
To begin this new year, I thought I’d depart from the usual artist-based format here and examine an issue in gospel music analysis that is by no means new.
A lot of today’s “southern” gospel music is influenced by sounds and styles from other genres of music, particularly pop and country music. We’ll look back to examine the historical precedents in this development.
The earliest gospel music in the southern tradition came out of the music of the churches. It was influenced only partly by the folk musics of the time, but generally there was very little relationship between the music of the southeastern churches and that of the secular traditions around them.
Naturally, this would change with the increasing population, industrial growth, and educational attainment in the region. But in the early 20th century, the four-part singing that was becoming the vogue in the churches became the focal style of the groups organized by the music publishing companies to promote their songbooks and other products.
As the gospel music industry started to grow, the emphasis shifted away from church singing from songbooks to concerts from the professional groups that arose from those early days.
And as the gospel music industry grew more professional, it stood to reason that it would intermingle more with the other genres of music that were also available to more and more Americans due to the growing national affluence.
We have already discussed in past articles how the white and black churches intermingled musically. With the close relationships that always existed between whites and blacks in the South even prior to the civil rights movements that began in the 1950s, it follows that white and black gospel music styles would also cross back and forth.
This was dramatically illustrated in the late 1940s and early 1950s when the Golden Gate Quartet, one of the premier black quartets, known for their “jubilee” style of singing, were often booked for concerts with such leading white quartets as the Blackwood Brothers and the Statesmen. Those bookings abruptly stopped after the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court verdict, but by then, a great deal of mutual musical influence had already occurred.
The Statesmen, in fact, went a bit farther in that direction in the 1950s, making a number of recordings with the Wade Creager Dance Orchestra, and using that group on their syndicated TV show (sponsored by Nabisco) as well. On that show, the Statesmen even sang the commercial jingles featured on the program. Like so many other things associated with that renowned quartet, the Statesmen were among the first gospel artists to incorporate popular music stylings in their work.
And since the Statesmen were a trendsetting gospel group, based on their influence and overall popularity, it only followed that other gospel groups eager to duplicate their reputation and success would follow in their footsteps. One such group was the Oak Ridge Quartet, led by their creative and innovative manager and lead singer, “Smitty” Gatlin. In 1962, the Oak Ridge Quartet signed a recording contract with Warner Bros. Records, and released one of the most noteworthy albums in gospel music history, “The Oak Ridge Boys Sing the Sounds of Nashville”, recorded not only with some of the finest Nashville-based sidemen, but three cuts on that album were recorded with a string section, taking the sound of gospel quartet music to a different plane.




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Interesting article, John. I learned a lot, as usual, that I hadn't known before. You can count me as one of the "traditional quartet music" fans that really appreciates the quartets that still sing it the old way......while enjoying a bit of the contemporary style (if I must, lol).
I look forward to what you have in store for us in 2008. Happy New Year to you, John.
Happy New Year, John! Thanks for a very informative article. Even if one knows these things, sometimes we forget who the real pioneers and innovators were.It's nice to be reminded.
Thanks, too, for the accolades for my dearly missed, Don Baldwin and his 'brothers'...the Couriers.
Hi John:
Nice article. I don't believe you should worry so much about what might be considered a "deture" from your usual way of picking subject matter. What I have found in life is history is about the truth. There is so much "revisionist" history re: so much of our country's history "changed" to be either more PC or more "agenda" oriented that sometimes I don't recognize what I KNOW as the truth in which I have lived. Sometimes it's like someone re-wrote life and turned it on it's head!
So, write away...keep the history of Gospel Music within the bounds of "truth" and change nothing. Make sure the real-life history is told. Truth is truth...God needs honest people to keep a record.
Anne-Angel
John: Once again you've done an incredible job. "Nothing But... the Gospel Truth" has been one of my favorite LP's by the Couriers (although I've relished each record they ever made). Their second LP for Warner Brothers (I don't remember the title) was an incredible follow-up too. I've followed the Oaks through the years. I struggled a bit when they went "Country", but understand their situation as "trend-setters" in Gospel Music. The Imperials "Contemporary" music stage provided great hits which I dearly love. I love the "old stuff" and love the "new stuff."
I was spending a couple of days with my mother-in-law recently when she asked what I thought of Signature Sound (I could tell by the look on her face, she wasn't a fan). My response: "Great voices, great arrangements, consistent witness. What's not to like?" Thanks again, John!
Dear John : I think John's article was
O.K.but not quite factual.The Cathedral
Quartet,the original group,were the first Quartet to record with full orchestra sound.There albums Cathedral with Strings and Cathedral with brass,set stage with all the orchestra
sound.Read about it in My forth coming
book about the Original Cathedral Qt.
Bobby Clark
With all due respect to Bobby Clark, whom I dearly respect and have thoroughly enjoyed over the years, I must comment on his post.
I have, in my possession, the irrefutable evidence that John Scheideman was indeed accurate with his information.
Years ago, it was said that The Cathedrals' 2 excellent albums (which I treasure and still play often) "The Cathedral Quartet With Strings" and "The Cathedral Quartet With Brass" were the first orchestrated albums. Whoever proclaimed this years ago was evidently unaware of the recording of "Nothing But The Gospel Truth" which was released by Warner Brothers and recorded prior to The Cathedrals' 2 recordings.
I have in my possession the actual original 2 track and 3 track (multitrack, at that time) master recordings of that Courier album that was recorded at RCA Studio B in Nashville. Don Baldwin, who owned the tapes, gave them to me as a gift in 1986. Everything recorded is on these tapes - except for the actual cuts - which were cut out from these tapes (both from the 2 track and 3 track masters), sequenced and spliced together and are now sitting in Warner Brothers' vault - in New York City, I believe. The 2 track master tape was last accessed about 10 years ago when Warner Brothers made a digital dat of it and sent it to Neil Enloe of The Couriers (a Christmas present to him, paid for by his children).
I have the remaining outtakes (as many as 10 or 12 per song) and they were recorded on RCA Red Seal recording tape and are on 10 1/2 inch reels - both in 1/4 inch (2 track) and 1/2 inch (3 track)formats. I have 4 reels of each.
The RCA engineer was Tommy Strong (who engineered many of the Blackwoods' finest albums in the early 60's in that same studio), and he has clearly marked the date on every one of those 8 tape boxes - May 28, 1963.
The Couriers took delivery of that Warner Brothers album in the Fall of 1963, shortly after Little David Young joined the group. He told me of the excitement that day, as The Couriers opened that first box of records.
The strings and brass albums by The Cathedrals had George Younce on them, and he wasn't even a member of the group yet in 1963. He joined in 1964.
Also the following link of Warner Brothers Discography shows the 1963 release date of the Courier album.
http://www.bsnpubs.com/warner/warner/warner1400.html
And, the following Cathedral History link reports their 2 orchestrated albums as having been released in 1965 and 1966 respectively.
Also the following link of Warner Brothers Discography shows the 1963 release date of the Courier album.
http://www.sghistory.com/index.php?n=Main.Cathedral_Quartet
The Courier album featured full orchestartions with both brass and strings on side 1 only, while the Cathedrals albums featured just strings on 1 albumand just brass on the other - and again, not on every tune. ("I Feel Like Shoutin'" and "Take This Whole World" featured no orchestrations).
So, neither The Couriers' nor Cathedrals' albums mentioned were fully orchestrated on every tune - but The Couriers' album was recorded earlier (1963) and had both brass and strings on it - while The Cathedrals' featured just strings on 1 and just brass on the other.
There were also some orchestrations on an Oak Ridge Boys Warner Brothers album that was released just before The Couriers' album - but it was not fully orchestrated with strings and brass as the Couriers' album was.
That said, I treasure the Courier album and both Cathedrals' albums - and the most significant thing to me is how excellent they are - even more than 40 years later - and not who got there first.
Cliff Cerce
The Cerces, PO Box 8525, Springfield, MO 65801
417-863-8440
http://www.thecerces.com
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Very well said, Cliff.Thank you for taking the time to make us all aware.
Cheri
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