
|
01 Mar 2006
Clarke Beasley - The Wheel Behind the NQC
![]() What is your official title and what do you do for the NQC? Executive Vice President, and I manage all of the day to day operations of the NQC, execute all of the promotion strategies, manage the exhibit hall, coordinate the talent, and supervise the staff. Fortunately, I have a tremendous full time staff as well as several people I call upon for help for the event. How long have you been doing this? I started in April of 1993 When you were a kid, did you dream of running the NQC? Looking back on it, I consider myself a kid when I started running the NQC. I was just 24 when the NQC board offered me this tremendous opportunity. All throughout my school days, however, I looked at the Convention with a tremendous amount of awe and admiration. I don’t know that running it ever crossed my mind as a kid. I was having too much fun just participating. Who has been your major infuence in wanting to work in Southern Gospel Music as your career? How so? First and foremost would be my father. It still amazes me at how much he has accomplished in his career, and it also amazes me that at 77, he is still very active and contributing a great deal. He is my primary role model—in every way. In the Florida Boys, you have three hall of famers (Dad, Glen Alred and Darrell Stewart) actively performing with each other in a major, first tier group. That may very well never happen again. Somebody else I would have to mention is Don Butler, long time Executive Director of the GMA. When I decided to stop performing and enter the business side of Gospel Music, Don hired me as Membership Director of the GMA, and I later became the staff accountant as well. Hiring me was the last thing Don did as Executive Director of the GMA. I consider my two years at GMA, working with Don and Bruce Koblish, as a very important continuance of my education. Without the experience I acquired helping with the production and coordination of GMA Week, I would have not been equipped to handle the position I was offered with the NQC. Don also gave me the opportunity to serve on the Grammy Awards Screening Committee and serve on the Board of Directors of the GMA Hall of Fame. I will always be in his debt. I would conclude my list of influences with Maurice Templeton. Maurice was the driving force in me being offered this position and the driving force in moving the Convention from Nashville to Louisville. I will always love and respect Maurice for all he has done for this music and all he has done for me. Have you ever had aspirations of perfoming in Southern Gospel Music? I actually did perform for several years with the Florida Boys. From the time I was 15 until I graduated from college, I performed with them when I was not in school, and I performed full time for year after my graduation from college in 1990 until I accepted the position with GMA in 1991. I was living in the St Louis, MO area when you were performing for the Florida Boys, so I never had a chance to see you with them. What did you do when performing with them? I think I saw the Florida Boys maybe twice in the whole 43 years I lived there. I played bass and sang on a couple of songs. I can't imagine the organizational tools that it takes to run a Convention that runs a whole week with concerts every day and night. What is the most challenging part of your job? What's the most fulfilling? There are several balls to keep in the air simultaneously, and I guess the most challenging part of the job is that it seems that every year a ball gets thrown into the mix that I was not expecting. When something new gets thrown in, I normally figure out how to manage it to where it is not a problem the following year. However, the following year, it will be something else. That dynamic is also what keeps the job interesting and makes it fun. I love the adrenaline rush and the challenges of the show itself. I still look forward to the Convention with that same eagerness and anticipation that I did when I was responsible for nothing, because in spite of all the challenges, I still have a lot of fun during the event. I don't know of any young, up and coming groups who do not dream of singing on the NQC stage. What is your advice to them? Simply this, to bloom where you are planted. Be faithful to what has God has called you to do—where he has called you to do it. As He directs and expands your ministry, the doors and opportunities will present themselves. In what other ways are you involved in the Gospel Music industry? I am currently serving as President of the Southern Gospel Music Guild, which also gives me a seat on the GMA Board of Directors. I still serve on the GMA Hall of Fame Board of Directors and on the Advisory Board of the SGMA. What do you do when your are not eating, drinking, and sleeping SGM. Tell us a little about you and your family. My family and I are very involved in our church, Parkway Baptist in Bardstown, Kentucky, which is one of the fastest growing churches in the state. My wife serves as an AWANA leader, a Community Bible Study leader, and teaches the three year old class at the school. I serve as a deacon and also serve on the personnel committee. It is exciting to be part of a church that is experiencing such tremendous growth and doing such great things in the community. In terms of hobbies, I live on a golf course, and I love to play golf. Many week days, when weather permits, my children and I will get in the golf cart and ride around the course and play a few holes. I love being able to do that. If you could take any five artists to a concert any place in the world, who would you take, and where would you take them and why would you take them there? This is hypothetical, of course. WOW—what a question. Diane Sawyer has nothing on you. Actually, it is a very good question; however, one that is not easily answered. WHERE I take them would very much determine WHO I would want to take. In terms of the groups that have the broadest appeal nationwide, I would have to start with the Florida Boys, because of all those years on national television, their name is still extremely well known, especially to those not well versed in the current industry. I then would take Greater Vision, because of the tremendous success they have had in the church market and their unsurpassed repertoire of material. I would take Signature Sound because of their incredible showmanship and the demand they have created via the Gaither “machine” of promotion and exposure. I would take Legacy Five, because their Cathedral connection makes them so popular in circles where nobody else is popular. In thinking through this, I would have to insist on taking six artists and conclude the lineup with the Kingdom Heirs, because Dollywood gives them to opportunity to sing to more people in a given year than anybody else in our industry, and the Hoppers, because they still remain the premier family group in Gospel Music. For what it is worth, that is the lineup I would choose most often, in most places. In the past few years, we have lost many of our heroes in this great genre of music, and lately some very valuable young people. What do you see as the future of SGM? I see a future where our music becomes a frequent, featured component of church music and Sunday morning worship. I believe very strongly that our future will be very much determined by our ability to accomplish this goal. Is there anything that I haven't asked that you would like to address? What makes our music special---I believe it is the combining of very captivating rhythms, melodies and harmonies, with the strongest, most clear and straight forward presentation of the Gospel among any genres in Christian Music. I don’t say that to diminish any other stylistic presentation. However, I will relate that I have been involved in very heated debates at the Grammy Awards Screening committees as to whether or not certain entries from mainstream Christian music actually contained enough theological content to qualify as “Christian” music. I am proud to report that no debates were ever had when discussing entries from our field. Every entry was filled with mentions of the cross, or calvary, or the blood, or the hope of heaven through the redemptive work of Christ. That is our most distinguishing characteristic, and I hope that never changes. Visit the National Quartet Convention online at http://www.natqc.com Reader Comments
NQC continues to provide and promote the best in Southern Gospel music. We are fortunate to have Clarke at the helm. He is a talented, articulate young man with his head and his heart in the right place - Christ-honoring.
Commented by On 03/02/2006
Nice interview. Looks like the NQC has a good man at the helm.
Cheers, Tony P.S. If I had a vote, Young Harmony would be on the Main stage. I'd also like to see Singnature Sound and the Gaither Vocal Band participating at National QUARTET Convention. They need to be there and there is a big hole left when they are absent. It's THE TIME FOR FANS. Make it happen.
Tony Partigianoni http://www.ksgm.com/images/gospel.gif
Pure SGM & Quartet-Style Singing
Commented by Tony On 03/04/2006
No Gaither VocalBand. No Signature Sound. It's time for NQC to practice a little forgiveness and make up. Only we fans are being hurt by this continued fued. I was dissappointed that Clark was not asked about this issue as I believe most fans were. I didn't ask that question because this was an interview about Mr. Beasley, as a person, not the NQC.
Deon Unthank
Some people are like Slinkys… Not really good for anything, but they
Commented by On 03/05/2006
Is the new group The Lefevre Quartet going to be singing at the NQC this year? They have had several weeks and months of #1 songs across the country. Thanks so much!
A fan Southern Gospel gal
Commented by On 03/07/2006
I for one am extremely grateful for the superb job Clark and the rest of the NQC personell are doing to keep the event 'pure.' Aside from the odd absence of SSQ, I believe the current lineup of artists is about as close to perfect as you can make it.
By the way, isn't Young Harmony singing in an artist showcase? If not, why?
Commented by On 03/13/2006
[If your best is not good enough, you probably need to change your work ethic or vocation.
Commented by pro-tools dude On 03/14/2006
Various members of The Apostles have had to the privilege to work with Mr. Clarke Beasley over the past 7 years, serving as Emcee and coordinators with Son Sound Music Group over the annual NQC Talent Competition in Louisville. There is not a finer man at the helm of any Gospel music industry organization or event. His staff is excellent and exciting to work with, and we count it a joy and privilege to work each year as part of Clarke's team. Clarke always makes sure when it is said and done, it was A1 First Class all the way. Our Lord deserves nothing less, and neither to all the SGM fans from around the nation who gather each year in Louisville for Gospel music's main annual event. Thanks Clarke! We lova ya!
Commented by Rick Smith On 03/16/2006
This addresses somewhat the request by SGN to limit the topic to the article...but using Clark's description of what makes this music so special, I agree with him whole-heartedly. And that may very well be reason some groups do not wish to be a part of the NQC-of their own doing, possibliy because they choose to go in a different direction. "The rythyms, melodies, harmonies, and presentation of the Gospel" these are all "style" characteristics. If groups cannot meet those "styles", Clark has a tough job, but I admire his courage to not "blurr" the lines, and hold to what describes the NQC. The best part of the article--imo.
Commented by On 04/13/2006
Sorry, Clarke, I apoligize for the mispelling of your name.
Commented by On 04/13/2006
|
About This Article
Clarke Beasley - The Wheel Behind the NQC
Favorited by: (What's an RSS feed?) Recent FeaturesFeatures Archives |
|