Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

James Cleveland

 
Biography: James Cleveland

The Reverend James Cleveland (c. 1931-1991) combined his talents as minister, singer, composer, and philanthropist to become known as the Crown Prince of Gospel Music.

Variously hailed as the King of Gospel Music and the Crown Prince of Gospel, the Reverend James Cleveland combined his talents as preacher, composer, singer, producer, and philanthropist to become one of the most outstanding exponents of the modern gospel sound. Indeed, with a voice that has earned acclaim as one of gospel's greatest, and a religious fervor that has refused the lure of secular music, Cleveland, more than any artist of his generation, served as a champion of gospel in its purest form. As he explained to Ed Ochs in an interview for Billboard, gospel is not only "a music, but … a representation of a religious thinking. Gospel singing is the counterpart of gospel teaching. … It's an art form, true enough, but it represents an idea, a thought, a trend."

Grew up Where Gospel Flourished

Born in Depression-era Chicago, the son of hard-working, God-fearing parents, Cleveland grew up in an environment where gospel flourished. His grandmother introduced him to Chicago's Pilgrim Baptist Church, where the budding musician was influenced by choir director Thomas A. Dorsey - also known as the father of gospel music. Under Dorsey's tutelage, the youth made his solo debut with the choir at the age of eight. The vocalist subsequently taught himself to play piano, often recounting how he practiced on imaginary keys until his parents could afford to purchase an upright for him. As Tony Heilbut quoted the star in The Gospel Sound: "My folks being just plain, everyday people, we couldn't afford a piano. So I used to practice each night right there on the windowsill. I took those wedges and crevices and made me black and white keys. And, baby, I played just like Roberta [Martin]. By the time I was in high school, I was some jazz pianist."

Roberta Martin, a Dorsey disciple and one of the Chicago gospel pioneers to gain international recognition, was among Cleveland's idols. It was her group, the Roberta Martin Singers, who first helped shape the youth's singing and piano style, with Roberta Martin herself inspiring the youngster to begin composing. By the time he was a teenager, Cleveland was singing with a neighborhood group, the Thorn Gospel Crusaders. And once the group began featuring Cleveland's compositions, the artist found himself piquing the interest of prominent gospel talents. In 1948 Cleveland's "Grace Is Sufficient," performed at a Baptist convention, prompted Martin to begin publishing the new composer's work.

Founded the Gospel Chimes

The next decade proved a productive one for Cleveland. He made his recording debut on the Apollo label in 1950, singing "Oh What a Time" with the Gospelaires. He composed songs for Roberta Martin, including "Stand By Me," "Saved," and "He's Using Me." He worked frequently with the Caravans, first establishing himself as a superlative gospel arranger, then emerging as a singer - the Caravans scored their earliest hits, in fact, with Cleveland as lead vocalist on such tunes as "Old Time Religion" and "Solid Rock." And he founded the first of his own groups, the Gospel Chimes, which helped showcase his talents as composer, arranger, and singer.

By 1960 Cleveland, who had incorporated blues riffs and what Heilbut described as "sheer funkiness" in his work, had become associated with a new tenor in gospel music. That year "The Love of God," a song he recorded with Detroit's Voices of Tabernacle choir, was a sensation, and its success helped Cleveland secure a recording contract with Savoy Records, for whom he recorded more than sixty albums. The artist passed another milestone with Savoy's 1963 release Peace Be Still. A recording pairing Cleveland with the Angelic Choir of Nutley, New Jersey, the album, which held a spot on the gospel charts for more than fifteen years, has sold more than one million copies, an almost unheard of achievement for a gospel recording.

During the 1960s Cleveland also formed the James Cleveland Singers, gradually built an international reputation, and became one of the best paid of the gospel music entertainers. And although two of Cleveland's former pupils - Aretha Franklin and Billy Preston - went on to achieve celebrity status, the master himself declined to expand his audience by moving into secular music, and instead chose to devote himself strictly to gospel.

Worked to Preserve Gospel Tradition

Indeed, in the early sixties Cleveland became a minister and served Los Angeles's New Greater Harvest Baptist Church as pastor until he was able to build his own Cornerstone Institutional Baptist Church in 1970. For him, gospel music and gospel teaching were inseparable - different mediums conveying the same message. As the minister-musician explained to Ochs: "If we can't preach to people in a dry, talking sermon and get their attention, we'll sing it to them, as long as we get the message across. We have been instrumental in drawing more people to the church in recent years through singing and getting them to find favor with something in the church they like to identify with. Then when we get them into church, putting the same message into words without music is not as hard, for we have set some type of precedent with the music to get them into the church and get them focused on where we're coming from."

For Cleveland, gospel music was so vital that in 1968 he organized the first Gospel Music Workshop of America. Designed both to help preserve the gospel tradition and to feature new talent, the workshop has grown to include more than five hundred thousand members representing almost every state. "My biggest ambition is to build a school somewhere in America, where we can teach and house our convention," Cleveland told Village Voice interviewer David Jackson. This was the best way, in the artist's opinion, to assure that gospel's legacy continues.

One Last Message

Cleveland perpetuated an understanding of gospel music and gospel teaching as part of the same religious experience, believing that the music devoid of the mission is not genuine gospel. As Jackson articulated: "Through classics like 'Peace Be Still,' 'Lord Remember Me,' 'Father, I Stretch My Hands to Thee,' and 'The Love of God,' Reverend Cleveland retells a biblical love story for the plain purpose of reconciling people to God and to one another." And as his scores of devoted followers attest, concluded Jackson, "his message is widely appreciated and applauded."

Cleveland died of heart failure on February 9, 1991, in Los Angeles, California. He had not been able to sing for a year before his death due to respiratory ailments. But the last Sunday of his life, he faced his congregation at the Cornerstone Institutional Baptist Church and told them, "If I don't see you again and if I don't sing again, I'm a witness to the fact that the Lord answers prayer. He let my voice come back to me this morning," the Los Angeles Times reported. The same source reverently opined that Cleveland had been "not just … a record maker, but a mentor, producer, primary source of new material and fountainhead of artistic recognition for the form."

Further Reading

Broughton, Viv, Black Gospel: An Illustrated History of the Gospel Sound, Blandford Press, 1985.

Heilbut, Tony, The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times, Simon & Schuster, 1971.

Billboard, September 27, 1980.

Chicago Tribune, February 17, 1991.

Detroit Free Press, February 18, 1991.

Ebony, December, 1984.

Los Angeles Times, February 10, 1991; February 15, 1991.

Village Voice, April 16, 1979.

Washington Post, February 11, 1991.

Baker, Barbara, "Black Gospel Music Styles: 1942-1979," Ph.D. dissertation, University of Maryland, 1978.

Casey, M. E., "The Contributions of James Cleveland," thesis, Howard University, 1980.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Black Biography: James Cleveland
Top

gospel singer; minister (religion); composer

Personal Information

Born December 5, 1932 (some sources give the birthday December 23 and the year 1931) in Chicago; son of Ben Cleveland (a WPA worker); children: LaShone; died of heart failure, February 9, 1991.
Religion: Baptist.

Career

Minister and gospel singer, songwriter, and pianist; sang with the Thorn Gospel Crusaders and many other groups, 1940s and 1950s; formed own group, the Gospel Chimes, 1959; co-director of music, New Bethel Baptist Church, Detroit, 1960; signed to Savoy label, c. 1961; released over 100 albums; founded James Cleveland Singers, 1963; organized Gospel Music Workshop of America, 1968; founded Southern California Community Choir, 1969; founder and pastor, Cornerstone Institutional Baptist Church, Los Angeles, 1970.

Life's Work

A prolific composer of pieces that remain gospel standards, a distinctive vocal performer, and a tireless teacher and organizer of huge gospel conventions, James Cleveland spent a lifetime "at the forefront of America's gospel music experience," in the words of his Billboard magazine obituary in 1991. Cleveland paved the way for modern gospel music by incorporating blues and jazz influences, and directly shaping the careers of soul superstars Aretha Franklin and Billy Preston. He was a towering figure, a man considered by many as the "King of Gospel Music" and the "Crown Prince of Gospel."

James Cleveland was born in Chicago, perhaps on December 5, 1932 (his birthday has also been given as December 23, and his birth year as 1931, but the date proposed here accords with that given by gospel music authority Horace Boyer in the New Grove Dictionary of American Music). His earliest musical experiences occurred when his grandmother took him to Chicago's Pilgrim Baptist Church, where the renowned choir director and composer Thomas B. Dorsey was responsible for the music. Dorsey was greatly impressed with the young man's vocal talent and asked him to sing a solo. Cleveland rapidly broadened his musical abilities. He told Gospel Sound author Tony Heilbut that although his parents could not afford a piano, "I used to practice each night right there on the windowsill. I took those wedges and crevices and made me black and white keys."

Influenced by gospel songstresses Mahalia Jackson (whose home was located on Cleveland's paper route) and Roberta Martin, Cleveland began performing and composing regularly while still in his teens. As his voice changed, he strained to hit high notes and caused some damage to his vocal cords. As a result, his singing voice took on a rough and raspy quality that became his trademark in later years. Martin, who was active in the gospel music publishing field, began paying Cleveland to write songs for her and he developed into an extremely prolific songwriter. Between 1956 and 1960, he wrote approximately three songs per week.

In 1953 Cleveland joined a gospel group called the Caravans as pianist, arranger, and occasional singer. With Cleveland on vocals, the group had some success with two recordings, "The Solid Rock" and "Old Time Religion." Seeking to put into action his own creative vision, Cleveland left the Caravans in 1959 and formed his own group, the Gospel Chimes. Over the next several years, Cleveland achieved a series of creative breakthroughs. He moved to Detroit in 1960 to take a position as music director at the famed New Bethel Baptist Church where the Reverend C. L. Franklin, father of soul vocalist Aretha Franklin, was pastor. In 1972, he collaborated with Aretha on the Grammy-winning multimillion-selling LP Amazing Grace.

While recording with various Detroit choirs, Cleveland attracted the attention of New York-based Savoy Records and was signed to the label early in the 1960s. He went on to record more than 100 albums for Savoy, sixteen of which were gold albums. One breakthrough recording was Savoy's 1963 release Peace Be Still. On the title track of the record, which paired Cleveland with the Angelic Choir of Nutley, New Jersey, Cleveland crystallized his choral work and hit on a powerful formula that he would follow many times throughout the rest of his career. In the words of Horace Boyer, writing in the New Grove Dictionary of American Music, "Cleveland half croons, half preaches the verse, shifting to a musical sermon at the refrain; towards the end of the songs the choir repeats a motif over which Cleveland extemporizes a number of variations." Peace Be Still remained on the gospel music charts for fifteen years.

Cleveland moved to Los Angeles in 1963, serving as pastor of the New Greater Harvest Baptist Church. In 1970 he opened his own church, the Cornerstone Institutional Baptist Church. Cornerstone would eventually grow into one of the city's largest congregations. Cleveland always insisted that his work as a preacher was integral to his career, remarking to a Billboard interviewer that gospel was "an art form, true enough; but it represents an idea, a thought, a trend."

After a brief hiatus, Cleveland soon redoubled his musical efforts. He formed several successful new groups, including the James Cleveland Singers and the Southern California Community Choir. In 1968, Cleveland founded the Gospel Music Workshop of America. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together singers from all over the country in order to perpetuate the art of gospel music. The workshops eventually attracted thousands of adherents and laid the groundwork for the popularity of gospel music.

By the 1970s and 1980s, Cleveland had become a gospel music legend. Disc jockeys, impressed by the sheer power of Cleveland's voice, played his music and several of his records became minor pop hits. However, unlike talented gospel artists like Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin who crossed over to pop careers, Cleveland maintained an unswerving allegiance to gospel. His imaginative arrangements are credited with introducing jazz and pop rhythms to gospel and paved the way for gospel-pop fusion artists such as Edwin Hawkins and Andrae Crouch.

Cleveland suffered severe respiratory problems in his later years and died of heart failure on February 9, 1991, in Los Angeles. Aretha Franklin memorialized Cleveland in the New York Times with these words: "Anyone who heard him, you were touched by him. He was a motivator, and innovator. He leaves the greatest legacy."

Awards

Sixteen gold records; Grammy award for Amazing Grace, 1972; Image Award from National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1976.

Works

Selective Discography

  • (All albums recorded on Savoy label).
  • This Sunday in Person, 1961.
  • Rev. James Cleveland with the Angelic Choir, Vol. 2, 1962.
  • Peace Be Still, 1963.
  • Songs of Dedication, 1968.
  • I Stood on the Banks of Jordan, 1970.
  • Amazing Grace (with Aretha Franklin), 1972.
  • In the Ghetto, 1973.
  • Tomorrow, 1978.
  • Lord Let Me Be an Instrument, 1979.
  • James Cleveland Sings with the World's Greatest Choirs, 1980.
  • It's a New Day, 1982.
  • This Too Will Pass, 1983.
  • Jesus Is the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me, 1990.

Further Reading

Books

  • Anderson, Robert, and Gail North, Gospel Music Encyclopedia, Sterling, 1979.
  • Contemporary Musicians, volume 1, Gale, 1989.
  • New Grove Dictionary of American Music, Macmillan, 1986.
  • Romanowski, Patricia, and Holly George-Warren, The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, Fireside, 1995.
Periodicals
  • Billboard, February 23, 1991, p. 4.
  • Library Journal, February 15, 1998, p. 181.
  • New York Times, February 11, 1991.

— James M. Manheim

Artist: Jimmy Cleveland
Top
  • Born: May 03, 1926, Wartrace, TN
  • Died: August 23, 2008, Lynwood, CA
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Trombone
  • Representative Albums: "Rhythm Crazy," "Introducing Jimmy Cleveland and His All Stars," "A Map of Jimmy Cleveland"
  • Representative Songs: "Love Is Here to Stay," "Marie," "Bone Brother"

Biography

One of the finest trombonists to emerge during the 1950s, Jimmy Cleveland has been overlooked since moving to Los Angeles in the late '60s. He started on trombone when he was 16, and his first important job was with Lionel Hampton (1950-1953). After Hampton's European tour of 1953, Cleveland became a busy freelance musician in New York, making many recording sessions (including with Dizzy Gillespie, Gil Evans, Oliver Nelson, Oscar Pettiford, Lucky Thompson, James Moody, and Gerry Mulligan). He toured Europe with Quincy Jones in 1959-1960, and played with Thelonious Monk's 1967 octet, but otherwise stayed in New York until going to the West Coast to play with The Merv Griffin Show's band and to continue recording for Quincy Jones. Jimmy Cleveland remains one of the most technically skilled of the bop-based trombonists, and still appears on an irregular basis in Los Angeles clubs. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: James Cleveland
Top
James Cleveland
Born December 5, 1931(1931-12-05)
Origin Chicago, Illinois
Died February 9, 1991 (aged 59)
Genres Gospel music
Instruments Vocals, Piano
Labels States, Savoy
Associated acts Albertina Walker
Roberta Martin
The Cleveland Singers
The Caravans

The Reverend Dr. James Cleveland (December 5, 1931 - February 9, 1991) was a gospel singer, arranger, composer and, most significantly, the driving force behind the creation of the modern gospel sound, bringing the stylistic daring of hard gospel and jazz and pop music influences to arrangements for mass choirs.

Contents

Biography

Early life and career

Born in Chicago, he began singing as a boy soprano at Pilgrim Baptist Church, where Thomas A. Dorsey was minister of music and Roberta Martin was pianist for the choir. He strained his vocal cords as a teenager while part of a local gospel group, leaving the distinctive gravelly voice that was his hallmark in his later years. The change in his voice led him to focus on his skills as a pianist and later as a composer and arranger. For his pioneering accomplishments and contributions, he is regarded by many to be one of the greatest gospel singers to ever live.[1]

Musical career

Work with The Gospelaires

In 1950, Cleveland joined the Gospelaires, a trio led by Norsalus McKissick and Bessie Folk, who were associated with Martin. Martin hired him as a composer and arranger after the group disbanded. His arrangements of songs such as "(Give Me That) Old Time Religion" and "It's Me O Lord" transformed them, giving a rocking lilt and insistent drive to old standards.

The Caravans

Cleveland subsequently went to work for Albertina Walker (Queen of Gospel) and the Caravans as a composer, arranger, pianist and occasional singer/narrator. In November 1954, Albertina Walker provided him the opportunity to do his very first recording. By staying out of the studio for a while, she convinced States Records to allow him to record with her group. He continued to record with The Caravans until States closed down in 1957.[2] He left and returned to the Caravans a number of times to join other groups, such as the Gospel All-Stars and the Gospel Chimes, where he mixed pop ballad influences with traditional shouting. In 1959 he recorded a version of Ray Charles' hit "Hallelujah I Love Her So" as a solo artist.

The Angelic Choir

Cleveland signed with Savoy Records and recorded albums with the group The Angelic Choir, including his critically acclaimed 1962 debut album Peace Be Still.

The Love of God

He became known by more than just the professionals within gospel music with his version of the Soul Stirrers' song, "The Love of God", backed by the Voices of Tabernacle from Detroit. Cleveland attained even greater popularity working with keyboardist Billy Preston and the Angelic Choir of Nutley, New Jersey; his recording of "Peace Be Still", an obscure 18th century madrigal, sold hundreds of thousands of copies thanks to Cleveland's comforting growl and emotional command.

Gospel Workshop of America

Cleveland capitalized on his success by founding his own choir, the Southern California Community Choir, as well as a church that went from a handful of congregants to thousands of members during his life. His influence stretched even further: like Dorsey before him, he taught others how to achieve the modern gospel sound through his annual Gospel Singers Workshop Convention, put on by the Gospel Music Workshop of America ("GMWA"), an organization that Cleveland founded along with Albertina Walker, and which has over 30,000 members in 150 chapters. The GMWA has produced, among others, John P. Kee.

Musical style

The style he pioneered — large disciplined organizations who used complex arrangements and unusual time signatures to turn their massive vocal power to achieve the propulsive rhythms, intricate harmonies and individual virtuosity of the greatest groups of gospel's Golden Age — was still the wellspring for the mass choirs of that era.[3] [4]

Death and controversy

Cleveland died in 1991 in Culver City, California.[5] Though his death is often recognized euphemistically as having been a result of heart failure, there has been an enduring controversy as to whether or not Cleveland actually succumbed to AIDS-related complications. Interred at Inglewood Park Cemetery, Inglewood California.[6][7][8][9] Neither are widely discussed within the gospel music community.[10]

Awards

  • Grammy Award won for Best Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus 1990:
    The Southern California Community Choir: Having Church
  • Grammy Award won for Best Soul Gospel Performance, Traditional 1980:
    James Cleveland & The Charles Fold Singers: Lord, Let Me Be an Instrument
  • Grammy Award won for Best Soul Gospel Performance, Traditional 1977:
    James Cleveland: James Cleveland Live at Carnegie Hall
  • Grammy Award won for Best Soul Gospel Performance 1974:
    James Cleveland & The Southern California Community Choir: In the Ghetto

References

  1. ^ Cohen, Aaron (May 28, 2006). "Gospel Festival to honor sounds and work of James Cleveland". Tribune. http://blackgospel.blogspot.com/2006/05/gospel-festival-to-honor-sounds-and.html. 
  2. ^ The United and States Labels Part II http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~campber/unitedstates2.html Accessed August 12, 2009.
  3. ^ Heilbut, Tony (1997). The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times. Limelight Editions. ISBN 0879100346. 
  4. ^ Boyer, Horace Clarence (1995). How Sweet the Sound: The Golden Age of Gospel. Elliott and Clark. ISBN 0252068777. 
  5. ^ Carpenter (2005). Uncloudy Days: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia. Backbeat Books. ISBN 0879308419. 
  6. ^ Malcolm Venable (May 2003). "The Moving Spirit". City Limits Magazine. http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/viewarticle.cfm?article_id=2927. 
  7. ^ Thomas, Stephen B., Ph.D., F.A.A.H.B. (January/February 2000). "The Legacy of Tuskegee: AIDS and African-Americans". http://www.thebody.com/bp/jan_feb00/tuskegee.html. 
  8. ^ Cobb, J. Matthew. "Oh Happy Gay". Prayze Hymn Entertainment. http://www.prayzehymnonline.com/articles_happygay.html. 
  9. ^ Graham, Rhonda (October 23, 1994). "And The Choir Sings On". Sunday News Journal. http://www.qrd.org/qrd/www/culture/black/articles/gospel.html. 
  10. ^ Taylor, LaTonya (February 6, 2006). "Gospel Music: Great Stories, Flawed Characters". Christianity Today. http://www.christianitytoday.com/music/interviews/2006/bilcarpenter-0206.html. 
Other References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "James Cleveland" Read more