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SG History 101

31
Aug
2005
SG History 101 - The Songwriters


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Without gospel songs, there would be no gospel music!

Thus, this month’s article is being written to salute the most basic contributors to gospel music…those people who God chose to use as vessels to create the most basic element in gospel music…the gospel song!

Songwriters go back to the very beginning of what would become the gospel music industry. The early gospel music material used by the various quartets and other artists came from hymnals, songbooks which collected the various songs sung by the singers of the day, and songs that were written by the singers or other professional songsmiths of the period.

Even then, some composers were more prolific than others. One who comes to mind is Curtis Taylor, born in 1879, who survived the sinking of the Titanic to write more than 3,800 songs based out of New York City, and Charles Tillman, the writer of “Life’s Railway to Heaven”, and thousands of other songs.

By the 1920s and 1930s, some professional songwriters began to garner attention for their distinctive approaches to the writing of gospel songs.


Albert E. Brumley
One of the earliest such songwriters was Albert E. Brumley, born in 1905 in Oklahoma Indian territory. In the years to come, groups such as the Chuck Wagon Gang and the Statesmen would record whole albums of his songs. He not only wrote gospel songs, but country and pop songs as well. It was for his gospel songs, though, that Brumley would be most remembered for.

Brumley was an organist whose musical talents developed in his late adolescence. He attended the Hartford Musical Institute in Hartford, Arkansas, and sang with one of the early Hartford Quartets. In 1931, his new bride Goldie encouraged him to publish some of the songs he had written, so he mailed one he called “I’ll Fly Away” to the Hartford Music Company, who published it right away and asked for more songs.

So he did. Brumley also wrote, “Jesus, Hold My Hand”, “I’ll Meet You In The Morning”, “Turn Your Radio On”, “Did You Ever Go Sailing?”, “Go Right Out”, “The Sweetest Song I Know”, “He Set Me Free”. “Heaven’s Radio Station Is On The Air”, “Little Pine Log Cabin”, “I’m Bound For That City”, “God’s Gentle People”, and “If We Never Meet Again”, restating the greatest story ever told in a fresh way for people of his time, and he eventually ended up owning the Hartford Music Company.


Vep Ellis
A few years later, Vesphew Benton Ellis, better known by his nickname “Vep”, began to write songs for quartets, steadily more as each previous song became popular. Ellis was born in Alabama in 1917, and was primarily a preacher, as well as being a pastor, an evangelist and musical soloist.

Even though songwriting was a hobby for Ellis, he still wrote over 500 songs and hymns, which were published by the Lillenas Publishing Company and the Tennessee Music and Printing Company. He also recorded five long-play albums and a number of 78s and 45s, and published songbooks filled with his own compositions.

Among his early song successes were “There Is A Change”, first made popular by the Harmoneers, “Heaven’s Joy Awaits” and “When I Got Saved”, both early hits of the Statesmen, and “I’m Free Again” in 1948, which nearly everyone recorded.

Among his other well-known songs were “My God Can Do Anything”, “Let Me Touch Him”, “Heavenly Love”, “Do You Know My Jesus”, “Over The Moon”, “The Love Of God”, and “At The End Of The Trail”. He spent 49 years as a minister in the Church of God, and six years as music director and soloist with famed evangelist Oral Roberts, and his mellow voice and warm smile ensured that his ministry, both in word and song, was a success.


Lee Roy Abernathy
Another of the all-time great gospel songwriters was Lee Roy Abernathy, who, like Ellis, was a man of many facets…performer, teacher, sound engineer, and always an innovator. Abernathy, born in 1913 to a Georgia sharecropper, began writing songs in the 1940s, and like everything else he did, his songs were unusual and distinctive. He wrote “The Burning Of The Winecoff Hotel” in 1946 after the tragedy in Atlanta claimed 119 lives, and that song still brings back bitter memories to those who were a part of the story. He also wrote a song in the 1940s called “Television”, which anticipated the effect of the then brand-new medium well in advance for its’ time.

In a more mainstream gospel vein, Abernathy wrote songs like “He’s A Personal Savior”, “My Home”, “Lord, I’m Ready Now To Go”, and “Lord, I’m Feeling Mighty Fine Today”, and his most famous song, “Everybody’s Gonna Have A Wonderful Time Up There”, was written to a lively boogie beat, which was scandalous to many church people at the time it was written in the 1950s, and even became a top ten pop hit for Pat Boone in 1958. The song is alternately known as the “Gospel Boogie”.

Another of the songwriting greats of that period was Mosie Lister, who was tuning pianos at an Atlanta music store when a young man named Hovie Lister (no relation) offered him a singing job with his brand new Statesmen Quartet. Although he didn’t consider himself a professional singer, and certainly not a touring one, he accepted the position, and was the group’s original lead singer before Jake Hess would join the group. Mosie, a skilled musician, actually wrote material and arrangements for the Statesmen in the beginning, and continued in that capacity until he moved to Florida in the early 1950s.

Among the classic songs that Mosie Lister wrote were “How Long Has It Been?”, “I’m Feelin’ Fine”, “His Hand In Mine”, “Till The Storm Passes By”, “Then I Met The Master”, “The Gentle Stranger”, and many, many others. He is still active in the gospel music business today, having arranged for and coached the Dove Brothers in their recent project paying tribute to the songs he wrote.


Bill Gaither
But perhaps the most preeminent gospel songwriter of all is Bill Gaither. Born in 1936 in Alexandria, Indiana, Gaither grew up like many youngsters of his day, hearing gospel music on the radio and falling in love with the various quartets. Young Gaither collected 78s of all his favorite quartets, among them the Statesmen and Blackwood Brothers, and yearned to make a living doing music just as they did.

When Gaither entered college in nearby Anderson, he joined a quartet there, still in search of his youthful dreams. By that time, though, the “quartet boom” of the 1950s was well underway, and it was a very competitive situation for any aspiring singer or musician to try to make it in. When it became apparent that he would not be able to break in at that point, Gaither resigned himself to a teaching career. Although he began a professional trio during that period, clearly his musical dreams had to take a back seat to practical reality.

But Gaither was always writing songs…as an English teacher, he had a knack for language, and by the time he married another teacher with a knack for poetry, Gloria Sickal, in 1962…the ingredients for the greatest gospel songwriting tandem in history were falling in place…and by the time their early efforts at songwriting were being accepted by gospel groups, things were well on their way. A quartet that his brother Danny was in, the Golden Keys Quartet, began to record his material, and later, the famous Speer Family would record it, and in fact published some of the early Gaither material.

Then, in 1963, the Gaither song “He Touched Me” became a staple for the repertoires of many a gospel artist. As was the case with the people discussed earlier, artists began asking for more and more material from Gaither, and he and Gloria began to produce it, en masse. By 1967, the success of Gaither’s songs enabled him to leave his teaching job, and devote himself full-time to writing and performing with his trio(which by then included Danny and Gloria).

Rather than continue with an extended narrative here, I’ll just share the numbers, which speak eloquently for themselves. Over 30 years as a performer, songwriter, and producer…four Grammys, over 20 Dove Awards, the first Gold record awarded an inspirational album, nominations to both the GMA and the SGMA Halls of Fame, and an honor from ASCAP as Christian Songwriter of the Century.

Just a few of the some 600+ songs that Gaither has composed and have become gospel standards include “Because He Lives”, “The King Is Coming, “He Touched Me”, “The Family of God”, “Something Beautiful”, “There’s Something About That Name”, “Going Home”, “Jesus, We Just Want To Thank You”, “It Is Finished”, “The Broken Vessel”, “Happiness”, “Get All Excited”, and “Something Worth Living For” seal Gaither’s legacy as the preeminent gospel songwriter of all-time.

Unfortunately, limitations of time and space forbid me from going into detail about a number of other truly great songwriters, so I’ll just list some more by name. People like JD Sumner, Jim “Big Chief” Wetherington, Bob Prather, Dottie Rambo, Joel Hemphill, Neil Enloe, Gordon Jensen, Harold Lane, Phil Cross, Ronnie Hinson, Dianne Wilkinson, Phil Cross, Rodney Griffin, Kirk Talley, and Gerald Crabb are just a few of the many songwriters who have graced fans of gospel music with memorable, outstanding song material over the long history of gospel music.

Reader Comments

WHEN I WAS YOUNGER I MET VEP ELLIS..HE CAME TO THE OPEN BIBLE CHURCH IN ROCKORD ILLINOIS..SOME OF HIS SONGS WERE "LETS BUILD A BRIDGE...so those who can follow." "I'll sing of my Redeemer"VEP ELLIS WAS SO BLESSED BY HE GOOD LORD..THAT HIS VERY FACE SHOWN WITH LIGHT..HE SAID "WHEN I CAME TO A PLACE TO SING &PREACH;..I LOOK OUT IN THE CROUD..AMONG THE PEOPLE..GOD HAS HERE VEP SAID to me..you are a sender!
AND HE(HE LORD) GIVES SOME PEOPLE A LIGHT..THEY ARE CALLED SENDERS...THEY SEND GOD'S STRENGTH AND THEY HAVE A LIGHT..THAT GIVES ME STRENGTH TO SING AND PREACH GOD'S WORD..!!!VEP ELLIS
I HAVE LOOKED TO FIND HIM ALL THESE YEARS..I'LL BET HE IS IN HEAVEN..SHAKING UP THE PLACE WITH HIS BEAUIFUL RICH VOICE..HIS SONGS ARE DEEP IN MY HEART.I HOPE TO FIND HIS RECORDS AND GIVE THIS MUSIC TO MY CHILDREN AND THE WORLD


Commented by On 08/15/2007
VEP ELLIS I MET THIS GREAT MAN IN OPEN BIBLE CHURCH IN ROCKFORD ,ILL. 1965
VEP TOLD ME THAT WHEN HE IS UP FRONT HE LOOKS INTO THE AUDIENCE FOR "SENDERS." HE TOLD ME THAT GOD PUTS SENDERS IN THE CROUD..THOSE ARE PEOPLE THAT SMILE SO MUCH GODS LOVE AND LIGHT OF GOD SHINES FROM THEIR FACES. HE THEN WOULD GAIN STENGTH FROM THEM AND SEND THE POWER RIGHT BACK To THE PEOPLE. HE WROTE "LETS BUILD A BRIDGE"...so those will follow..show them a love the world has not known..I hope to one day find his records and play them for my children. VEP..WALKED UP TO ME AND SAID
"YOUNG LADY..YOU HAVE A SPECIAL GIFT..YOU ARE A SENDER" HE IS OVER NOW IN GLORY .."I'LL SING OF MY REDEMER" AND I'LL BET HE STILL HAS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL VOICE OVER THERE! TODAY IS GOLDEN MOMENT I FINALLY FOUND VEP AGAIN. AUG 2007 CAROL--ISLAND-GIRL


Commented by On 08/15/2007
Another great songwriter worthy of note, in my opinion, is G. T. (Dad) Speer with songs such as "Heavens Jubilee" "Oh, The Glory Did Roll" "The Dearest Friend I Ever Had" Several of his songs were co-written by Adger M. Pace.


Commented by On 11/23/2007

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SG History 101 - The Songwriters
Written: 08/31/2005
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Category: SG History 101
Comments: 23
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