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01 Jul 2005
CSI-Nashville “The Death of Southern Gospel Music”
![]() The crime scene is set, the guns and knives are the invisible word of mouth. The credibility, fairness, respect, and integrity of many women and men that tirelessly fight for their songs continues to be organized and scrutinized. Why? Because the industry in its entirety has sold itself out. People are trying to hide behind the ministry card. Over 75% of Southern Gospel music is business. No matter what people say. Over the years gospel music has survived on a very thin and conservative foundation. It has been sold as a vision, not a genre. It has been represented with control, not knowledge. It has been held back, for some to hold on. It has been publicized, to capitalize. It has been choked out, so others can breath. You know the old saying ,"If you love something, let it go. If it comes back it loved you too." Gospel music needs to be let go. It needs to be set free. Forget the saying "Outside the box," that's what people say when they are trying to appear to have knowledge of the real world. Forget the box, forget the denominations, forget the hair, clothes, age, drums, forget all of your restrictions. I was reading a comment somewhere on the web site where a lady was trying to find the sin in the Bible that she was infering against another mans character. Hey, I have an idea, instead of taking all that time to prove someone wrong, pray for them to do right. I really think people jump to conclusions way to often. OK, lets stop for a minute and think about Southern Gospel music as a government. If wages were dropping, housing and demand was shrinking and jobs were being lost. Would we do the same things? Would we support the same leaders? Would we travel to the same place looking for work, when we have already been turned down? NO!! Wake up. Lets stop being afraid we may not get a spot at NQC, or we may miss making the charts, or booking agent XYZ may not take us, or we need to get signed by a major label. Come on people, think past singing one week in September, or having your name pasted on some chart, wanting a booking agent to sign you, when you cant book yourself or needing a label to invest in you when the last product you ordered is in the garage still boxed. I think Southern Gospel music would be a lot better if-
A separate union needs formed to unite labels, producers, stations, artist, managers and churches. We need to respect one another's strengths and create a bond. We need to lock into a plan that we all adhere to. I could go on and on. The facts are we're dying, falling and complaining. What we are not doing is changing, planning and uplifting. This format has followers. We have a huge potential. I hear all the time,"Man if I could do what Bill Gaither has done." You can!! He had exposure, he tapped in a fan base outside of the Hallelujah Hillbilly Highway. So many groups and artist are singing in circles, traveling the same highways, with their good old buddies, trying to keep it down-home and real. Oh come on, I hear the complaining and griping daily. You artist are tired and miserable. You put everything in what you do. If you take a dollar bill stomp it, spit on it, rip it, chew it, you know what? Its still only a dollar. No pain, no stress has changed its value. Its the same in Southern Gospel, you can fight the same circuit, same demons, same broken dreams and visions night after night. But, you are still the same value. You have to move outside of your disappointments and heartaches. I have learned nothing easy is worth having. And nothing worth having is easy to keep. Be ready to change and fight. I am excited about what all of us together can do for Southern Gospel music. God Bless, Rick Hendrix Reader Comments
You guys are right. SG has some kind of doom hanging over it. A very oppressive, competitive format. I saw Ricks options.What are some others? I think we need to get better radio. I ran a station for years. The format also needs to advance in sound. And lock out the cheap projects and bad part time artist. I am all for the quality ones.
Dale
Commented by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) On 07/06/2005
THis is all true. There are many unknowns that are flooding with low quality music. I am so thankful that God put Rick in my path and he took a chance on the 'Unknown' that I was. I believe that he will of a great help in the future also.
I also want to thank SGlive365 for adding my song into rotation. You truley took a chance on an 'unknown' too. I didn't mean that nobody will help the unknowns, I just meant it is harder. I may have worded it wrong. It is sort of like we have to prove ourself first. Hope that makes sense. But I want everyone to know how greatful I am for the people that have helped me.!! We are all a team Justin
Commented by Justin Endicott On 07/07/2005
When you get right down to it, though, all the planning and changing will not make a dent in the critical situation in Southern Gospel music unless we do one thing -- learn a little music! Just because someone can sing a little and strum a few chords on a guitar does not mean they should be in music ministry or recording CDs. Everyone should have at least a few years of formal music training before they attempt to pursue a career in music -- even Southern Gospel. Would you want a doctor who has not been through the necessary schooling? Would you want a contractor building your house if he was not trained in it? Why do we allow Southern Gospel music to be performed by the untrained? On the other hand, if the artists and musicians in SG were well-trained in music, the genre could not help but be noticed.
- Galatians 5:25.
Commented by Keith Prater On 07/07/2005
well since we are "keeping it real" here...I got somethings to say...This comment kind of un-nerved me "Who cares if you sing 22 dates a month for a total of 800 people. Wouldn't it be smarter to sing 5 dates for 6,000 people? Artists need to rework their plan" Since we are being realistic...as an unknown artist..it is very difficult to get bookings with more than a 1,000 people per concert. Promoters will not even listen to you without you first having a booking agent doing your calling for you...so unless I want to be Harriett on the phone booking for Jamie Carter then I don't get past the secretary. So how do you propose to get past that? Plus...I'm running into this problem...I'm getting larger venues such as WV state fair but do you want to know what they are paying me....Zero..nahda...oh wait they are giving me free admission and an opportunity to be heard....don't get me wrong I am grateful for the invite...but as I read that comment I thought wow how do they expect me to make it? (financially) Plus, SGM does not have large venue things very often..unless your "label" does them. So back to square one...It's just very fustrating. And most people int he industry say to "sing everywhere you can" now I hear to try to do large venues...heck...I'm unsure of where is UP and where is Down LOL...
But it's like the article said "I have learned nothing easy is worth having. And nothing worth having is easy to keep" So I guess this is part of my fight!
Commented by Jamie Rebekkah Carter On 07/10/2005
Jamie, I feel your pain. You like to take every opportunity you can to sing for the Lord, but some people take advantage of that. There is a local Promoter in our area that charges the not so known new artist to sing at his big concerts. They make you feel that it is an honor that they invited you because, they do not invite just anyone. Only a select few. They charge you $500 to sing and the only thing they give you is a booth in a corner behind all the big names, also they do not even place you on the main stage as opening acts. They stick a small stage in a corner of the product room and let the new artist sing on it away from the main stage. The least that they can do is if they do not pay you anything, do not charge you to sing. The new artist is paying part of the tab for the known artist for this promoter. I have learned a lesson from this one.
Commented by Betty On 07/11/2005
It's a shame that promoters would behave this way. If they were truly Christian, they would not do as Betty wrote. It is dishonest.
As to Jamie's concern, I think Rick was getting a little ahead of himself. Once an artist has developed over a period of time and is highly skilled and experienced, he is right. However, for an artist first starting out, it is too much to expect. And it is not just because nobody knows you. If you've never sang for more than a hundred people at a time, it would be a serious leap to go from that to over a thousand all at once. Most could not handle it emotionally. It is probably best to grow into those types of crowds gradually. Remember the parable of the mustard seed. It starts small and grows big.
- Galatians 5:25.
Commented by Keith Prater On 07/11/2005
I could'nt have read this at a better time. I have two daughters, a 13 year old and a 9 year old who just wow'd an audience at a talent contest in Owensboro , Kentucky with their harmony. They did'nt even place in the winners and I understand because there was so much talent there. There was just so much focus on marketability and performance that it sickend me!
I hate talent contest anyway, but after trying for 17 years to get songs "out there" that I've wrote and not being able to break in I don't know any other way. I was once told that someone would sign my song on if I would let them change one of the words through out the song to (grace) because the Baptist like to hear that word in gospel songs. This was from an industry professional! I have come to realize that these contest are just another way of industry commercializing. There should be someway that somebody could break through all of this. Where's the Hank Williams Jr. , Gretchen Wilson , and Elvis Presley's of Gospel music. There is people in high places that are forcing everyone to convert to one way or no way. Is marketable 300lbs., bleach blonde, and big flappy shirts??? How could I think that it had anything to do with God's annointing? Thank you for this article that I read, I couldnt agree with you more and I urge you to do something.
Commented by Mary Burgess On 07/11/2005
I think what Mr Hendrix is trying to say is- take it serious. Make it work for you to reach more people and not kill yourself in the time of it.I may not agree with everything he says
Dale
Commented by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) On 07/12/2005
Rick, kudos to you my brother! You hit the nail on the head with this article. It is sad, I've been singing solo for 3 years now in the local area, I enjoy doing it and am selective about the songs, the words and the message it reflects and I do it because I love the Lord and want to encourage, uplift and glorify Jesus, NOT entertain. However, I just entered a national talent search in which I submitted a demo and now will go to the semi-finals in 4 days. I contacted a local southern gospel radio station to see if they would take a "local's" cd..only to be told that pretty much if I hadn't spent about $6,000 on my demo and it wasn't the quality/sound of the Talley Trio..then I was wasting my time sending it. That really blew me away... the Christian Music Industry in my eyes has become just like the World. It is sad and to boot, the cd of last years "finalists" in this contest blew me away..90% of it sounded like hard rock, heavy metal, rap, blues, alternative and there was 1 group that came close to southern gospel. It made me realize and disheartened me that...the Christina Music World is not really looking for God given talent or actually the "spiritual" part of it..but "entertainment". I am about 4 days away from the semifinal and am beginning to lose my interest. I don't need a judge, a panelist, or someone to judge the talent God gave me... I know that "my style" Southern Gospel..probably won't be the one chosen. Look at how they dress in the industry...looks no different than the world. That's whats wrong w/ our churches and pastors too..the world is coming in and the church is not going out into all the world.. Definitely a problem we as Christians need to be praying about.
Thanks Rick.... you are a blessing. A sister in Christ in EAstern, NC
Commented by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) On 07/13/2005
Quote: It is sad and to boot, the cd of last years "finalists" in this contest blew me away..90% of it sounded like hard rock, heavy metal, rap, blues, alternative and there was 1 group that came close to southern gospel. It made me realize and disheartened me that...the Christina Music World is not really looking for God given talent or actually the "spiritual" part of it..but "entertainment"
What makes you think that there can not be any talent outside Southern Gospel?
Commented by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) On 07/13/2005
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CSI-Nashville “The Death of Southern Gospel Music”
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