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Bluegrass Gospel
A01=Bill C. Malone
A01=Jack Edward Bernhardt
A01=Marty Stuart
At the Feet of God
Author_Bill C. Malone
Author_Jack Edward Bernhardt
Author_Marty Stuart
Bill Monroe
Brand New Church
Brother Arthur Glenn Sullivan Family Gospel Singers
Brush Arbor
Category=AVLK
Category=AVM
Category=AVP
Category=QRMB3
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eq_bestseller
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eq_music
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ethnography
fieldwork
Florida Panhandle
folklore
Glossolalia
Happy Hollow Holiness
Jesus Name Pentecostal
Jonathan Jon Gideon Causey
Joyful Noise
Lake Cove Louisiana LA
Loretta Lynn
Marty Stuart
Nashville Tennessee TN
oral history
Place of Hope
Ryman Auditorium
Shape Note Hymnals
Tree of Life Tabernacle
Victory Grove
Wagarville Washington County Alabama AL
white
Wildwood
Product details
- ISBN 9781496857682
- Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
- Publication Date: 15 Jul 2025
- Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Heavily influenced by Bill Monroe, the "Father of Bluegrass" in the 1940s and ’50s, gospel music in the South began to shift into bluegrass gospel, a style that combines both genres. In Bluegrass Gospel: The Music Ministry of Jerry and Tammy Sullivan, anthropologist and journalist Jack Edward Bernhardt explores the lives, music, and ministry of acclaimed father-daughter bluegrass gospel performers and recording artists Jerry (1933–2014) and Tammy Sullivan (1964–2017) of southwest Alabama.
Beginning in 1993, Bernhardt lived and traveled with the Sullivans as they took their music and testimony along bumpy back roads to backwoods sanctuaries from the Florida Panhandle to Mississippi, Louisiana’s bayous, Texas, Arkansas, and beyond. The author’s compelling narrative combines long-term fieldwork with extensive oral histories, archival research, photography, and tape recordings of the Sullivans’ music and testimonies in secular and sacred contexts. Bernhardt describes in vivid detail the challenges of life on the road through unforeseen circumstances and the financial uncertainty of performing for pass-the-collection-basket "love offerings," while remaining committed to doing the work they felt called to do. In an afterword by Marty Stuart, Jerry’s friend and cowriter of the 1995 Grammy-nominated "At the Feet of God," Stuart recounts his experiences playing mandolin with the Sullivan Family on the "Brush Arbor Trail" as a talented, wide-eyed twelve-year-old.
In the penultimate chapter, Bernhardt accompanies Tammy’s widower, Jonathan Causey, and their son, Jon Gideon, to churches along the same gospel trail blazed by Jerry and Tammy. With their own music ministry, the Causeys continue the legacy of song and testimony the Sullivans pursued for thirty-five years.
Ultimately, Bernhardt reflects on how his relationship with the Sullivans led to friendship and mutual respect for cultural differences that endure through time. The result is an intimate portrayal of life, faith, and family-based music ministry in the South today as in the past.
Beginning in 1993, Bernhardt lived and traveled with the Sullivans as they took their music and testimony along bumpy back roads to backwoods sanctuaries from the Florida Panhandle to Mississippi, Louisiana’s bayous, Texas, Arkansas, and beyond. The author’s compelling narrative combines long-term fieldwork with extensive oral histories, archival research, photography, and tape recordings of the Sullivans’ music and testimonies in secular and sacred contexts. Bernhardt describes in vivid detail the challenges of life on the road through unforeseen circumstances and the financial uncertainty of performing for pass-the-collection-basket "love offerings," while remaining committed to doing the work they felt called to do. In an afterword by Marty Stuart, Jerry’s friend and cowriter of the 1995 Grammy-nominated "At the Feet of God," Stuart recounts his experiences playing mandolin with the Sullivan Family on the "Brush Arbor Trail" as a talented, wide-eyed twelve-year-old.
In the penultimate chapter, Bernhardt accompanies Tammy’s widower, Jonathan Causey, and their son, Jon Gideon, to churches along the same gospel trail blazed by Jerry and Tammy. With their own music ministry, the Causeys continue the legacy of song and testimony the Sullivans pursued for thirty-five years.
Ultimately, Bernhardt reflects on how his relationship with the Sullivans led to friendship and mutual respect for cultural differences that endure through time. The result is an intimate portrayal of life, faith, and family-based music ministry in the South today as in the past.
Jack Edward Bernhardt, an anthropologist and journalist, wrote about bluegrass, gospel, and country music for more than thirty years for Raleigh, North Carolina’s The News and Observer. He has also written extensively on archaeology and music for several publications, including The Bluegrass Reader, New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Alabama’s Sacred Music Traditions, Bluegrass Unlimited, Country Music Annual, and Caves and Culture. He is former vice president of the North Carolina Folklore Society.
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