This New Gospel Music Grows on Me

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    This New Gospel Music Grows on Me

    By Dale Short

    This is not something I say often, so please listen up:I was wrong, and I apologize to the folks I offended back then. Anybody got

    a peace pipe?

    Roughly 40 years ago, I heard there was a new gospel music station going

    on the air in Birmingham. I was overjoyed by this, because I've been a gospel

    music fanatic from the crib upward. My family sang in a gospel quartet, and their

    home LP collection was at least 99 percent gospel, with a handful of Jerry Clower

    and Elvis thrown in for variety.

    I cut my teeth on Tennessee Ernie Ford, the Kingsmen, Wally Fowler, the

    Happy Goodman Family, the Carter Family, Mahalia Jackson, Professor Alex

    Bradford, The Chuck Wagon Gang, Dorothy Love Coates and the Gospel

    Harmonettes, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the Dixie Hummingbirds, the Swan

    Silvertones, the Pilgrim Jubilees, and more.

    As I got older, I came to love the fusion of gospel and Bluegrass, and

    discovered the Stanley Brothers, Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, the Bluegrass

    Cardinals, the Birmingham Sunlights, and (possibly my favorite living gospel

    group, especially theira cappella work) The Primitive Quartet from Candler, NorthCarolina. In those years, I drove all over creation with my son and my

    grandparents whenever I heard that one of these groups would be appearing at a

    church singing.So when I turned on that new Birmingham radio station in 1971 or so,

    excited to hear all these great sounds mixed together, I felt as if a cruel trick had

    been played on me. The station wasn't playing gospel music at all, but a sort of

    second-rate, rock-and-pop format from groups I'd never heard of, whose lyrics

    occasionally mentioned how much they loved Jesus and how great God is, in sort

    of a vague and general way.

    Well, I'm probably being unfair. It was more like FOURTH-rate rock and

    pop disguised as gospel. I called the station to find out what the, uh...heck was

    going on, and they informed me that this was the next big craze: Contemporary

    Christian music.

    At the time, I was editor of a community newspaper, and instead of turning

    the other cheek I started writing angry editorials about what an embarrassment and

    insult this development was for real gospel music and the people who loved it.

    As I recall, I alternately derided the new stuff as Elevator Gospel and Bubble

    Gum Gospel.

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    I argued that it missed the whole point of faith, the struggle of life, the

    burdens of doubt, and the high personal cost of trying to abandon one's entire

    human nature in an attempt to follow the difficult teachings of Jesus. I pointed out

    that 90 percent of the new music sounded like producers had come out of the

    woodwork to cash in on the craze and were resurrecting wimpy secular love songs

    that never got recorded, and just changing the lyrics a little.

    I challenged listeners to take the lyrics of any Contemporary Christian

    song at random, substitute the words my boyfriend or my girlfriend for God

    or Jesus and see if it made any real difference in the song's message. If not, then

    somebody was missing the whole point of what the gospel and spirituality meant.

    At that point in my youth I considered myself a musical purist, but I've

    realized since that one man's purist is another man's crank.

    (This was also when New Country was coming to the forefront, and one

    day my sister-in-law remarked to me that she loved the new country music she was

    hearing on the radio. When I asked her why, she said, Because it doesn't soundlike country music! Ah. Well, then. This must be a societal trend, I thought.)

    Needless to say, my traditional-gospel-music crusading, in print, got me a

    ton of the Christian equivalent of hate mail. A notable exception was a church

    music director from Sumiton named Devin Stephenson, who wrote a courteous and

    well-reasoned reply to my points. Our opinions on the subject were at opposite

    ends of the spectrum (and probably still are), but I learned a lot from what he said

    and the civil conversations we had meant a lot to me.

    To cut to the chase, I was on the Internet a few years ago and heard a song

    by the gospel group Casting Crowns titled If We Are the Body. I thought it was

    powerful, beautiful, and heartbreaking in equal measure, and I still do. I even

    started checking out the Contemporary Christian station again, albeit grudgingly,

    and every month I found more and more gold nuggets among the dross.

    Mark Lowry's Mary, Did You Know? still gives me goosebumps every

    time I hear it, and when a lady named Francesca Battistelli (whom I gather is not a

    Southern Gospel gal, but still) sings Motion of Mercy it sets off a one-person

    prayer meeting in my Honda Civic and sorely tempts me to take piano lessons

    again and see if this time they stick.

    There's also amazing, world-class new gospel talent right here in Walker

    County. A guy named Michael Cannon, for instance, plays guitar that would makeMichael Hedges jealous, and writes original Christian music that takes my breath

    away. (If you'd like to sample it, search YouTube for the name fusionartist202.

    You'll be glad you did. Trust me.)

    Has the new musical format then known as Contemporary Christian

    changed so dramatically since its onset, or have I changed? I'd guess a little of

    both, but I sure won't quibble.

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    I would only add Hallelujah and God bless. And thanks for accepting

    my apology.

    # # #

    (Short is a native of Walker County. His columns, books, photos, and radiofeatures can be found on his website, carrolldaleshort.com. His weekly radio

    program "Music from Home" airs every Sunday night at 6 pm on Oldies 101.5 FM,

    and is now carried live online at the station's website oldies1015fm.com.His e-mail address is [email protected])

    http://carrolldaleshort.com/http://oldies1015fm.com/http://oldies1015fm.com/http://carrolldaleshort.com/