Blended
Music before “Blending” Was Cool-Part 1
About 100 years before blended music for
worship became popular in public worship as part of the worship the worship
renewal movement, Elisha A. Hoffman wrote the words to “What a Wonderful Savior”. This
song may be defined as a gospel hymn. There are several definitions given for
the gospel hymn by various authors.
These definitions run from a “mixture song” which includes praise to God mixed with clear fundamentalist doctrine to
“simple songs with an elaborate chorus”.
Some of the definitions that I have found have been positive but others
are very negative considerations of this musical genre especially because they
stress adherence to the fundamental doctrines of the Bible.
Notably, the early gospel hymns were
developed first by George Root (1820-1895), William Howard Doane (1832-1915),
Robert Lowery (1826-1899), Philip Bliss (1838-1876), et al. There have been a host of writers who have
produced these mixture songs in the 20th century. Some current writers are particularly
negative about gospel songs that exhibit clear fundamentalist doctrine and the
fact that these songs are quite simple harmonically.
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