I'm A Believer?

It seems to me that you don't need to be a believer in order to sing religious music masterfully. Plenty of great singers bring tears to the eyes of listeners while singing songs written within various world spiritual systems without necessarily subscribing to those beliefs. They do this by finding their own way to connect to the music and lyrics, which is, in a way, a form of acting. And no performance of any kind worth its salt is without some element of acting.

It was interesting, therefore, to interview a bunch of people from the gospel music community and hear their thoughts about the relationship between religious belief and the music they practice. Very few people I talked to think that it's possible to sing gospel music convincingly without being a worshipper of Jesus Christ. Here are some examples of answers I received to the questions: "Is it possible to separate the music from the religious aspects of gospel or must the two always go hand in hand? Is it possible to be a great gospel singer if you're not a Christian?"

Marvin Sapp, chart-topping gospel recording artist:

"I don't know of any gospel artists who aren't christians. Gospel music is about conviction. it isn't easy to have a conviction about someone if you don't have a relationship with them. I don't know of any great secular artists that are gospel artists. Al green is a better secular artist than he is a gospel artist in my opinion."

Donald Lawrence, gospel music songwriter and record producer:

"Someone who doesn't go to church can respond to lyrics that share good news. On the other hand, the music tends to talk about Jesus and God, so you may not want to be a gospel artist if you don't believe to avoid compromising yourself. Gospel music comes from heart so you have to have it in your heart to connect with it. It's the same for all art forms from country music to opera: you have to make the connection and train hard to be successful."

Rebecca Sherill, director of McCoy Memorial Baptist Church choir in Los Angeles:

"You have to feel and believe what your'e singing in order to make other people believe and feel what you're singing. The essence of gospel is beliving what you're singing. The two go hand in hand."

Janet Sutton, director of ACME Missionary Baptist Church Choir in Chicago:

"Anyone can sing gospel music. The record stores are full of recordings of "Amazing Grace" created by people who aren't believers. You can sing whatever you want to sing. But the message is more effective if you know what you are singing about. You can be a gospel artist if you aren't a christian. But if you haven't gone the whole way by declaring Christ as your lord you can't fully engage with it."
October 8, 2008 8:10 AM | | Comments (4)

4 Comments

thanks for your incisive points, Peter. I completely agree with you regarding Kathleen Battle. the context for a performance is certainly as important as the background / training / inspiration of the performer.

Have heard gospel and sacred music in so many concert halls--many vocal recitalists toss in a trad. gospel number as an encore--and the performances always sound strangely hollow and empty to me. Kathleen Battle comes first to mind: just a cold, precise, and clincial voice when it comes to hymns and gospel. My take: gospel and hymns come from the pious tradition in which the message, the spirit behind the text, takes absolute primacy over the musical elements. In recital, though, the musical elements take primacy. We're not in a concert hall to be preached to. I don't want to believe you can't sing gospel unless you're a Christian, but I haven't heard convincing evidence otherwise. Sure, lots of artists perform Amazing Grace, but it's hard for me to imagine a secular artist holding their version of a gospel standard up against, say, Mahalia Jackson's, Shirley Caesar's, Andre Crouch's.

Hello. Thanks for weighing in. You make an interesting point. Lots of secular artists make great use of gospel now that you mention it, such as Paul Simon.
I just listened to a snippet of Gelb on YouTube, though the gospel interludes sound to me like regular soul backing. Perhaps on the version in the link you sent me (thanks for sending that over by the way) there's a full gospel choir... I guess I'll have to buy the music to find out.

Coming at this from the other direction, what about non-christian singers who use gospel choirs as another instrument?

I have heard a few examples of this, but my most recent favorite is Howe Gelb (main man behind alt/country band Giant Sand) and his album Sno Angel Like You, recorded with the Voices of Praise Gospel Choir.
http://www.thrilljockey.com/catalog/?id=100363

Howe uses the choir delicately, to buttress his songs, and while they are absolutely a gospel choir, they arent exactly singing about God every minute of every song. I dont know about Gelb's personal religious feelings, but he not wearing em on his sleeve on this stuff- its folk-rock, not christian music. But to my ear, at least, it works quite well.

He even has taken them on tour with him, mostly in Europe, where he is much bigger than he is here, playing alt music festivals and the like.

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This page contains a single entry by lies like truth published on October 8, 2008 8:10 AM.

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