Various Artists
Gospel Diaries Golden Memories (Live)
Gospel Diaries (release date: October 7, 2024)
By Robert M. Marovich
Gospel Diaries Golden Memories is a series of musical moments captured by historian Eric Maurice Clark during his visits with vocalists and musicians, most of whom have direct links to gospel’s earliest days, especially in Chicago, the genre’s birthplace city. Not captured in a studio but in churches and private homes, the 25 selections sound like field recordings, complete with background chatter, hallelujahs, testimonies, and other exhortations.
As a whole, the project feels like an all-night sing, a combination of the communal joy of a Gaither Homecoming and the informality of the Million Dollar Quartet, with each listener an eavesdropper on the session.
The songs, like the artists who perform them, hail from the traditional gospel era. The playlist includes selections from two veteran gospel singers who passed away recently, Rodessa Barrett Porter and Vernon Oliver Price. Other participating artists include Elsa Harris, Zella Jackson Price, Richard Jackson, Cliff Dubose, Dello Thedford, Leanne Faine (she sings her trademark song, “Holy Ghost”), and Cleo Kennedy. Loretta Oliver sounds as good as ever on “Something About God’s Grace.” Clark’s grandfather, Bishop Jesse McDowell, contributes a couple of gospels at the beginning and the end of the project. Among the younger generation in the mix are Calvin Bridges (he sings his composition “I Can Go to God in Prayer” with Vernon Oliver Price), Pastor DeAndre Patterson, Minister Tim White, and Bishop Dan Willis and Yvonne Ruff.
James Herndon offers the collection’s standout moments. He accompanies himself on piano on several selections, including “Where Is Your Faith in God” and “The Angels Keep Watching” (aka “Angels Watching Over Me”). Herndon proves he could – and ought to – record an entire album of traditional selections, something along the lines of what Steven Dolins’ The Sirens label has done for veteran gospel singers and keyboardists in the past couple of decades.
Given the on-the-spot nature of the recordings, the organ and piano come through loud and clear, but many of the vocalists could have benefited from better microphone placing. Exceptions are Pastor DeAndre Patterson of Chicago’s Christian Tabernacle Church, whose voice is so strong on “It Pays to Serve Jesus” that he probably didn’t need a mike at all; and the effervescent Zella Jackson Price on the chestnut “I Don’t Know About Tomorrow.”
Nevertheless, each of the singers and musicians demonstrates that a good Zion song, like a good Zion song vocalist, neither goes out of style nor loses its ability to touch the heart.
Four of Five Stars
Pick: “The Angels Keep Watching”
Written by : Bob Marovich
Bob Marovich is a gospel music historian, author, and radio host. Founder of Journal of Gospel Music blog (formally The Black Gospel Blog) and producer of the Gospel Memories Radio Show.