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SG History 101

01
Jan
2006
Ministry or Entertainment?


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One of the most persistent controversies in the long history of gospel music has been is whether its primary purpose is to minister or to entertain audiences.  It remains an issue today for many in gospel music. This article will not necessarily answer that question, but its intent is to shed some light on the history of this issue and perhaps assist in the reader making that decision for him or herself.

From the beginnings of the tradition we have come to call southern gospel music in the mid-nineteenth century, the purpose of music in church has been a subject of debate and discussion. The complete study of the origins of professional gospel music is outside the focus of this article, and deserves an article of its own. For the purposes of this article, I will summarize the consensus of all the stories of the beginnings of those traditions.

The rise of the Pentecostal movement and the consequent establishment of singing schools and singing conventions in the mid-nineteenth century were the main impetus for specialty singers of gospel song. The pioneering efforts of men such as Aldon Kieffer, Ephraim Roebush, and A.J. Showalter initially were the agents that began a gospel music industry, with their popularization of the shape-note method of singing and their publishing of song books that popularized those techniques.


James D. Vaughn

Enter James D. Vaughan, a Tennessean who, as a boy, became fascinated with music and the shape-note method of singing. When he turned 18, he began the first of many singing schools bearing his name and products, and in order to help sell his song books and other musical products to people, he established a quartet of men to sing the songs in his books, an demonstrate the virtues of his singing methods. Out of this came the first professional gospel singing groups, since the material in Vaughan's books consisted of religious music of the day.

Quartets began to form in the various places where Vaughan had conducted singing schools, and by 1910, Vaughan happened on the idea to form a travelling professional quartet to help his burgeoning music publishing business grow. The great success of the original Vaughan Quartet and other quartets under his sponsorship convinced anyone paying attention that there was money to be made in performing gospel songs before audiences.


V. O. Stamps

The quartet craze began to sweep the South, and soon other intrepid people began to rise up from the Vaughan organization and establish publishing empires of their own. Probably the most successful Vaughan alumnus was Texan Virgil O. Stamps, known by his initials, V.O., a fine singer himself, and a restless, visionary businessman.

By the 1920s, this method of using travelling quartets to sell religious music to people had caught on so successfully, the competition in the songbook field began to get intense. With the help of his brother Frank, also a fine singer and manager of a prominent quartet, and his business partner, J.R. Baxter, Jr., Stamps' Stamps-Baxter Company became the leading music publishing company in the South.

For quite some time, Stamps-Baxter quartets competed with Vaughan quartets at singing conventions, fairs, and whatever venues they managed to appear at. Because of the desire to outsell the competition, quartets from both organizations worked as hard as they could to entertain the audiences as best as possible, and with Frank Stamps' quartet also getting into the brand new field of records, there was another medium that the various singers and their companies would try to conquer to establish loyal followings.

Although it was certainly true than men like Vaughan, Stamps, Showalter, and Homer Rodehaver were motivated to assist churches and other ministries of the time musically, clearly the focus of their work was on maintaining a business, and doing it as successfully as possible. Arguably their work was their way of contributing to ministry in their individual ways. Nevertheless, the focus remained on the businesses, and whatever made them most successful was utilized.

Along with all this activity, the new medium of radio was beginning to be used to establish new singers…people from all stations in life intent on making a living through the singing of gospel songs. Groups like the Speer Family from Alabama, the Blackwood Brothers from Mississippi, and the LeFevre Trio from Tennessee (and later Atlanta) aligned themselves with music companies and radio stations to establish themselves, and travelled where they could to promote themselves and their singing.


Chuck Wagon Gang circa 1938

Around that time, a group from Texas began to attract attention with their simple, heartfelt renderings of traditional and new gospel songs. They were not affiliated with any of the music companies, and like many of their contemporaries, didn't limit their repertoire to solely gospel songs. The Chuck Wagon Gang, led by Dave (Dad) Carter and featuring his children, were endearing themselves to audiences on radio, first in Lubbock, and later in Dallas over powerful station WBAP. Initially they did mostly western songs, with only occasional gospel material thrown in, but as listener response indicated that their gospel material was better liked, eventually they began to incorporate gospel more and more into their repertoire, until by 1940, the group had eliminated all of the western and folk material they had been singing, and stuck to strictly gospel thereafter. That same year, the Chuck Wagon Gang signed the first of many contracts with Columbia Records, an alliance that would last some four decades.

But ask Dad Carter if he was doing a ministry or entertaining, and he would say, "This is the way I make my living. I am an entertainer."

No doubt most professional gospel singers of the day saw themselves in the same way. Although many of them were raised in churches, and sang the songs they were singing because they loved them and thought people needed to hear the message in them, the attitude at that time didn't appear to allow for the singers of those days to think of themselves as anything but singers entertaining people with good, inspiring songs.


Blackwood Brothers circa 1937

But as groups like the Chuck Wagon Gang, the Blackwood Brothers, the Speers, and the LeFevres gained popularity, and thus exposure, it was a portend that changes were nigh in the gospel music industry.

Next month, I'll examine the rise of the Statesmen Quartet, and how the changes they affected in gospel music helped further to establish the lines in this alleged conflict between ministry and entertainment in gospel music.

Reader Comments

RevTabasco's avatar Once again, John, you have done a great job painting the historical landscape for us. I often wonder why we have to make entertainment and ministry mutually exclusive. To me it is a both/and proposition. Ministry that is dull will soon cease to minister. Also, I see entertainment as a ministry - the ministry of lifting our spirit.

I look forward to reading next month!

Come see what’s up at Jim’s Gems



Commented by RevTabasco On 01/01/2006
John-

Thanks for your informative, yet brief presentation of the history of this wonderful ministry and artform. Not all people involved in Gospel music perceive it to be ministry, and not all perceive it to be entertainment. Some perceive it to be neither, some both.

I just love the Gospel and am attracted to any method of spreading it. The word entertainment is not a bad word. It can have two meanings; either strictly for amusement purposes or for reasons of making a story absorbing and fascinating. I tend to appreciate both factors with the emphasis on getting the Good News. The Gospel doesn't have to be boring to be effective.

If there's a better way to persuade men and women to accept Christ, I'm all for it. But the important point is to proclaim the Gospel, period.

Keep up the good work that always leaves me wanting more.

Neil


Commented by On 01/01/2006
In my humble opinion, much of the controversy over whether gospel music is entertainment or ministry comes from those horror stories we've heard about gospel quartet singers travelling around the country
drinking, smoking, fornicating, etc. "They're not even Christians" folks would say, "They're only in it for the money."

That may have been true of many singers back in decades past, but now... guess what? There isn't any money in SG. So those poor "wordly" singers have travelled on to richer climes. Like country music.

So lighten up, SG fans. Allow yourself to be ministered to AND entertained at the same time. Otherwise, we'll have to pack away our fire-engine red quartet suits, put on some black tweeds, and we'll enunciate directly, from the hymnbooks... and we'll all sound like the Funeral Home Quartet... reverent, safe, peaceful.............


Commented by On 01/02/2006
Chris, you're not referring to any artists in particular in your comments, are you? Just checking...grin


Commented by On 01/02/2006
I grew up loving Gospel, and it's history. I sang it with my family growing up around the ministry.
I spent a long time out of church, but I can't tell you the numbers of nights I would come home from a night of party-ing -- most times stoned -- and would put on a Goodman or Stamps record to put me to sleep. Pitiful as a lot of you may think, it serves as an example of the power of the simple Gospel.
I know how some of these Gospel singers have lived first hand. I contributed to the folly. But it never once depreciated the influence this music has held over me.
That's all because of the actual "Spirit" behind the music itself. Hokus-pokus or not, Gospel music is the greatest music of all time.
Ministry or entertainment? I think that's just another argument a lot of "religiosos" have to get into. Those folks really need a hobby.
I say it's both ministry AND entertainment. The two CAN co-exist. Gospel music proves it.


Commented by Kevin Wicker On 01/03/2006
All the above are very good comments. The first sentence of this article seems to be asking if the PRIMARY PURPOSE is ministry or entertainment.
As a minister/singer and "die hard sg fan" I have been ministered to as well as entertained through the years by "professionals" and "part timers", but I have left the concert/church service on most occassions with my spirits lifted and my soul blessed! Whether the
person[s] call themselves entertainres or ministers, I don't know, but I received from the Lord because I was expecting/anticipating to be blessed and I was! In some cases the people on the stage were very musically challenged, but I was blessed anyhow because my heart was in the right place as I rejoiced in the message of the songs. I consider my/our style of sgm as minsitry because we attempt to lift the spirits of those listening by the message and by a little humor added in. "A merry heart doeth good like medicine..." [Proverbs]. Whether it's entertainment or ministry depends on the recipient's perception.


Commented by On 01/03/2006
What I do today is not dependent on what Stamps and Baxter did way back then. And whatever they did back then has no bearing on whatever is right and true. Are you going to jump off a cliff because someone you admired did also? I don't know what the truth is on this matter, but we are not going to find it by looking back. "Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." (Phillipians 3:13-14). God's prize is ahead of us not behind.

If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit

- Galatians 5:25

My Blog



Commented by Keith Prater On 01/04/2006
Brother Prater:
I agree that we must always "..look forward to the things which are before.."
But, remember that those who have paved the way laid the foundation of what made Gospel music what it is today.
I'm assuming that you are a Gospel music artist. (Your name doesn't ring a bell -- but neither does mine, so don't take offense.)
What you do today has everything to do with what the forerunners did in the past. If you are a TRUE Gospel artist, you have a deep sense of roots: you appreciate where SGM has been, where it is, and where it's going. How can you get TO, if you don't understand where you came FROM?


Commented by Kevin Wicker On 01/04/2006
It seems to me that if I am a "true gospel artist," it would be based on what Jesus has done inside of me rather than my attachment to what the Speers, Stamps, or Statemen did back in the good ol' days. Whether I should sing for ministry or entertainment, or whether I should sing one style or another isn't based on what someone else did in the past, but on what is in my heart today -- whether that comes from my own thoughts or from God. My root is within my own self, what God has put in me. I rely on that when I am writing new songs or singing in church, not what others did in the past. I respect what the forerunners did, but I do not get too disturbed if I stray from their example. God is a greater song-giver than they.

If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit

- Galatians 5:25

My Blog



Commented by Keith Prater On 01/04/2006
Well said.


Commented by Kevin Wicker On 01/04/2006

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Ministry or Entertainment?
Written: 01/01/2006
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Category: SG History 101
Comments: 31
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