Sunday, September 13, 2015

Marion Williams - Born To Sing The Gospel


"Marion Williams (August 29, 1927 – July 2, 1994) was an American gospel singer.
Marion Williams was born in Miami, Florida, to a religiously devout mother and musically inclined father. She left school when she was nine years old to help support the family, and worked as a maid, a nurse, and in factories and laundries. She began singing in front of audiences while young. As was common in the area, Williams learned African-American blues and jazz, alongside Caribbean calypso. Poverty caused Williams to leave school at fourteen, working with her mother at a laundry, although she eventually graduated from Pacific Union College in 1987. She was singing at church and on street corners, inspired by a wide range of musicians, including Sister Rosetta Tharpe and the Smith Jubilee Singers. She stuck with gospel in spite of pressure to switch to popular blues tunes or the opera. (she would have been terrifyingly good at either)

Williams was invited to join the Ward Singers when they heard her singing during a visit to a close friend in Philadelphia in 1946. Williams did so in 1947, staying with them for eleven years. Her first recording with the group was "How Far Am I from Canaan" (1948), followed by the breakthrough "Surely God Is Able", which launched Williams and the rest of the group into superstardom. Their concerts were mobbed by frenzied fans.

Dissatisfied with the low pay she was receiving while starring for the group, Williams left the Ward Singers in 1958, followed by most of the rest of the group, to form the Stars of Faith. The Stars of Faith was unable, however, to reproduce the success the Ward Singers had enjoyed, as Williams retreated from the spotlight to give other members of the group more opportunity to star. The group's career recovered, however, in 1961, when it appeared in Black Nativity, an Off-Broadway production, and toured across North America and Europe.

In 1965, Williams began a solo career but soon returned to Miami for her mother's funeral. While there, she felt reinspired to continue her career and began touring college campuses across the country. Her perhaps best-known hit is from this period -- Standing Here Wondering Which Way to Go." wiki

 "Born to Sing the Gospel returns Marion Williams to her home church, Philadelphia's B.M. Oakley Memorial Church of God in Christ; the material is engagingly varied, spanning from the bluesy original "Sometimes I Ring Up Heaven" to the traditional title track to the medley of the classics "Christ Is All" and "Jesus Is All." Though in fine form throughout, Williams hits her peak on "Death in the Morning," her delivery charged with all of the raw power of a field recording." AMG

9 comments:

wouter said...

thank you for this uplifting start of my sunday , KC! and i'm not even religious... :-)

Feilimid O'Broin said...

But for weddings, baptisms, and funerals, I haven't stepped inside a church in forty two years. Not a boast, just a fact, as I am not religious and informed my parents when I was fifteen that it was hypocritical for me to attend and go through the motions. So for years my Sunday mornings have been devoid of any routine or observance; that is, until you began posting gospel selections. Now I look forward to discovering gospel artists and listening to the passion and emotion in their songs. I doubt it will afford me any entrance to that most select of private clubs when my time is up, but it sure makes the remaining Sundays more enjoyable. Marion Williams is simply wonderful. Thanks so much and the best of holidays to you and yours as well as all of the other contributors who make this, the Crypt Redux, and Buddy Bolden's so remarkable.

Mutha Klanger said...

Wow KC. This one is a real stunner. A bit dangerous to listen to while driving in the Xmas Eve madness, given the overpowering urge to clap hands and stamp feet that MW generates. I made it home in one piece :-) thank you

the doc said...

I got this last winter but didn't comment. I've listened to it now and really enjoyed it. Cool Down Yonder is so smooth and funky, one hardly realizes that one is listening to gospel!! THe MW tracks on Great Gospel Women, vols I & II are also wonderful. HAPPY FATHER'S DAY and thanks!!

LAZZ said...

Great re-post, Sire.
I missed this first time around.
Timely serendipity.
Thank you.

KingCake said...

http://www.embedupload.com/?d=5KEMD5J5DT

Anonymous said...

Thank you for giving us another opportunity to enjoy this gospel artist. There are many renditions of gospel songs that I always compare to the version that Mahalia Jackson gave us. Lately, however, I've grown up enough to realize that a masterful artist in full control of his/her instrument can afford us a new listening experience. IMHO, such a realization opens the listener to a much wider range of opportunities. Thank you, KingCake for always presenting the masters. LOLness

Goneahead said...

first, thank you so so much for this and the last gospel series. Great stuff, and much appreciated! Also, I just picked up a 5 CD Gospel import from Wagram - if you are interested, I'd be happy to figure out a way to get you a copy. Its the least I can do after the fantastic gospel you've been posting here!

http://www.renaud-bray.com/Disques_Produit.aspx?id=1446346&def=Best+of+Gospel+(The)+(5CD)%2CCOMPILATION%2C3284032

KingCake said...

I think the best plan would be to upload the discs and then put the links in the Shares and Requests - Then you kind of advertise it by leaving a note in the chat box so folks will go look for it.

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