The music showcase featuring award-winning recording artists and Southern California community choirs runs on Feb. 20-21 and ...
With the notable exception of Mahalia Jackson, most women in gospel music have been overshadowed by male singers and groups. Emmy Award-winning journalist Cheryl Wills joins Beyond The Hype to share ...
The lyrics of Albertina Walker’s classic Black gospel song serve as a blueprint for negotiating the patience love and marriage require, writes Rev. Calvin Taylor Skinner. “Please, be patient with me; ...
“Notes on faith” is theGrio’s inspirational, interdenominational series featuring Black thought leaders across faiths. “Please, be patient with me; God is not through with me yet.” My wife and I ...
My fascination with the late Albertina Walker’s life story began about six months ago, as I began to listen more and more to my YouTube gospel channel. I listen to “Oh Lord Remember Me,” a song I have ...
*Gospel recording artist Shontelle Norman-Beatty is blessed with phenomenal talent. The new DARE Records artist shows off her vocals on her first single, a contemporary spin on the classic “Jesus Will ...
Some artists may seem more concerned with racking up record sales and material possessions than staying true to their music, but not Yolanda Adams. Collecting massive props throughout her stellar ...
Gospel legend Albertina Walker died today at the age of 81, reports the Associated Press. Known as the “Queen of Gospel,” Walker died of respiratory failure at RML Specialty Hospital after a battle ...
Talk about a happy warrior. Mavis Staples has been on the front lines of the fight for civil rights since the movement accelerated in the mid-1950s and she’s still ready to rumble. But the gospel and ...
Scott Walker, who with his American pop group, the Walker Brothers, became a teenage idol in Britain in the 1960s, but who later immersed himself in experimental music that influenced artists like ...
“THIS is a song that a girl took away from me, a good friend of mine. This girl, she just took this song.” Otis Redding’s playful preamble to his performance at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 ...