![]() ![]() His songs have been recorded by Kenny Chesney, John Anderson, The Oak Ridge Boys, B.J. The Atlanta area resident penned top hits for country singers Travis Tritt and Tanya Tucker. After some solo albums, Pat found success in Nashville as a songwriter. ![]() Pat Terry is best known as a pioneer in contemporary Christian music with his three-man band that toured college campuses and churches in the 1970s. Artists include folk singer Bobby Jo Valentine, bassist Adam Nitty, bluegrass band Arkansauce, and singer-songwriter Pat Terry. “Our people are excited about this,” said Dant, who put the schedule together. This allows for reaching a larger audience - with fans of the musicians learning about the church and for artists to sell some of their merchandise to help support themselves during this hard time. The church pays $250 “sponsorships” to the artists for the house concert - which are carried on both the church’s Facebook page and the musician’s. As a result, the church decided to sponsor a series of Saturday night home concerts available on Facebook Live. So Jim reached out to some musician friends to see how they were doing when unable to hit the road. The music, the ministers noticed, drew a larger online audience. Pop singer Livingston Taylor, rock guitarist Nita Strauss, and the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus are but a few to share their unique gifts at the church in ways not typical for them as performers - or for a Baptist congregation.ĭuring social isolation, the church shifted to live-streaming for worship and “Viral Vespers” - which include both spoken and musical offerings from the ministerial staff. “It has been such a big part of what we are doing.” “Music speaks in a different way,” said Dant. So he has engaged with a wide variety of musicians as part of his ministry. Jim Dant is pastor of First Baptist Church of Greenville, S.C., yet his clergy robe hardly conceals the bass guitar playing, wannabe rocker inside. So Lee concluded others might find such solace and that, in a time of physical separation, the best way was to live stream his singing of those beloved hymns. “When I turned around to say, ‘Hey,’ he was like, ‘Don’t mind me just keep going.’” “One day, while I was back there singing, I noticed one of my neighbors was quietly drinking a beer and smoking a cigarette in his backyard and listening,” Lee recalled. He added: “I’d noticed I was needing to do that more than normal recently.” And he rightly assumed others needed the same hope that comes from old hymns of faith. “But I grew up singing and playing in church, and when I’m having a hard time and dealing with anxiety, uncertainty and doubt, and just generally rough stuff, I sit in our backyard and sing old gospel songs by myself.” “We’re definitely a secular rock-and-roll band, that plays songs I write loud and amped up,” he said. But his music couldn’t completely stop - and the weekly, solo live-streaming gospel hour seemed right. Like many musicians, Lee and his band mates had to cancel tours - including a long one in Texas, centered on the popular yet postponed South by Southwest festival. In an interview with Nurturing Faith, Lee said music for him is “a deeply human mode of communication that can carry with it a sense of intimate connection, and I think we are all craving that right now.” One could almost feel the swaying in homes around the Internet when he rocked a bit with Luther Barnes’ “Satan Take Your Hands Off Me,” and the comment stream filled when he slowed things down with Kris Kristofferson’s hit, “Why Me, Lord?” ![]() Other comforting hymns of faith followed, such as “When The Roll Is Called Up Yonder,” “The Old Rugged Cross” and “There’s A Land That Is Fairer Than Day.”Īs requested by “Aunt Nancy” - Lee’s partner in family Rook competitions -he sang “His Eye Is On The Sparrow.” “When times are tough, this is a good one to sing.” “This is one I associate with my grandparents,” he said. ![]() With guitar in hand, or occasionally a banjo, he sings not the latest tunes on his albums or popular cover songs - but beloved hymns that shaped his faith while growing up in Birmingham, Ala.įor Holy Week, the live-streamed “Lee Bain’s Inclusivist, Liberationist Hour of Gospel” began with a soulful rendition of the spiritual, “Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord).” Then he sang the reassuring “It Is Well With My Soul.” Lee Bains III had planned to be touring with his band, The Glory Fires - that “draws deeply from punk, but also soul, power pop, country, and gospel.” Yet, like just about everyone else, Lee became homebound this spring.Īnd, like many other musicians of all genre and varied notoriety, Lee has put his good gifts to good use.Įach Wednesday evening - “until COVID is over or I run out of songs” - Lee welcomes listeners into his Atlanta living room for a one-man, low-tech show via Facebook Live. ![]()
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