Christian
music is music created by or adapted for the Christian church. It also includes
Contemporary Christian music, in which the music explores Christian themes but
is designed to be played in places other than churches. Music during service for
many churches is a big part of the worship. Hymns are sung, psalms are vocalized
and spiritual songs are uplifted to praise God. Sometimes, musical instruments
are played while singing is implemented in the service. On the other hand, some
times churches use just a cappella to worship God. At times, just musical instruments
are only used to express praise towards God. More recently, in newer and more
charistmatic churches, music played by bands accompanies whole songs that are
sung to worship God. All of these ways (and more) are used by one church or another
in this period of time.There
is record of the earliest music of the Christian church in a few New Testament
books of what are probably hymns. Some of these fragments are still sung as hymns
today in the Orthodox Church, including "Awake, awake O sleeper" on
the occasion of someone's baptism. Being
Jewish, Jesus and his disciples would most likely have sung the psalms from memory.
However, without a centralised music industry, the repertoire of ordinary people
was much greater than it is today, so they probably knew other songs too. Early
Christians continued to sing the psalms much as they were sung in the synagogues
in the first century
Gospel music refers to the religious music that first
came out of African-American churches in the first quarter of the twentieth century
or, more loosely, to both black gospel music and to the religious music composed
and sung by predominately white Southern Gospel artists. While the separation
between the two styles was never absolute both drew from the Methodist hymnal
and artists in one tradition sometimes sang songs belonging to the other.The sharp
division between black and white America, particularly black and white churches,
kept the two apart. While those divisions have lessened slightly in the past fifty
years, the two traditions are still distinct. In
both traditions, some performers, such as Mahalia Jackson have limited themselves
to appearing in religious contexts only, while others, such as Sister Rosetta
Tharpe, the Golden Gate Quartet and Clara Ward, have performed gospel music in
secular settings, even night clubs. Many performers, such as The Jordanaires,
The Blackwood Brothers, Al Green, and Solomon Burke have performed both secular
and religious music. It is common for such performers to include gospel songs
in otherwise secular performances, although the opposite almost never happens. .Gospel
is a musical genre characterised by dominant vocals (often with strong use of
harmony) referencing lyrics of a religious nature, particularly Christian. Subgenres
include contemporary gospel and urban contemporary gospel. Gospel is the the successor
to spirituals, consisting of religious songs close to the style of late-nineteenth-century
popular music.
Christian
/Gospel Music Resource Links | |
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