Black Gospel Archive fills gaps in gospel music history

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The Black Gospel Archive houses records, cassettes and other artifacts from the “golden era of gospel.” The archive, inside Baylor University’s Moody Memorial Library, also holds an online collection that can be accessed by anyone.

The Black Gospel Archive houses records, cassettes and other artifacts from the "golden era of gospel." The archive, inside Baylor University's Moody Memorial Library, also holds an online collection that can be accessed by anyone. Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU hide caption

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Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU

Over the past two decades, Baylor University's Black Gospel Archive has collected and digitized more than 60,000 gospel songs, making it one of the largest digital gospel collections in the world.

The archive focuses on records from the "golden era of gospel music," roughly 1945-1980. It also houses important artifacts like recorded sermons, concert announcements and sheet music, to preserve the history of Black Gospel culture.

Now, thanks to a new grant, the archive will expand its collection to include oral histories as well.

"It is the music that endured," gospel historian Bob Darden says. He served as the lead researcher for the archive until his retirement in 2023.

The Black Gospel Archive houses a physical and digital collection of Gospel records from the Golden Era, roughly 1945-1975. The shelves also display sheet music, record sleeves and other memorabilia from this time period.

The Black Gospel Archive houses a physical and digital collection of Gospel records from the golden era, roughly 1945-1975. The shelves also display sheet music, record sleeves and other memorabilia from this time period. Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU hide caption

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Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU

Darden's 2005 New York Times Op-Ed, "Gospel's got the Blues" helped inspire the creation of the archive.

"And now, it continues to be one of the greatest legacies and greatest records of a period in American life, as shameful as it was," Darden said about the gospel music in the collection.

At a time when Black Americans were protesting segregation and discrimination, gospel boomed as a form of protest. Songs like "We Shall Overcome" became anthems for civil rights protests.

"There were many forms of expression, and we've managed to save one," Darden said. "That's going to help us understand those who came before us."

Many of the records in the archive are extremely rare. For example, the recording of "The Old Ship of Zion" performed by The Mighty Wonders of Aquasco, Md., is one of only two copies known to exist.

Little is known about the origins of each recording, unless someone associated with it contacts the archive.

These are the gaps it hopes to fill thanks to a Lilly Endowment grant received earlier this year. The archive will collect oral histories of those who lived through Gospel's golden age.

"There are people still alive in their 80s and 90s that need to be interviewed," archive researcher and ambassador Stephen Newby said. "This is going to allow me to go to them and interview them and ask them questions about their church histories and about gospel music."

Stephen Newby, research lead for the Black Gospel Archive, sits in the digitization studio housed at the Archive. Here, the archive team digitizes and re-records records that have been donated to the collection.

Stephen Newby, research lead for the Black Gospel Archive, sits in the digitization studio housed at the archive. Here, the archive team digitize and re-record records that have been donated to the collection. Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU hide caption

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Molly-Jo Tilton/KWBU

He said those oral histories are some of the biggest elements the archive is missing.

"I see the gaps in the story," Newby said. "This is going to allow me to take some time to fill some of those gaps."

The grant will also fund a four-year concert series starting in Chicago and Detroit.

Newby said there is no way to know how many uncatalogued gospel records are out there, but the team will keep digitizing them as long as donors keep sending them.

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