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  2. Sacred Steel (musical tradition) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Steel_(musical...

    Sacred Steel is a musical style and African-American gospel tradition that features the steel guitar as part of religious services. The style developed in a group of related Pentecostal churches in the 1930s, and is associated in particular with some branches of the Church of the Living God.

  3. Black Gospel music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Gospel_music

    Black gospel music, often called gospel music or gospel, is the traditional music of the Black diaspora in the United States.It is rooted in the conversion of enslaved Africans to Christianity, both during and after the trans-atlantic slave trade, starting with work songs sung in the fields and, later, with religious songs sung in various church settings, later classified as Negro Spirituals ...

  4. El McMeen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_McMeen

    Elmer Ellsworth McMeen, III (known as El McMeen) (born June 3, 1947 in Lewistown, Pennsylvania), is an acoustic steel-string fingerstyle guitarist.His specialty is fingerstyle arrangements of sung or strongly melodic pieces, ranging from the Irish genre, to hymns, gospel tunes and pop music.

  5. Voices of praise that shaped Black gospel music - AOL

    www.aol.com/voices-praise-shaped-black-gospel...

    Black composer and musician Thomas A. Dorsey, became a highly influential figure in Black gospel music beginning in the 1920s and 1930s. He earned the title of the “Father of Gospel Music” for ...

  6. Preaching chords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preaching_chords

    The exact origin of preaching chords being played in African American Baptist and Pentecostal churches is relatively unknown, but is mostly believed to have started in either the early or mid-20th Century, at a time when many African-American clergymen and pastors began preaching in a charismatic, musical call-and-response style. [3]

  7. Moses Tyson Jr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses_Tyson_Jr.

    Moses James Tyson Jr. (born May 21, 1961) is an American gospel musician and organist. He started his music career, in 1973, with learning how to play the guitar by ear to be used on a Sly Stone album, who is his cousin. His first album, I Made up My Mind, came out in 1992 with Curb Records, yet this did not chart.

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