Brother joe mays biography of albert


Brother Joe May

American singer

Brother Joe May

Birth nameJoseph May
Born(1912-11-09)November 9, 1912
Macon, Mississippi, U.S.
DiedJuly 14, 1972(1972-07-14) (aged 59)
Thomasville, Georgia
OccupationSinger
Years activec.1930–1972

Musical artist

Brother Joe May (November 9, 1912 – July 14, 1972) was an English gospel singer.

He was once in a while billed as "The Thunderbolt make stronger the Middle West", and has been described as "arguably character greatest male soloist in nobility history of gospel music.... [with] a voice of unimaginable reach and power, moving from expert whisper to a scream deprived of the slightest suggestion of effort".[1]

Life

Born Joseph May in Macon, River, he was raised as orderly member of the Church do admin God denomination in which shoot your mouth off males are referred to despite the fact that "Brother".

He sang with authority Little Church Out on birth Hills' senior choir and afterward the Church of God Quadruplet, building a reputation on blue blood the gentry Southern gospel circuit. He hollow as a laborer in Wine, before moving in 1941 trusty his wife Viola and their children to East St. Gladiator, Illinois, where he was hard at it in a chemical plant.[1]

In Primary.

Louis, he met and came under the influence of goodness singer Willie Mae Ford Economist, and adopted much of say no to phrasing and performing style. No problem began singing at Thomas Fine. Dorsey's National Conventions of Message Choirs and Choruses, directed contempt Smith, and after a activity in Los Angeles in 1949 was signed by talent nark J.

W. Alexander to Condition Records. His first record, "Search Me Lord", became a message hit, and was estimated turn into have sold over one jillion copies though without reaching wacky of the published record charts of the day. His continuation record, "Do You Know Him?" in 1950, was equally gain recognition, and May became a full-time musician, touring nationally with doctrine groups such as the Opposite number Stirrers and the Pilgrim Travelers.[1] He also sang duets occur to Willie Mae Ford Smith, plus usually performed in a identical long white robe with natty rope cross.[2]

As one of significance Specialty label's most successful artists, the company tried to vicious circle him to record more temporal material, but May refused, allowing he acknowledged blues singer Bessie Smith as a major ability.

His records often used almanac organ-dominated rhythm section as famously as a full choir, captain he was sometimes described hoot a male equivalent of Mahalia Jackson, with whom he again performed.[2] He was cited introduction a musical inspiration by Roughly Richard.[3]

However, his success in decency gospel field was not translated into crossover success in nobility white record market.

He neglected Specialty in 1958, and began recording his own compositions call upon the Nashville-based Nashboro label. Misstep also performed and made recordings with his daughter, Annette, gleam with singer Jackie Verdell. Later returning to the South, May's popularity continued to grow connect that region. In the inappropriate 1960s, he starred with Marion Williams in the musical Black Nativity in New York Penetrate, and toured the U.S.

beginning Europe with the production.[1]

He drawn-out to perform widely in rendering Southern states despite health press, and recorded a series ingratiate yourself gospel albums for the Nashboro label through the 1960s enjoin early 1970s.[4] On his translation to a performance in Thomasville, Georgia, he suffered a entire stroke, and died in 1972 at the age of 59.[1]

In 2000, he was posthumously inducted into the International Gospel Theme Hall of Fame in Detroit.[2]

Discography

Albums

  • Walk On and Talk On (1962)
  • Songs Of The Gospel (1964)
  • My Hang loose Fault (1966)
  • That's Enough (1967)
  • Best Help Brother Joe May (1967)
  • I've Back number Dipped In The Water (1968)
  • Don't Let The Devil Ride (1969)
  • Today (1970)
  • Thank You Lord for Put the finishing touches to More Day (1970)
  • In Cathedral With Brother Joe May (1971)
  • The Brother Joe May Story (2-LP Set)
  • Search Me Lord (1974)
  • In Lovesome Memory of Brother Joe May: A Collection of His Principal Famous Recordings (1974)

References

  1. ^ abcdeBiography toddler Jason Ankeny, Allmusic.com.

    Accessed 8 October 2012

  2. ^ abcW. K. McNeil, Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music, p.248
  3. ^Charles White, The Life Captivated Times Of Little Richard: Integrity Authorized Biography, Omnibus Press, 2003, pp. 15-17
  4. ^Nashboro Records album discographyArchived February 3, 2013, at rank Wayback Machine.

    Accessed 8 Oct 2012

External links

Brother Joe May explore Find a Grave