The story of gospel music's chartbusting mainstream success and the accompanying shifts in Black Christian theology.
From the clandestine spirituals of the enslaved--songs that voiced sorrow, hope, and an unshakeable belief in divine deliverance--to the rousing anthems of the Civil Rights era, gospel music has shaped and reflected the deepest yearnings of Black Americans striving toward freedom. During gospel's celebrated golden age (ca. 1945-1965), the music became inseparable from the struggle for racial justice. At the same time, the genre gained unprecedented visibility in Black churches and the American mainstream. Performers such as Clara Ward, Mahalia Jackson, and Sam Cooke expanded the reach of sacred music, carrying its message across cultural and religious boundaries.
Ethnomusicologist, minister, and singer Charrise Barron explores the next major era in Black gospel: the two decades between 1993 and 2013, which she calls the platinum age. In this transformative period, gospel music fully embraced the aesthetics of popular culture. Artists like Kirk Franklin and Mary Mary topped the charts, adopted contemporary styles, and reached audiences far beyond traditional church settings. Commercial success both fostered and responded to profound shifts. Influenced by Pentecostal megachurches and new theological trends, platinum-age gospel retained its spiritual resonance while largely dispensing with the golden age's political impulses.
While the platinum age delivered popularity and financial returns, it also diluted gospel's historical role as a prophetic voice against injustice. Combining music criticism, cultural history, and theological insight, Barron offers a compelling account of how gospel music has continually reinvented itself--and what it gained and lost in the process.