a lead singer. I mean I could sing a little bit, but not to the degree to sing for Quincy.”

In 1981, Jones talked the Grammy Awards show producers into replacing the usual high-energy song-and-dance segment at the opening of the broadcast with “Just Once,” sung by James Ingram.

“So there I am, standing on stage at the Grammys, scared as I don’t know what. I open my mouth and my words are trembling because I never stood and sang in front of anybody. But people started clapping, and I got through it. I went home, man, and I had nightmares that I had to live up to being a singer.”

Ingram’s “Just Once” and “One Hundred Ways” were included on Quincy Jones’ album The Dude. For his contributions to the album, Ingram won a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance.

“It was a blessing indeed. Bless-S-I-N-G. I didn’t have any attitude about singing, didn’t know I could sing! So in 1983, when I recorded my first solo album, when I had the chance, I gave God His due. I recorded ‘Jah Mo B There,’ which praises God by his Hebrew name. That was my concept, not Quincy’s or Michael McDonald’s.”

But did you grow up singing in the church?

“I grew up in the Church of God in Christ in Akron, Ohio. I sang in church, but I wasn’t a lead singer. I sang background because I had a choice of either sitting by my mother in church or being up in the choir where I could play and mess around!

“My father was a deacon and a Sunday School teacher. My older brother Henry, who is six years older than me, was COGIC’s minister of music for the state of Ohio.

“So I listened to gospel music growing up. One of my favorite artists was Andrae Crouch because he was more contemporary. But we listened to the Clark Sisters and all of them.”

How might you respond to someone who wants to know why a secular artist is singing gospel?

“I grew up in the gospel church, and I don’t care if people don't like me singing gospel. Let me tell you a story about ‘crossing the line.’

“My father bought me a guitar in the sixth grade. I was playing honky-tonk, the blues, you know, do-DOOM-do-DOOM-do-DOOM. My father said, ‘Don’t play that devil music in this house.’ I was so disappointed, I went and put the guitar up, set it in the corner.

“So in church, I asked Brother Richard, ‘What’s devil music?’ Remember, I’m only in the sixth grade. He took me over to the organ that had two rows of keys. He smiled at me and he said, ‘I don’t know what devil music is, but I’ll tell you what. You point to the devil notes on this organ and I’ll never play it again.’

“Now he didn’t know the story about my father. I smiled at him and I said, ‘Thank you.’ Know what I did? I went back and waited for my father to leave to go up to Cleveland, and I went into the garage with that guitar and started back, do-DOOM-do-DOOM-do-DOOM!

“But the thing was Brother Richard got me out of those ‘isms’, and to this day I thank him for that.”

How did Stand (In the Light) come about?

“The actual song, ‘Stand (In the Light),’ was inspired by the devastation and disappointment of Hurricane Katrina. The song asks us to ‘stand in the light of God.’ But the actual album happened because I sang on Jeff Majors’ gospel show.

“Jeff is a friend of mine and he called me to sing on his show. The question, though, was what to sing. My wife overheard the conversation and said, ‘Why don’t you play him “Mercy”?' That’s a song that Debbie Allen and I wrote for a play years ago. We’ve written at least seven plays. So I played ‘Mercy’ for Jeff and he loved it, but it was seven minutes long, so he asked if I could cut it down to four minutes. I cut it down to four minutes and performed it on his show.

“Afterwards, Cathy Hughes [from the television station] walked over to me and said, ‘What are you going to do? We got such a great response from the song.’ I said, ‘Do about what?’ She said, ‘You need to finish the album on this.’ So Cathy and my wife attacked me and that was it!”

How is “Mercy” doing as a single?

“I have gotten a lot of great response from ‘Mercy’ so far. In fact, a friend of mine who has a station in Washington DC said a woman called in and she couldn’t stop crying because, evidently, she was having some problems with her child. The song hit her because it's about asking God to not only have mercy on your child, but also on you.”

What other songs from Stand (In the Light) may be singles?

"‘Don’t Let Go’ I think will be a sure-enough single, and so will ‘Blessed Assurance.’”

Is there another gospel project in your future?

“Why not? Even though I had started on this album a year and a half ago, I did not have a clue that the release was going to happen now, when this album is more appropriate than ever. That ain’t nothing but God.”

*****

James Ingram's Stand (In the Light) will be released on January 27 on Intering Records/Music One/WEA. Meanwhile, Ingram just returned back from South Africa and will be on The 700 Club and TBN programs as well as on the Hour of Power from the Crystal Cathedral. His website is www.jamesingramsmusic.com.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

"Never Would Have Made It" Tops AP Best Songs List


TBGB congratulates Pastor Marvin Sapp. His "Never Would Have Made It" tops the Associated Press' best songs list of 2008.

Writes AP Music Writer Nekesa Mumbi Moody (Dec. 12, 2008):

"If you want to create a mix-tape of the year's best songs, here are the must-haves for 2008.

"1. "Never Would Have Made It," Marvin Sapp: Of course, a gospel tome is inspirational — that's the whole point, hello! — but Sapp's stirring song was more than that. It moved the listener to the core, which few songs, even gospel tunes, have the power to do."

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Awesome - The Voices of Promise (IMOK Gospel Music 2008)


Awesome
The Voices of Promise
IMOK Gospel Music 2008
www.imokgospelmusic.com

The Voices of Promise. It’s a perfect name for a youth choir.

But they could also have been dubbed the Voices of Surprise.

The youth choir, which hails from The St. Mary Church of God in Christ in Brooklyn, New York, was a concept conceived by Elder Jonathan Hall to surprise their Pastor, David A. Butler. The participants kept the secret from the pastor despite numerous rehearsals and preparations for a recording. The surprise was unveiled when the group entered its first recording date in November, 2006. Pastor Butler was “shocked,” surely, but he was probably also smiling and mighty proud of his teens.

The product of Elder Hall's original idea, the Voices of Promise’s debut CD, Awesome, benefits from a crack production team that includes just about everyone on the IMOK Gospel Music roster, including Angela Hall and Melvin Crispell (who fronts his own gospel group, Testimony). The adult participants are all over the project like camp directors, playing drums, organ, writing songs, directing the choir and filling in wherever needed.

The ensemble offers up its best work on “Trust in Him,” a mid-tempo number that requires concentration and harmonic exactitude. Feeling the group’s kinetic energy, one anticipates a reprise of the song before it even begins.

Another strong track is the vigorous “I’ll Reign With Him,” though the group must have had the most fun singing “He’s Coming Again,” with its special vocal gymnastic section toward the end.

The lead vocalist with the most promise among the Voices of Promise is Naomi Broadus. The alto’s contributions on “What You Need” demonstrate a young singer who, with continued training and performance opportunities, could go far.

The chance to record Awesome is a great experience for the members of the Voices of Promise, one that will provide them a lifelong remembrance of when they were growing up in the church. And the time they kept a huge secret from their pastor, and he didn’t mind one bit.

Two of Four Stars

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Just Love - Brian Courtney Wilson (Spirit Rising 2008)


Brian Courtney Wilson
Just Love
Spirit Rising Music/Music World Entertainment 2008
www.musicworldentertainment.com

From Matthew Knowles, father and manager of world-famous daughters Beyonce and Solange, and producer of gospel superstars Trin-I-Tee 5:7, comes Just Love, the debut album by soulful gospel balladeer Brian Courtney Wilson.

Wilson, a Chicagoan now living in Houston, and not to be confused with Bryan Wilson (A Second Coming) is set to release Just Love on Knowles’ Spirit Rising Music imprint in January 2009.

From the title track and first song, which showcases the church as a welcoming center of community and forgiveness, Just Love has an autobiographical feeling. The lyrics by and large depict a soul in search of meaning, purpose and love in an oft-confusing world of come-hither temptations, wrong paths, imperfection and mistakes just itching to be made. Comfort and surety are found in the arms of a strong, loving and redeeming God.

Wilson is a gospel crooner with appealing intensity. Although “Just Love” and the gentle and melodic “All I Need” are the songs destined for radio play, Wilson’s finest work is on “Believe,” a quietly passionate sacred love song well suited for gospel-themed weddings. By the way, dear readers, come January I will ask for your recommendations on gospel songs that work best for a wedding. This is in response to many inquiries TBGB has received on the subject over the past several months.

Nine of the album’s ten songs are unhurried, smooth and cut from quiet storm cloth (or should I say “peaceful praise”). The one exception is “No Other,” which features a finger-popping, bass-thumping club beat courtesy of the multi-talented musician Stan Jones, who pretty much does everything on the track. He also conveys a litany of shout-outs at the end of the song, including one to the gospel industry’s own lovable Telisa Stinson, who now serves as Spirit Rising’s A&R director.

Brian Courtney Wilson's Just Love is an auspicious debut, a chill-down CD especially effective for warming the heart and reviving the spirit on a rainy Sunday afternoon or a cold winter's night.

Three and a Half of Four Stars

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Bishop Paul S. Morton Presents...the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir: Cry Your Last Tear

Bishop Paul S. Morton presents the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir
Cry Your Last Tear
Tehillah Music Group/Light Records 2008
www.lightrecords.com

Browsing through the music bins, one might think Cry Your Last Tear, with a photo of Bishop Paul S. Morton dominating the front cover, is a new release by the pastor’s Greater St. Stephen Choir of New Orleans, but it’s not.

It’s much bigger.

The Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir is comprised of members from the denomination’s Southern, Southern Atlantic and Central Regions. The group has a smooth, comfortable, well-rehearsed sound accompanied by sweeping string arrangements best expressed on the quietly prayerful “More of Thee.”

Cry Your Last Tear is not just about the choir, however. Two Gospel Dream winners cameo: Stephanie Dotson (2004) leads “I Do Believe,” and 2008’s Melinda Watts fronts the choir on “In Pursuit of Your Glory.” Inspirational interludes by Full Gospel Baptist Church recording ministers such as Bishop Neil C. Ellis and Pastor William H. Murphy III are interspersed throughout.

Many of the songs are of uplift and inspiration, on how belief in the power of God can turn the impossible into the possible. Not surprisingly, though, the two tracks that disrupted the recording session were the traditional-sounding “Wonderful God,” and “Cry Your Last Tear,” the album’s home run. Written by VaShawn Mitchell and led by Bishop Morton, “Cry Your Last Tear” has all the makings of a modern classic, though it will need a radio edit, as it winds down with Morton playfully interpolating Marvin Winans’ “Ain’t No Need to Worry.”

The album’s final moments quieten the congregation. Bishop Lester Love renders “Glory Medley” in a tender, husky baritone reminiscent of Shekinah Glory’s Phil Tarver. Bishop Morton’s tearful delivery seals the deal on the final track, “Get the Glory,” a bone-chilling choral work with shades of “You’ll Never Walk Alone” and a coda with grandeur worthy of Richard Smallwood.

Executive Producer Pastor Jerry Q. Parries – himself a choir guy – has put together a beautiful recording that goes down like a fine mint.

Three and a Half of Four Stars

More Gospel Artists Doing Good: Pastor Gregg Patrick & The Bridge Project


Pastor Gregg Patrick (currently moving up the charts with his hit single "I Am A Witness"), celebrates at his home with friends Clifton Davis, Felicia Young (Tennesse Titans Quarterback Vince Young's mom) and Shawn McLemore.

Earlier in the day, Patrick made a large donation to the NFL Mother's Association to feed the nation's homeless for Thanksgiving. McLemore wrote three of the songs on the CD CrossOver, which debuted at #9 on Billboard.

Monday, December 08, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: December 8, 2008

“Did It All For Me”
Aaron Sledge
From the CD Da Light
Sky High Entertainment 2007
www.myspace.com/skyhighdalight

As I mentioned in my review of Chicagoan Aaron Sledge’s full project Da Light, “Did It All For Me” is a fine piece of pop-gospel songwriting. It’s so good, you’ll swear you’ve heard it before...a sure sign of a hit.

Sledge gives the melodically simple praise ballad a gorgeous reading, and his recording ought to get radio play, but “Did It All For Me” also has a future in the repertories of gospel, pop, country and Christian singers alike. It's like a Diane Warren love song with religion.

Kersten Stevens - The Gift

Kersten Stevens
The Gift
www.kerstenstevens.com

All I had to hear was that gospel/hip hop/jazz violinist Kersten Stevens was putting out a Christmas album, and I knew it would be superb. Sometimes you just know these things.

And of course I was right.

On The Gift, the versatile Kersten brandishes her bow like a magic wand, transforming a handful of Holiday classics into marvelous jazz performances. A combo featuring Mark Brown, Miki Hayama, Ulysses Owens and Tony Cimorosi provides energetic backup, giving Kersten free rein over the melodic theme and variations as the spirit moved her.

Tracks include a modern "Hark the Herald Angels Sing," "Do You Hear What I Hear," and "God Rest Ye Merry Gentleman."

The penultimate moment on The Gift is "O Holy Night." Kersten gives the song a delicate and sweet reading that highlights the essential beauty of the melody.

Another example of why Kersten Stevens is a gift to music.

The Gift is available through her website: www.kerstenstevens.com.

Three of Four Stars

Friday, December 05, 2008

"Arise Medley" - Arise (Stile Records 2008)



"Arise Medley"
Arise
From the CD God's Got My Back
Stile Records 2008

While "God's Got My Back" is very likely the plug song on Arise's CD of the same name, to my ears "Arise Medley" is the real treat. Electrifying Afro-Caribbean handclap rhythms and a Latin acoustic guitar propel the group's sweet harmonies and a charming melody.

The lyrics sound hand-picked from an island folksong, and for all I know, they may well be:

"Me, I will not suffer, no/I will not beg for bread.
He is my daddy-o/I'm going to praise him so."

Arise is Dwight Schroeter, Keith Marrett, Christopher Simms and Carlyle Johnson.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Aaron Sledge - Da Light (Sky High Entertainment 2007)


Aaron Sledge
Da Light
Sky High Entertainment 2007
http://www.myspace.com/skyhighdalight

At first blush, Chicago’s Aaron Sledge seems a contradiction: an urban inspirational artist whose album is covered in photos of the singer in street-smart clothes, posing tough next to a Lexus, showing off a top-shelf shoe collection, and hanging out on Chicago streets.

But listen to the vignettes on Sledge’s CD Da Light, and you realize that the contradiction is not only deliberate, it’s his main point. The outward manifestations of style and success – fashionable clothes and cars – are not necessarily inconsistent with life on the straight and narrow. In other words, you can have bling and be blessed at the same time.

The opening track on Da Light, “2nite,” establishes this theme with hip-hopera drama, although the music throughout the album is not angry or self-indulgent but tasteful and easy-going. Beats and synths swirl, flow and pulse in communion with what is essentially a series of personal conversations between Sledge and his Maker. Infectious musical soundtracks underpin songs such as “I’m Sorry” and “Hold On,” and during “Stuck Here,” a CD-skipping effect is a tongue-in-cheek riff on the theme.

At other times, Sledge can be graceful and elegant as a Praise and Worship leader. The most significant example is “Did It All for Me.” This is beautifully inspired songwriting with all the elements of a major radio hit and the potential to spawn covers by other artists, including white Christian singers. It is by lengths the best track on the CD and one of the best songs I’ve heard this year.

Another track with radio potential is “The Program,” a memorable motif on the Twelve-Step addiction methodology. For Sledge, the seven steps to recovery from addiction to sin are literal ones: his toward Jesus, and Jesus toward him.

Lyric playfulness is also evident on “Bad,” as Sledge likens Christ to a “bad man” as in “baaaaad:” you can’t fight him – there’s nobody like him. As I’ve noted in posts on other urban inspirational and holy hip hop releases, the elements of life on Mean Street are unsettling but effective metaphors for life on Straight Street. It is Jesus’ populist evangelism in the 21st Century.

If on a future project all of Sledge’s songs have the quality of “The Program,” “Hold On,” and “Did It All For Me,” this young man is a shoo-in for a Stellar nomination.

Three of Four Stars

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Folk Singer, Civil Rights Activist Odetta Dead at 77

Odetta (Holmes) Gordon, known to the world as simply "Odetta," died of a heart attack in New York yesterday, December 2. She was 77 years old.

Odetta sang folk songs, ballads, blues, Civil Rights anthems, spirituals, showtunes, gospel...really just about any style of music was fodder for her straightforward delivery. Her booming contralto could cut through the densest of fog. Artists such as Tracy Chapman, Alicia Keys, and Bernice Johnson Reagon all have traces of Odetta's style in their voice.

Spirituals historian Lyvonne Chrisman of San Francisco had alerted me to Odetta's flagging health a couple of weeks ago. She sent me a story from www.pollstar.com that read, "Odetta apparently went to the Lenox Hill Hospital [in New York] over the weekend [ca. Nov. 7-8] for a simple IV treatment but had kidney failure Nov. 9 and is listed in critical condition. An active supporter of President-elect Barack Obama, Odetta is determined to sing at his inauguration in January, according to manager Doug Yeager."

Yeager continued:

"Odetta believes she is going to sing at Obama's Inauguration, and I believe that is the reason she is still alive. She has a big poster of Barack Obama taped on the wall across from her bed. Her old heart has already outperformed and lasted far beyond the expectations of the heart specialists who treated her in January-March 2007 when she had her last health crisis while touring out West. Now compounded with the kidney failure, the doctors at the hospital are trying to do everything possible to stabilize her system and prevent the weakening of her other organs. They have her on dialysis now to rid the body of the toxic poisons that have built up, and it seems to be slowly working. She is sleeping a lot, but after a dialysis treatment and some food, she is coherent and talking. She is not in pain. We are told that she will be in the ICU Unit for at least another week, and that we'll just have to wait and see after that."

I'm sure that somewhere over the rainbow, Odetta will be singing for Barack Obama.

I had the good fortune to see "The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" perform in the 1990s at the Abbey Pub in Chicago. Besides marveling that her battered acoustic guitar, with as many battle scars as Willie Nelson's guitar, still sounded great, I was impressed by how powerful and strong her voice still was, thirty years or more after she sang for the 1963 March on Washington. Odetta's voice was distinctive. I can hear it in my head right now.

Those who did not grow up during the 1960s may not realize the importance of Odetta Gordon and Miriam Makeba, and how much of a loss their passing is to the world. They broke down gender and racial barriers with the power of their voice and the wisdom of their message.

Johnson Family Christmas Dinner...on DVD


Just in time for the holiday season, the Johnson Family is back!

Christmas is upon us and as the family comes together many spirits will be lifted and lives renewed. Family conflicts erupt again and major drama ensues.

Produced by hot urban filmmaker/actor/director/writer Jean Claude LaMarre (Color of The Cross, Basquiat, Fresh, Malcolm X, TV’s Law & Order) the film comes on the heels of the very successful Johnson Family Dinner.

This time around Mom and Dad are experiencing the baby-boomers’ crunch; Dad isn’t sure he will have enough money for retirement and Mom wants to help. Alex and her husband Sam have opened their new restaurant and business is great.

Lisa is caught in the middle of an emotional triangle between a man who isn’t right for her and her family. Robert Jr., now divorced, is moving back home and his ex-wife is moving in with the baby. Money Mike, who is always in a mess, is now pursuing a career in rap music with thugs from the neighborhood! When they all come together this Christmas their lives will move forward in very new directions.

Johnson Family Christmas Dinner will make you laugh and cry. It will warm your soul just like any dinner…for any occasion.

Johnson Family Christmas Dinner
Street Date: December 9, 2008
Genre: Family/Faith-Based
Run Time: 90 Minutes
UPC: 8-83476-00515-7
SRP: $19.99

Click here to purchase on Amazon.com

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Gospel Memories -- Eighth Annual Gospel Christmas Caravan

Tune to 88.7 WLUW Chicago this Sunday morning, December 7, from 3:00 to 7:30 a.m. Central Time for the monthly 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 December 7 Broadcast:

The Eighth Annual "Gospel Memories" Christmas Caravan
featuring classic recordings of Christmas carols, spirituals and hymns by:
Davis Sisters
Harmonizing Four
Wings over Jordan Choir
Gospel Keynotes
Bishop Charles Watkins
Ward Singers
Sister Rosetta Tharpe
Angelic Gospel Singers
Mahalia Jackson
Pilgrim Travelers
Staple Singers
Paul Breckenridge
First Church of Deliverance Choir w/Earl “Fatha” Hines
...and many more!



In Loving Memory: South Africa’s first lady of song, Miriam Makeba (right)

Benediction: “The Lord’s Prayer” – Fellowship M.B. Church - Chicago, Rev. Dr. Clay Evans, Founder and Pastor

Preacher Feature:
Rev. A.W. Nix - “Start a New Life on Christmas Day” (1928)

(NOTE: Rev. Nix sings on this sermonette! Hear the voice that first inspired young pianist Thomas Dorsey to consider dedicating his life to gospel music, back in 1921.)

Recordings by classic artists such as:
Rev. Timothy Wright and the Washington Temple COGIC Choir (1974)
Stanley Keeble & the Voices of Triumph (their first single)
The Moss Brothers: teenaged J Moss & Bill Jr. (right)
Spiritual Tornados
R.L. Knowles
Sallie Martin
…and much more!

So tune in and turn on to "Gospel Memories" -- it's a sound religion!

Monday, December 01, 2008

TBGB Pick of the Week: December 1, 2008

“Cry Your Last Tear”
Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir
From Bishop Paul S. Morton Presents the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir
Tehillah Music Group/Light Records CD 2008
www.lightrecords.com

In the capable hands of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship Mass Choir, VaShawn Mitchell’s superb composition, “Cry Your Last Tear,” is splendid.

The simple lyrics and message, wrapped in a “choirtet” arrangement, strike a chord among the attendees of the recording session, as I'm sure it will among gospel music radio listeners.

Along with V.O.W.'s "Somebody Somewhere," "Cry Your Last Tear" ranks among the finest gospel recordings I’ve heard in 2008.

Cheers for the Mass Choir, and for Mitchell, who is well on his way to becoming a sacred songwriter of significance.

Update on Tommy Ellison's Health

TBGB has had a number of inquiries recently regarding the health status of Tommy Ellison.

We asked Sam Williams, Tommy's manager, to let us know how things are going. Sam sent us this update:

Good Evening,

We really appreciate the love and concern from all of Tommy's friends, we don't consider them fans they are our many friends.

The latest information regarding Tommy, he's progressing slowly and that is of good news, please continue to keep Tommy in your prayers.

God Bless,
Sam Williams
Manager of Tommy Ellison & The Five Singing Stars

NOTE: On January 3, 2009, a little more than a month after this posting, Tommy Ellison died, passing from this world to the next.

Information on his homegoing:


The memorial services will be held this Saturday, January 10, from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Brookland Baptist Church, 1066 Sunset Blvd. in West Columbia, SC.