A Brief History of Anthem, Spiritual, and Gospel Music
from Early Slavery to the Mid Twentieth Century


By Michael Tanner

 

"There can be little doubt that shouting is a survival of the African

"possession" by the gods... it is a sign of special favor from the

spirit that it chooses to drive out the individual consciousness

temporarily and use the body for its express..."

-Zora Neal Hurston,

The Sanctified Church

 

"Of all the bodies of folk song that have survived in America to the

present century spirituals are probably the most extensive; they are

certainly, in on form or another, the best known. As 'negro

spirituals' they have entered church and concert hall, have

influenced composers from Dvorak to Virgil Thompson and have been

sung in schools and by choirs throughout the English-speaking world.

Yet, in spite of their widespread popularity through publication and

performance, their origins are obscure and the ways in which they

were first sung ar probably unknown. Even the term 'spirituals' was

not widely used by Blacks (though it was common in Sea Islands), the

word 'Anthem' being much more widespread and surviving to the 1950s

in rural areas."

-Oliver, Harrison, and Bolcom

Gospel, Blues, and Jazz

 

      Anthem music, later called 'spirituals', and much later

'gospel' music, while having a direct and vital link to Africa is

distinctly American music. A music so much a part of the fabric of

the sum of American music that much of the popular idioms of today

can be traced, with little effort, to gospel music (for brevity,

herein I will use the term 'gospel' to refer to anthem and spiritual

forms of religious Afro-American music).

 

African Roots:

 

      Tribal African music of four hundred years ago differed from

European and white American music in one major regard: secular music

did not exist in African traditions. Besides sacred music, `Europeans

sang about love, war, and drinking, as well as the recent historical

events of nearby villages, or far off countries. While many of these

songs mentioned God in some manner, many still remained secular and

popular among the village and country folk.

      All African music was naturally sacred and the concept of

singing secular music was alien to them. Their music can be seen to

satisfy four main functions in the fabric daily life, they are:

religious, agricultural and sexual fertility, hunting, and war. In

this regard African music has more in common with Native American

music than European music since song was used as a means of being in

harmony with nature and the cosmos.

 

      One predominant style of music that is still retained and was brought

to America during the slavery period of the early 1600s to 1865, is

the call and response pattern in which a leader sings a line and the

entire group answers. Typical styles also included drums and other

percussion instruments played a complex rhythmic accompaniment.

(Sound familiar? A good example of this call and response style with

syncopated rhythms can be heard by Ray Charles who used this to great

advantage on his hit "What'd I Say").

 

Slavery Era:

 

      From the need to subjugate, or from fear, many American slave

owners did not allow blacks to use traditional African instruments,

nor could they play or sing their native music. Gradually much of

the words and melodies were forgotten and disappeared in North

America. It is because of this ban on their musical ancestral link,

that a new African American style of music was created. New songs

were created using the African traditions of harmony, call and

response, behind a strong rhythmic meter mixed with European

traditions of harmony and musical instruments. Gospel songs created

by blacks used Christian subjects with African vocal and rhythmic

influences. The church became a sanctuary for black slave

expression. It was the only place that groups of slaves could

congregate without fear of white supervision. Though not all slave

holders allowed religious instruction or permission to worship and

had to meet secretly.

 

      The enslavement of blacks in the American Colonies began

during the 1600's. Slavery flourished in the South, where large

plantations grew cotton, tobacco, and other crops. The plantations

required many laborers. Work songs and "field hollers" were used to

ease the drudgery of hard labor in the fields, later they were sung

while laying railroad track, or while working in places such as the

many turpentine camps in the mid 1800s.

 

      Slavery was less profitable in the North, where economic activity

centered on small farms and industries. By 1860, the slave states

had about 4 million slaves. The slaves made up nearly a third of the

South's population. Since demographically, more blacks lived in the

South, the birth of gospel music became endemic first in the South

before it was finally spread to the rest of white America. First,

through traveling minstrel shows in the late 1800s, then through

vaudeville and sheet music in the early 1900s, and finally through

records in the early 1920s. Many of the songs and melodies were

embraced by whites and began to greatly influence white religious and

popular American music.

 

      By the early 1800s it was common for slaves to perform for

their masters, and later in front of polite white society in larger

musical ensembles, but it wasn't until the end of the Civil War that

European musical instruments were abundantly available to former

slaves. Instruments were literally left on battlefields that were

befriended by new black owners. Instruments were cheap and freed

blacks used what little new income they had to purchase or barter for

them. Although some blues forms existed in the early 1800s, as the

end of the 1800s drew near the first black secular music, the "blues"

began to evolve almost instantly and simultaneously all over the

states and territories, where ever large groups of blacks lived.

 

      Technically the field holler was the first musical style to

move away from religious themes and concerned its self with work only

(and much can be said about the double meanings of many gospel songs,

such as Swing Low, Sweet Chariot which on the surface is about life

in the hereafter, but any slave knew it was about the promise of life

in the here and now devoid of slavery. "home" wasn't necessarily

heaven, but of freedom instead. Some historians argue that all early

gospel songs were codified songs of protest). However, blues was the

first solely secular form of African American based music with the

birth of ragtime and jazz following closely behind

 

The Church:

 

      The role of the church remained central to blacks in America

once they were emancipated. With emancipation, a just and equal

freedom was elusive and largely nonexistent. Jim Crow laws remained

as a given in the South and a huge exodus of blacks migrated to the

industrialized North (and continued until the 1970s), which promised

jobs and more freedom. To a very limited degree jobs were found, but

only jobs that whites did not want. More freedom was granted to them

only, as some historians argue, because the North lacked the

tradition of a fully organized and functioning racist tradition, and

because virtually the entire organized abolitionist tradition existed

in the North. The former abolitionists switched from advocating

emancipation to advocating fair treatment for recently freed blacks.

With this political and social backdrop, the church evolved as a

religious sanctuary from the eyes of slave holders to a sanctuary

where black culture and music could thrive. In this atmosphere

churches were used as meeting places for black town forums with, at

times, more of political than religious agendas.

 

      Gospel music was changing rapidly. As once rural blacks

migrated to large cities in the North and South, and with the advent

of a growing black economy an emerging urban sophistication, gospel

music turned it's back on some of the cruder forms of harmony,

melody. and structure. Whites portraying blacks nationwide in

minstrel shows whetted the appetite for white audiences who desired

to hear the real thing. Beginning in 1871 the black Fisk Jubilee

Singers, who were students of the all black Fisk University in

Nashville, Tennessee, traveled widely in America internationally with

great success singing spirituals. Also, the late 1800s Ragtime was

developing into what later a 1917 San Francisco newspaper music

critic called "jazz" (alternately spelled "jass").

 

      Gospel music had influenced blues and jazz, and now, by the early

1900s, blues and jazz were in turn, influencing gospel music. for

instance, the syncopated rhythms of ragtime firmly entered many of

church performers approach to existing and newer songs. Many

traveling singing preachers began to accompany themselves with piano

and guitar. The guitar became a popular form of accompaniment due to

the practicality of ease of mobility. Since blues pianists and

guitarists were common nationwide, the singing preachers began to

adopt the chordal and melodic styles of many of bluesmen and women.

Blues and jazz was the popular rage, and served as the spice for

black musical palates, while gospel was the religious staple.

The more theatrical and prosperous traveling preachers and performers

sang in revival tents and as guests in churches and missions for the

homeless. Many of them traveled with an entourage of musicians and

small choirs.

 

      White music publishers recognized that the antebellum style

of black jubilee and spirituals were rapidly fading and began to

widely publish a huge amount nineteenth century sheet music. This

brought a potentially dying form of gospel music into the white

parlors and churches which were loved either for the beauty of the

music or or baser nostalgia of the good old days of antebellum South.

 

      After the Civil War, it had become the norm for black

churches to factionalize into various denominations according to the

region and predominant white denominational influence. The more

conservative black Methodist and Separatist Baptist churches from

their inception preferred the sedate hymns of English composer Isaac

Watts (1674-1748). Blacks embraced Methodism early on since white

Methodists readily adopted some of the black camp meeting songs, and

repetitive choruses. In addition these white Methodists mimicked the

black style of disjointed affirmations, prayers, and pledges. Still,

both black and white Methodists and black Separatist Baptists

services were musically tame in comparison to the emerging black

Holiness and Four Square churches. These churches retained the

unrestrained "country" element found in lesser sophisticated

congregations, and relates more directly in musical form, intensity,

and attitude found in various blues forms of the day and later in

rhythm and blues, rockabilly, and rock and roll.

 

      The invention of recorded cylinders and records overshadowed

sheet music sales of gospel music and much more rapidly spread gospel

music into white and black homes (who could afford them), and even

more so in the early 1920s on the radio, but the concept of singers

attaining a "Star" status hadn't yet developed until post W.W.II.

 

The Seminal Influence of T.A. Dorsey:

 

      Since a brief history is the aim of this article, it is

impossible for me to cover the subject of musical idioms that evolved

from gospel music even with a modicum of success. For this reason,

click here to view graphically a flow chart showing what I feel is

too large of a subject to cover here.

 

      The term "Gospel" existed before W.W.II, but other terms such

as "anthems", "spirituals", and "jubilees" were more common. After

W.W.II a former blues musician and son of a preacher (who used to

accompany the widely popular blues singer Bessie Smith), Thomas A.

Dorsey, converted back to the church and turned his considerable

talents to writing religious music. T.A. Dorsey, best known for

"Precious Lord, Take My Hand", is of a pivotal post W.W.II importance

when we consider the three elements of his business acumen:

He is the first black man to start a black owned music publishing

company in America. Although he published his own music and others,

he had the acumen to include singer Sallie Martin as a partner. He

wrote the songs and secured the rights to other songs. Sallie Martin

then became a glorified sales rep. She traveled from coast to coast

performing and selling music sheets to black churches. It is

Dorsey's distinctive style of writing that the majority of choirs use

today. A combination of the old hymnody of Watts, and of the African

"call and response" sung in country churches.

 

      This distinctive style of religious music he insisted should

be called "Gospel". He wanted to disassociate what he felt was a

modern style of black religious music from the days of slavery and

the distasteful nostalgia of antebellum South. Surprisingly the

gospel term stuck retiring "anthems", "spirituals", and "jubilees"

as an anachronism of past black religious music.

Secondly, he was the first black promoter on a large scale to

promote the better choirs, quartets, and solo singers in and, more

importantly, out of the church. With much controversy among the

faithful, he was the first to advertise the religious concerts, and

charge money to see them. (The first on record were the Fisk Jubilee

Singers. It is also interesting to note that black Historian W.E.B.

DuBois sang with and promoted the Fisk group one summer in the late

1800s). By doing this, T.A. Dorsey had helped create a star system.

 

Four Main Branches of Modern Gospel Music:

 

      Now that gospel music has added the element entertainment not

seen prior to T.A. Dorsey's promotion, solely religious music

stations had already began to appear nationwide, but principally in

the South in the 1940s. By the 1950s radio began including gospel

music as part of its regular programming along with popular secular

music, and so four main styles or "branches" of gospel music emerged.

Each branch, although directly related, can be easily identified for

obvious reasons.

 

      * Choirs- When the term "gospel" music is mentioned, perhaps

the first thing that a novice congers in the mind is a rousing choir.

Even today in the 21st century the style of gospel choirs remains

fixed in the Dorsey template. For this reason among the four

branches this is the most modern form. Choirs today range from

"traditional" musical accompaniment, typically piano and or organ,

bass, drums (tambourine), and possibly guitar. Bigger studio

productions rarely include strings and more commonly a horn section

might be added. Since the 1980s synthesizers have been the only

noticeable addition. Vocally, choirs have remained stable in

approach. A soloist or two is accompanied by the traditional call

and response that harkens back to the field hollers and African roots

music. Some choirs are crossing over to a black urban pop style, or

a more white oriented "Christian Music" style, and becomes less

recognizable as true gospel choir music. "Oh, Happy Day" recorded

in 1968 by the Edwin Hawkins Singers to this day remains the only

million seller in gospel music history, and has added to the notion

by the novice that this is the only extant form of gospel.

 

      * A capella Quartets- Another very popular form of gospel,

the quartets has two distinct periods. Prior to W.W.II the a capella

quartets emerged. This style of singing is directly related to white

barbershop quartet harmonization. What is known as "Southern Gospel"

is really a "sanctified" barbershop quartet style of singing by white

singers. Where black quartet singing differs from barbershop and

Southern Gospel style singing is the addition of a lead singer with

three part harmony. It is common for black quartets to have five six

or seven members, but since they adhere to the barbershop harmonic

template they are still considered and called a quartet group. Black

quartet singers are predominantly the purview of male singers. Few

women a capella quartet singers can be found on record. Choirs and

solo singers by tradition are still today preferred by women. The

best known of the a capella quartets were the Golden Gate Jubilee

Singers, later known as the Golden Gate Quartet. With the advent of

electrical instruments, many of the a capella quartets jumped on the

bandwagon, so to speak.

 

      * Progressive Quartets- While still singing in the quartet

tradition, this electrification of a capella was eventually called

"progressive quartets" and are separate enough in style to form a

fourth branch. Similar in motivation to country singers, the a

capella quartets turned to electrified instruments after the war in

order to be heard by larger audiences. The addition of electric

guitar, bass, piano and drums became the standard instrumentation for

what was later called "progressive gospel". Groups like the Five

Blind Boys of Alabama, the Dixie Hummingbirds and the Soul Stirrers

gained almost instant success once they switched to electrified

instrumentation. The late 1950s and early 1960s is considered the

"Golden Era of Gospel" especially for the progressive quartets. For

good reason the Soul Stirrers have been inducted into the Rock n'

Roll Hall of Fame as being an essential influence on the shape of

Rock n' Roll. Many of the groups in the 50s and 60s copied the

rhythmic intensity, the chordal and harmonic style of the group. Sam

Cooke, a later member of the group later became the first black pop

star and first black man to own his own recording company. Ira

Tucker of the Dixie Hummingbirds told me in a 1993 interview that

"Mick Jagger said he has over twenty of our albums."

 

      * Solo Singers- A good choir may have three or four really

good solo singers. These singers eventually gained a following and

typically formed a separate career fronting their own band. The the

majority of the soul music performers of the 60s and 70s were former

members of choirs. Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, Al

Green, Roberta Flack, Solomon Burke, James Brown, and many more, all

stood in front of congregations, dressed in robes, learning the ropes

of one of the most demanding and intense vocal forms of music. Not

all of the best talent left these choirs and turned secular. Mahalia

Jackson, Shirley Caesar, and Albertina Walker to name a few, became

highly popular soloists. Some of these soloists employ back up

singers, or perform as guests with better choirs, but typically the

soloist carries the song by her or himself.

Source: Crosscurrents


Return to: Gospel History