Sunday, June 30, 2019

The World Famous Blue Ridge Quartet Sing the Old-Time Gospel







Rimrock Records put this out in at least two other editions, both with much cooler covers--I got stuck with the drab one.  But the music is fabulous.  This was one of the first LPs to turn me on to gospel music (around 1990/1991)--Bev had bought it and asked me to put it on cassette for her car player.  I was blown away by it (the LP, not the player, which wasn't bad, either).  I was just starting as a church organist, not counting my time in the Navy playing for the services on the base in Edzell, Scotland.  But I didn't have much of a background in hymns, and the only gospel-style hymns I knew were Rock of Ages, The Old Rugged Cross, Leaning on the Everlasting Arms, and a few others.  My biological family was not exactly a church family.  But Bev had a few gospel songbooks from 1911 or so (bought at antique fairs), and she suggested that, as volunteer organist, I play some of the "old tunes" mentioned by our elderly retired pastor--tunes he felt we should still be singing (Bev and John totally agreed).  Those included Send the Light--which, by now, I can't remember ever not knowing, even though I spent half my life unaware of its existence!  As I sensed right off in my church-organist duties, gospel songs are a type of sacred song, the first examples popping up around 1840, according to scholars, and probably with campmeeting roots.  It's the difference between Revive Us Again and When the Roll is Called Up Yonder and Now Thank We All Our God and O Worship the King.  And there are an amazing number of almost-gospel numbers, like Oliver Holden's Coronation (1793), which was one of the pre-Lowell Mason "fuging tunes" that Mason, Thomas Hastings, and others tried to replace with more "correct" numbers which, ironically, now sound very gospel.

No modern hymnal version of Coronation (All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name) retains the brief "fuging" section, so you'd need an old, old tunebook (or find one on line) to behold the tune as originally penned.  Despite the term, "fuging" tunes are thought to have been inspired by motets.  No fuging tunes in this collection, but they are a part of gospel history, imo.

Today's numbers totally justify the "old-time" in the LP title--older numbers like Power in the Blood, Will the Circle Be Unbroken, No Not One (they skip the punctuation), Angel Band, and 1899's There Is Power in the Blood, which a close evangelical friend from my Navy days considers "okay for a song that sounds like a soap commercial."  I get his point, and I love it anyway!  The bluegrass mega-standard Angel Band came into the world as The Land of Beulah (text: 1860, music: 1862), and, just to be showing it, here's a scan from my copy of P.P. Bliss and Ira Sankey's Gospel Hymns No. 2 (1876):


The LP pulls the usual routine of crediting all of the public-domain numbers to the arranger, so I've looked up all the actual credits and placed them in the playlist.  The E.M. (Eugene Monroe) Bartlett credits are a bit confusing.  Being more recent than the other numbers, they were still in copyright when this LP was made (1968, says one Discogs page), so Bartlett was listed rather than some arranger.  In fact, his numbers (see scans) were credited to "Bartlett-Brumley."  But which Brumley?  Given the age of the numbers, it would have to be Albert E. Brumley, but I've found nothing to support Albert having composed the tunes for the three Bartlett titles.  The "Brumley" could just as easily refer to publishers Albert E. Brumley and Sons.  I'm thinking that's the case.  Anyway, we know for sure Bartlett was there, so I gave him sole credit.  Same with Loy E. Foust.  Jesus Whispers Peace was credited to "Croots-Brumley,"  but Eldridge Murphy is the one credit I could confirm.  Ahhhh, confusion.

As far as I can tell, The Life Boat is one of those unknown-authorship deals where authorship claims have been made but not confirmed.  Will the Circle be Broken is the 1907 Charles Gabriel classic, not the Carter Family variation (?) which starts, "I was standing by the window, On one cold and cloudy day...", which they recorded as Can the Circle be Unbroken?  I've long regarded this number as just another popular gospel title swiped by A.P. Carter and thereafter mistaken for a folk number and/or a Carter composition, like 1899's Keep on the Sunny Side of Life (which A.P. would have had to have written when he was eight!).  But after buying and hearing the 1928 black gospel recording by Rev. J.C. Burnett (a marvelous side), I'm wondering if maybe it did start as a folk number, after all, despite Burnett's recording coming 11 years after the publishing of the Gabriel title.  It could well have been something that was floating around.  So, did Gabriel swipe the number?  Well, tune similarities will happen, and happen often, when tune writers are putting simple tunes over the three primary triads, plus maybe a secondary dominant, and churning them out like crazy.  And, as in country music, stock phrases abound in gospel.  So... who knows.

Update: Though Lord Lead Me On is often attributed to a Kenneth Tuttle (or, as on this disc, to no one at all!), its words and tune are by Marion W. Easterling.  Cleanse Me is much better known as Search Me, O God, its 1936 words by J. Edwin Orr, who used a Maorian melody.  Many thanks to Josh, who alerted me to the fact that my written playlist was four titles short!  I just now filled them in (it is the evening of July 1).  I blame my bronchitis.  I'm currently on meds after a weekend trip to the local urgent care and am feeling much better.

A superb collection, superbly performed.  And it was a milestone in my life, and a favorite of my late foster parents.  An absolute gem.





DOWNLOAD:  The BRQ Sing the Old-Time Gospel





Who Is that (E.M. Bartlett)
Life's Railway to Heaven (M.E. Abbey-Charles D. Tillman)
No Not One (Johnson Oatman, Jr.-George C. Hugg)
Angel Band (Jefferson Hascall-William B. Bradbury)
Near the Cross (Fanny Crosby-William B. Bradbury)
Will the Circle Be Unbroken (Ada R. Habershon-Charles H. Gabriel)
There'll Be Shouting (E.M. Bartlett)
There's Power in the Blood--real title: There Is Power in the Blood (Lewis E. Jones)
The Life Boat (Jno. R. Bryant?)
Over the Silent Sea (Loy E. Foust)
How Beautiful Heaven Must Be (Cornelia Bridgewater-Andy Bland)
Jesus Whispers Peace (Eldridge Murphy)
I'm in Love with Jesus (E.M. Bartlett)
Just a Little While (E.M. Bartlett)
Cleanse Me (aka Search Me, O God) (J. Edwin Orr-Tune: "Maori")
Shall We Gather at the River (Robert Lowry)
Lord Lead Me On (Marion W. Easterling)
Leaning on the Everlasting Arms (Hoffman-Showalter)

The World Famous Blue Ridge Quartet Sing the Old-Time Gospel (Rimrock RLP 1005; 1968?)


Lee


9 comments:

Ernie said...

Is this the one you were working on last week but couldn't get finished up? Nice work.

Buster said...

This sounds great, Lee - and thanks for the commentary!

Zoomer Roberts said...

Good morning, Lee.
Thanks for posting this wonderful music, done the way I first it and still prefer it. Your ever-cogent "liner notes" are edifying and a joy to read. Would that I might hear this group sing "I'm Dwelling In Beulah Land!" Have a blessed Sunday.
Zoom.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Ernie,

Thanks. And, yes, this was the one. I realize now my bronchitis was starting--it had me a little too ill to mirco-focus on things. Went to a local urgent care, got a breathing treatment and prescriptions. I feel way better.

Buster,

Sure. I was worried I might have over-commented. Glad you enjoyed my mini-gospel history. The funny thing was, my more church-experienced foster parents never thought to consider gospel songs as something different from the more formal ones. I spotted the difference right away, and once I pointed it out, they got it. I guess my lack of a church background gave me an advantage. One thing people don't know unless they've delved into the history is that gospel songs sort of sneaked into the scene under the "Sunday School" label. If a sacred song was for Sunday School class, no one scrutinized it much. I have an 1860s Sunday School book on my PC table that contains four or five songs that are now mainline hymnal standards. I guess if you wait long enough, people forget what the fuss was about in the first place.

Zoomer,

You too! I made it to church despite my bronchitis, and I feel like a proud youngster. At 62. But age is all in the mind, they say. And the hips. And the lower back.... And most of the joints. Yes, I'd love to hear that song done by these guys. There's a volume 2 to this, but I've yet to encounter it. I'll snap it up if and when it appears!

A man for whom Christ died said...

Lee,
Thanks for this great album! I plan on putting it on CD (along with another recently-acquired tape of The Joe Lester Family) for us to listen to in the van ASAP! Am I mistaken though, are there four extra cuts (not listed in the playlist) in the folder? Keep up the great work, love and prayin' for ya!

Romans 11:33-36 KJB

Josh
Podcast: http://www.jeremiah616.sermon.net
Callcast: (563) 999-3967
Blog: http://www.brojoshowens.wordpress.com
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/preacher-friends

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Thanks, Josh! And those four extra files should be the cover and label scans. This will make for great listening as you travel!

A man for whom Christ died said...

Lee,
I was actually talking about cuts 15-18. Files 19-22 are the scans, but I don't need to tell ya that, do I? LOL! I planned on elongating my previous comment, but just settled for what I wrote when I did. I like hearing just the quartet and piano (with a little effects added for good measure), even if the piano is out of tune LOL! I also didn't know that There'll Be Shouting was written by Bartlett! Who Is That, is (I believe) in our church hymnal (which is indeed The Church Hymnal), but I've only heard it sung once in any church. The first place I heard it, was on Ralph Stanley's I Want To Preach The Gospel album from maybe the early '70s? The kiddos will also recognize some of these songs and they love The Joe Lester Family (the other group which will be on my home-made disk), so it'll be a goodun for a long time to come! BRQ was from Spartanburg, SC and I believe my first real acquaintance with them, was an album my Pawpaw had, from them and one of their musical neighbors, The Sheltons of Pickens, SC, entitled, Together. It's also honestly, where I got acquainted with some of the older hymns, like I Am Bound For The Promise (or is that Promised) Land and Showers Of Blessings. I'd say that album was done in the early '70s, can't nail it down though. Anyhow, thanks again, love and prayin' for ya!

Romans 11:33-36 KJB

Josh
Podcast: http://www.jeremiah616.sermon.net
Callcast: (563) 999-3967
Blog: http://www.brojoshowens.wordpress.com
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/preacher-friends

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Josh,

I see it now! I've been battling bronchitis, and I probably just spaced out the last four numbers when writing the post! Thanks for alerting me. I just filled them in and got the writer-composer credits. Took a little searching, but it was fun research.

A man for whom Christ died said...

No problem Lee, glad to do what I can! And, I didn't know that Marion W. Easterling wrote LORD Lead Me On, page 96 in our hymnal, love that one too! He also wrote (although a lot-ta-folk don't like to admit it), When I Wake Up, To Sleep No More. Lela Epperson (an old friend from years ago, now at home with the LORD), of The singing Echos, arranged it like she wanted it and that version took off like wildfire, thanks to them, The Inspirations and The Kingsmen versions! I've heard that The Kingsmen even tried to market it as their own (with even their pictures on the sheet music), but that didn't set too well. Easterling wrote the song back in 1944 and for the original arrangement, the oldest version I've found, is from The Coffey Family's first album, which is entitled (I believe) Introducing The Coffey Family. I have it somewhere... I've also heard a choir or two do it the old way, but most folk go for the more modern (as in 1972?) approach. Another interesting twist is, there is a third verse that I've only heard less than a handful of groups do and they apply the newer arrangement as well. Rambled on enough, 3am comes awful early. 'Til later, love and prayin' for ya!

Romans 11:33-36 KJB

Josh
Podcast: http://www.jeremiah616.sermon.net
Callcast: (563) 999-3967
Blog: http://www.brojoshowens.wordpress.com
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/preacher-friends