HOF Nominee Consideration
Is there an individual that has made a
profound impact on Christian & Gospel
music but are not yet inducted into the
Hall of Fame? Submit an application
for their consideration.
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Gospel Music Association
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Year of 2004

 

Goodman, Vestal

Vestal Goodman, known affectionately as the “Queen of Gospel Music” died Dec. 27, 2003 at the age of 74 from complications of the flu. Goodman was notified earlier that December of her induction.  A founding member of the Happy Goodman Family, Goodman was the first artist to receive a Female Vocalist of the Year Dove Award in 1969. A multiple Dove and Grammy Award-winning artist, Goodman originally desired to study for the Metropolitan Opera, but instead stayed true to her roots in the church and devoted herself to singing gospel music. As part of the Happy Goodman Family, Goodman helped launch Word Records as the fledgling record company’s flagship artist in the early ’60s. She recorded her first solo album in 1975 and her voice has been heard by millions across the world during her five decades of concerts, television appearances and speaking engagements. A frequent participant of Bill and Gloria Gaither’s “Homecoming” tour and video series, Gaither himself has said she has the most dynamic and greatest voice in the history of gospel music, saying, “Vestal is a national treasure!”

Green, Al

Al Green formed his first gospel group at the age of nine in Forest City, Ark., and has been singing the gospel ever since. The Green Brothers toured throughout the South in the mid-1950s before the family relocated to Grand Rapids, Mich. There, Green began singing soul music on his own, incorporating gospel and his signature wild moans and wails. In 1976, when Green was at the peak of his popularity, he bought a church in Memphis, Tenn., and became an ordained pastor of the Full Gospel Tabernacle. At first he continued to record secular material, but by the ’80s, he was concentrating solely on gospel. Throughout the ’80s he released a series of gospel albums on Word/Myrrh. From 1981-89, Green won seven gospel Grammy Awards. In 1982 he appeared in the gospel musical, “Your Arms Too Short to Box with God,” with Patti Labelle. Green was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1995. In February 2002, the National Recording Academy’s National Trustees bestowed the 2002 Lifetime Achievement Award to Al Green in a special televised segment on the 44th Annual Grammy Awards Show.

Patty, Sandi

With 39 Dove Awards and five Grammy Awards to her credit, Sandi Patty is the most awarded female artist in the history of contemporary Christian music. Her 23 albums have sold more than 11 million units, including three Platinum- and five Gold-certified albums. Recipient of the Dove Award for Female Vocalist of the Year a record 11 times, her career has spanned more than two decades as she has taken her music to very corner of the world. In 1986, she introduced herself to the nation with her rendition of the “The Star Spangled Banner” during the rededication of the Statue of Liberty, which was broadcast across the country as part of ABC’s special “Liberty Weekend.” Since then she has appeared on numerous primetime specials and shows, including NBC’s “Christmas in Washington,” “The Tonight Show,” ABC’s “Disney Christmas Special,” and “Pop Goes the Fourth” with the Boston Pops Orchestra.

Preston, Frances

BMI president and CEO Frances W. Preston is being inducted in the non-performer category of the GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame. She has been called “one of the true powerhouses in the pop music business” by Fortune magazine. Preston joined the performing rights organization in 1958 after working in the music and broadcasting industries in Nashville. She opened BMI’s southern regional office there, and was named Vice President in 1964. Under her leadership, the southern operation grew to more than 400 employees housed in a building on Music Row that was opened in 1995. Preston brought the same drive and business acumen to New York, becoming Senior Vice President of Performing Rights in 1985, and was appointed President and CEO in 1986. At BMI, Preston’s most prominent contributions have come through her political vigilance when it comes to the rights and incomes of songwriters, composers and publishers. She is a permanent board member of the Gospel Music Association, where she served as Chairperson and President, as well as a lifetime member of the Country Music Association and the Nashville Songwriters Association International. On a charitable level, she is President of the T.J. Martell Foundation for Leukemia, Cancer and AIDS Research and her involvement has led to the creation of the Frances Williams Preston Research Laboratories at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center and the dedication of a major medical research building in her name.

 

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