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Since 2009, Hall has re-joined the GVB to fill in as lead (2010, when Michael English recovered from back surgery) and baritone (2013, when Mark Lowry broke his femur). [citation needed] In September 2012, he began serving as worship leader at Shadow Mountain Community Church in El Cajon, California, where David Jeremiah serves as senior pastor ...
This list includes artists that perform in traditional gospel music genres such as Southern gospel, traditional black gospel, urban contemporary gospel, gospel blues, Christian country music, Celtic gospel and British black gospel as well as artists in the general market who have recorded music in these genres
The Gospel Harmony Boys; Gospel Music Hall of Fame; Greater Vision; Buddy Greene; ... The Old Friends Quartet; Old Time Gospel Hour Quartet; Doug Oldham; P. Adger M ...
Oldham's album, Something Worth Living For, was named the best gospel album of 1968 by the National Evangelical Film Foundation. [3] In the mid-1970s, Oldham was granted an honorary doctor of divinity degree from the California Graduate School of Theology. [7] In 2006, he was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. [8]
Anthony was arranger, accompanist and orchestral conductor for other musicians and for several albums with "The Melody Four" quartet. [7] [5] [27] [28] He organized, arranged and conducted about a dozen albums with "16 Singing Men" for Word Records [29] [30] [1] and Zondervan Records.
In August 1996, southern gospel audiences re-accepted English after promoter/historian Charles Waller reunited English with Ed Hill, Rick Strickland, Dwayne Burke and Milton Smith as the Singing Americans, before an audience of over 4,000 gospel music fans at the Grand Ole Gospel Reunion. [1] J. D.
Glen died due to complications from cancer on October 15, 1999, aged 72 during the Cathedral's farewell tour, just five days before his 73rd birthday. Although unable to attend that year, Glen made his final performance at the National Quartet Convention via telephone hook-up from his hospital bed at Vanderbilt Hospital.
Robert Anderson (March 21, 1919 – June 15, 1995) [1] was an American gospel singer and composer. Journalist Kenan Heise stated in the Chicago Tribune that "During the 'Golden Age of Gospel', the 1940s and 1950s, Anderson was the most highly regarded male singer of music giving off a message of joy and redemption."