The Fairfield Four is an American gospel group that has existed for over
90 years. They started as a trio in Nashville, Tennessee's Fairfield
Baptist Church in 1921. They were designated as National Heritage
Fellows in 1989 by the National Endowment for the Arts. The group won
the 1998 Grammy for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album. As a quintet,
they featured briefly in the motion picture O Brother, Where Art Thou?.
The
group gained more popular recognition after appearing on John Fogerty's
1997 album Blue Moon Swamp, singing on the track "A Hundred and Ten in
the Shade". They also undertook live appearances with Fogerty.
During
the 1940s, the Fairfield Four were among the top-ranked gospel
quartets, along with the Dixie Hummingbirds, Five Blind Boys, and Soul
Stirrers. Originally a gospel duet created in the early '20s by the
pastor of Fairfield Baptist Church in Nashville to occupy his sons,
Harry and Rufus Carrethers, they became a gospel trio with the addition
of John Battle. The group was transformed into a jubilee quartet by the
'30s and began the first of numerous personnel changes. They recorded
for RCA Victor and Columbia during the decade and were known for their
reinterpretations of standard hymns, featuring bright, close baritone
and tenor harmonies. When the Fairfield Four sang, they utilized the
full extent of their voices, moving easily from deep, rolling basslines
to the staccato upper peaks of the tenor range, all executed with
precise, intricate harmonies and ever-shifting leads.
the
Fairfield Four reached their broadest audience when the Sunway Vitamin
Company sponsored a nationally broadcast radio show for them daily at
6:45 a.m. on WLAC, Nashville. At the same time, they also continued
touring; it was a grueling schedule, especially with the drive to
Nashville, and often the group would be missing a member or two on the
show. In 1942, the quartet recorded for the Library of Congress, but by
1950, it all became too much. Coupled with some financial trouble and a
dwindling radio audience, the Fairfield Four broke up, though one
member, Reverend Sam McCrary, used the group name to perform with other
quartets. In 1980, the Fairfield Four from the '40s was reunited for a
concert in Birmingham, Alabama, by Black gospel specialist Doug Seroff.
In 1989, they were designated as National Heritage Fellows by the
National Endowment for the Arts. They continue to perform, though the
original members are either deceased or retired.
