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Considered one of many leaders of Southern Gospel music John D. Vaughan was among the original pioneers. Created 1864 in Tennessee David was a music teacher, a musician and a songbook publisher. In 1900, he started the John D. Vaughan music publishing company and the Vaughan school of music in 1911 where many gospel performers studied in the coming years. In the season previous 1910, he pioneered the idea of selling songbooks on the highway when he built the initial professional quartet and delivered them on the road. Vaughan also established one of the very first stereo in Tennessee in 1922 that broadcast Southern Gospel music until 1930. Furthermore, he founded Vaughan phonograph records, which can be the initial documenting company in the south. It's obvious why Vaughan is known as the master of Southern Gospel music and why he was inducted to the southern Gospel music Corridor of Recognition in 1997.

You can't speak about James D. Vaughan without mentioning Charles Davis Tillman. Tillman is also regarded among the pioneers of modern Southern Gospel music. Created 1861 in Alabama whilst the newest boy of a Baptist preacher, Tillman has been attributed with developing African-American spirituals into old-fashioned Christian music. As a singer and musician, he was introduced to the religious sylvester stallone age.

"The Old-Time Religion" at an extremely young age where he wrote his own variation and exposed it to the white churchgoers and southerners to this new form of sound. In doing so this blend of music eventually became referred to as Southern Gospel and inspired a era of musicians such as for example Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly. Tillman continued to publish dozens of songs one of which being typically the most popular "Life's Railway to Heaven" that influenced generations. Tillman has been memorialized at the southern Gospel music Corridor of Fame and the Gospel music Corridor of Fame.

Holding on the Southern music history will be the Blackwood Brothers. Shaped in 1934 with friends Roy Blackwood, Doyle Blackwood, James Blackwood, and R.W Blackwood started singing together as a quartet. By 1940, these were previously on your way offering songbooks and performing on the air in Iowa. The quartet through the years has received several selection changes of family unit members and non-family members but over all has been important in the Southern Gospel music organization for 76 years. They encouraged ages of quartets that followed them such as the Kingsmen Quartet, the Statesmen Quartet and the Walnut Ridge boys.

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