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It's more than the music : life lessons on friends, faith, and what matters most  Cover Image Book Book

It's more than the music : life lessons on friends, faith, and what matters most / Bill Gaither with Ken Abraham.

Gaither, Bill (Author). Abraham, Ken (Added Author).

Summary:

A gospel music composer discusses his childhood, ambition to become a gospel singer, frustrating years as a school teacher, and pursuit of his dream, which led to a Grammy-winning career and a fuller realization of his faith.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0446530417
  • ISBN: 9780446530415
  • ISBN: 0446692875 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: ix, 308 pages ; 24 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Warner Faith, [2003]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references.
Subject: Gaither, Bill
Gospel musicians > United States > Biography.

Available copies

  • 23 of 23 copies available at Evergreen Indiana.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 23 total copies.
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Akron Carnegie PL - Akron B GAI (Text) 75253000034042 Adult Biography Available -
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Brownstown PL - Brownstown 92 GAITHER (Text) 79361000025634 Adult Nonfiction - Indiana Collection Available -
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Greenwood PL - Greenwood NONFICTION BIOGRAPHY Gaither (Text) 36626102148137 2nd Floor Adult Nonfiction Available -
Indiana State Library - Indianapolis ISLI 248 G1435g (Text) 0000103826335 Indiana book Available -
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Chapter One HOMECOMING

It seemed as though the big days of my career were over; I could see the handwriting on the wall and it wasn't pretty. I was fifty-five years of age, and after enjoying a successful career writing and performing music for more than three decades, in 1991 the music world was about to pass me by.

I had been a composer and a musician most of my adult life. Making music was all I had ever known; it was all I'd ever dreamed of doing, all I'd ever wanted to do, and now, like the heavy wooden lid coming down on a grand piano, I could see, feel, and hear the music coming to an end.

I was discouraged and slightly depressed as I considered my options, but I wasn't upset. In the music business, change, and making adjustments to it, is the norm. I was accustomed to seeing one aspect of my career wind down while another area of opportunity opened up. Granted, the line between the end and the beginning is sometimes hard to discern, like the line separating the sand from the sea. They seem to run together for a while, and what we think is an ending often becomes a new beginning. Besides, my wife, Gloria, and I had achieved many of our goals musically, and we were beginning to think about backing off a bit anyhow, slowing down, and living a seminormal life.

Oh, we still planned to be involved in music, but more as mentors rather than as performers. We still planned to write and publish music, discover and promote new artists, and even host a few concert events ourselves, but we had been in the spotlight long enough. It was time for us to step offstage and encourage the next generation of writers, musicians, and singers.

One day I told Gloria, "It seems that the Gaither Vocal Band is winding down, but before we quit, we'd like to record a southern gospel classic. I've always loved that style of music, so I'd like to have all my old heroes come in and sing on one song, something we all know. It might be fun, and besides, I'd like to honor some of those people who first got me excited about gospel music when I was a kid."

I called some friends and invited them to join the Gaither Vocal Band-at the time comprised of Mark Lowry, Jim Murray, Michael English, and me-for the recording session to be held at Master's Touch studio in Nashville. One of the first people I called was Hovie Lister, the inimitable leader of the famous Statesmen Quartet, one of the first gospel quartets I had ever heard as a young boy.

Hovie had long since retired and was living in Atlanta, but he was just as energetic as always when I talked to him by phone.

"Hovie, I want to get some friends together to help me out in the studio on an old song. Think you might be interested?" "I'll be there," Hovie replied. "Just tell me when and where."

"Well, the Vocal Band is recording a new album-I think we're going to call it Homecoming or something like that-and we want to include some of the grand old gospel songs. We got to thinking about it and said, 'Wouldn't it be fun to invite some of our friends to sing a song-some of the great gospel singers who influenced us when we first started out in music so many years ago?' We're going to be recording in Nashville, and I'd be thrilled if you could come and help us out on the song, 'Where Could I Go but to the Lord?' We're planning to shoot a video of that song, too. Think you can make it?"

"I wouldn't miss it!" Hovie replied in his usual upbeat style. "I'm not sure who all is going to show up, but I'm going to ask several other friends, some of the old-timers like Glen Payne and George Younce of the Cathedrals, J.D. Sumner and some members of the Stamps, James Blackwood, and of course, Jake Hess."

"Jake's gonna be there?" Hovie asked excitedly. "I hope so. You know he hasn't been feeling so well lately, but I'm going to ask him."

"Oh, I sure hope he can come," Hovie answered. Hovie and Jake had worked together for fifteen years as part of the Statesmen, as far back as the late 1940s. Later, Jake left the Statesmen to start a new "cutting edge" group known as the Imperials. It would be a thrill for me to have them in the same studio again. "I'm going to invite the Speers and the Rambos, too," I told Hovie, "and who knows who else. We'll just have an old-friends party."

"Sounds good to me," Hovie said. "I can't wait! Where are you going to do this?"

I gave Hovie the details regarding the time and location of the recording session, and he assured me again that he'd be there.

I was off to a good start. I continued contacting a group of gospel music legends including those I had mentioned to Hovie as well as Buck Rambo, Howard and Vestal Goodman of the Happy Goodman Family, the jolly, heavyset couple known for the size of their hearts as well as the size of their physical frames. Eva Mae LeFevre, of the family group by that name, said that she could come, as did several members of the famous Speer Family. My friends Larry and Rudy Gatlin of the Gatlin Brothers heard about the session and said they might drop by as well. Everyone seemed genuinely excited about the idea and willing to help.

These old-time gospel artists were legends to me. They had been the hottest, most popular groups on the circuit when I was growing up. As a young boy, I became obsessed with their music and with them. Now, however, many of the singers were retired, or at least inactive. Some had fallen on hard times. Others were struggling with poor health. For many of them, the tour buses, recording contracts, standing ovations, and deeply moving spiritual moments were fading memories. Although a few of the artists were still able to travel and sing and keep their datebooks relatively full, it was obvious that with each passing year their fans were dwindling. They'd been passed by, ignored by the music industry they had helped to create, and for a number of years now they had been set on the shelf in obscurity. Some had retired comfortably, but others were struggling to survive after pouring their hearts and lives into the music and ministry. Many gospel legends were barely eking out a subsistence living as fewer congregations invited them to sing in their communities. I had hoped that, if nothing else, our recording get-together might remind these heroes that they were not totally forgotten.

On the day of the recording session, we were scheduled to begin rolling tape around ten o'clock to record "Where Could I Go but to the Lord?," a classic written by James B. Coats. For some strange reason, when I booked the studio time, I had reserved it all day simply to record one song. As it turned out, that booking proved to be providential.

By noon, the foyer of the Master's Touch studio in Nashville was already abuzz with activity. It was like walking into a class reunion. The room was crowded with the friendly faces of people who had sung on shows together all around the country for decades, but in recent years they had hardly seen or talked with one another. There were my dear friends Rosa Nell, Mary-Tom, Faye and Brock, and Ben Speer of the Speer Family. The Speers were one of the first gospel groups I'd ever heard, and in 1960 Ben Speer published the first song I had written, "I've Been to Calvary." Since then the Speers had sung many of Gloria's and my songs, including "Let's Just Praise the Lord," "The Family of God," "The King Is Coming," and "There's Something about That Name." The Speers were singing Bill and Gloria Gaither songs long before anyone else had even heard of us. I was especially glad that they could be here on this occasion.

In another part of the room was Buck Rambo of the Singing Rambos, another family group, and Eva Mae LeFevre, a founding member of one of the most popular gospel singing groups in America for decades. Looking around the room, I saw two of my dearest friends, Glen Payne and George Younce of the Cathedrals. Glen and George had experienced a wonderful resurgence in their careers in the mid-eighties when the younger generation of music artists discovered that "those two old guys can really sing!"

James Blackwood was there, too. James was on the program the first night I ever sat in the world-famous Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, in 1948. He and his family formed the nucleus of the famed Blackwood Brothers Quartet and were true pioneers in this kind of music. James, too, had been sick recently, and I was glad he could make it to the taping.

I was especially excited to see Jim Hill. Jim had sung with the Golden Keys and was the first professional singer to whom I'd ever "pitched" one of my songs. He sang "I've Been to Calvary" shortly after I had written it, and thanks to Jim and the Golden Keys, Ben Speer heard the song, and both groups recorded it.

Later, my younger brother, Danny, had sung with Jim as part of the Golden Keys. Jim's own composition, "What a Day That Will Be," had been sung and recorded by hundreds of groups and was already a classic in this genre of music.

Staying close to the coffeepot was J.D. Sumner of the Stamps Quartet, the renowned gospel singers who backed up Elvis Presley during the last few years of his life. The country music artists Larry and Rudy Gatlin did indeed drop by the studio. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Gatlin Brothers had risen to superstardom in country music, and their song "All the Gold (in California)" had even topped the pop charts, catapulting the Gatlin Brothers to performing in Las Vegas, on NBC's Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and in many other places where traditional country music had not yet made significant inroads. The Gatlins' close family harmonies were a pleasant reprieve for many music lovers who didn't care for the heavier rock sounds that dominated radio airwaves at the time. The Gatlin Brothers' rich voices took them around the world to some of the biggest and best music venues of the day. They had grown up listening to gospel music, though, and the brothers had never forgotten their roots.

The atmosphere in the foyer was electric. Everyone was talking, laughing, hugging, and catching up on what each friend had been doing. For years, these folks had seen each other almost every week in concerts around the country. They had worked together so often, most people in the room knew each other's songs by heart. Often, if one group was doing an encore, the other groups on the program would join them on-stage for the finale. Frequently, musicians from various groups joined in the fun. It was like one big musical family ... and now they were together again, in the same room.

I hated to break up the party, but when I noticed the time, I thought, Hey, this is great, but we have some work to do here. I held open the large studio door and said, "Let's go in and sing awhile," motioning toward the inner studio. The party eased into the room, and when everyone had assembled I prayed a brief prayer, thanking God for allowing us to be together and asking Him to bless our efforts. Everyone said amen, and I went to work positioning the singers at various places in the oak-paneled studio. Overhead microphones were strategically placed throughout the room, allowing some of our old-timers the luxury of remaining seated while singing.

I explained that a camera crew was on hand to get some footage that we might use for "clips" in the Gaither Vocal Band video of the song. Camera crew was probably a grandiose term for the video production team. They had only one video-camera! "Don't even pay attention to the camera," I said. "Let's just have fun and sing."

We had asked several artists, including Larry Gatlin, Vestal Goodman, and Michael English, to sing solos at certain points, so the three of them gathered around a large Neumann microphone near the center of the room. The only instrument in the studio was a grand piano. I had already recorded the instrumental tracks, which the singers could hear in their head-phones as they sang. We waited for the red light to go on in the studio, indicating that we were recording. The excitement was almost palpable, but we weren't really sure what to expect once the tape started rolling. We had assembled a few of the greatest gospel singers in history, but some of the men and women in the studio that day hadn't sung a note in public for several years, much less tried to harmonize with other singers. Worse yet, it suddenly occurred to me that although these artists had performed in hundreds of concerts together around the country, except for the rousing "anything goes" encore numbers, they'd never really sung together seriously. I sure hope this works, I thought as the red light came on.

It quickly became clear that my biggest problem was not getting this chorus to sing-my problem was getting it to stop! Everyone was so excited to be together, and was having such a wonderful time, the enthusiasm just kept bubbling up and over-flowing! All the singers in the room that day were professionals; they all knew that under ordinary recording circumstances we were to be quiet before the red light was illuminated as the song began, and until the light went out after the song was over, indicating that the recorder in the control room was turned off. And of course, everyone knew that in most recording situations, one was not to give in to any extraneous expressions of praise or worship, no matter how spiritually moved a person might become during a song.

We all knew how to behave in a professional recording session. But these were not ordinary recording circumstances. And it became obvious after about ten minutes that this was not going to be an ordinary recording. Everyone could sense the Spirit of the Lord was in that studio.

Jake Hess had to sing for a funeral earlier that day so he arrived late for the session, and we were all thrilled to see him, especially Hovie Lister. Hovie nearly wept as the two men embraced in the studio. Jake's smooth-as-velvet voice was the lofty standard that aspiring gospel singers of my generation hoped to emulate.

As Jake listened to the music, he, too, immediately recognized that something unusual was going on. Always the quintessential gentleman, Jake looked over at Vestal Goodman and spoke quietly and reverently, "Something special is happening here. I've never felt such a strong presence of the Spirit in a room in my entire life."

Jake was right. We could all sense it, even if we couldn't describe or control it. Something was happening! Somebody other than Bill Gaither was in charge of this session! We recorded the chorus, and then Vestal, Larry, and Michael sang their solos. It was awesome! The soloists recorded their parts perfectly, and the choir of old-timers sang as though it was their debut. This is even better than I'd hoped for! I thought. It was so good, before the bouncing red needles on the recording console had time to lie still, I was gathering everyone together again. "Let's do another take," I said.

Continues...


Excerpted from IT'S MORE THAN THE MUSIC by Bill Gaither with Ken Abraham Copyright © 2003 by The Gaither Charitable Foundation, Inc.. Excerpted by permission.
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