Rebert H. Harris (March 23, 1916 – September 3, 2000) was an American
gospel
Gospel originally meant the Christian message (" the gospel"), but in the 2nd century it came to be used also for the books in which the message was set out. In this sense a gospel can be defined as a loose-knit, episodic narrative of the words a ...
artist and lead singer of the
Soul Stirrers
The Soul Stirrers were an American gospel music group, whose career spans over eighty years. The group was a pioneer in the development of the quartet style of gospel, and a major influence on soul, doo wop, and Motown, some of the secular musi ...
. He had a pure tenor three-octave voice that he utilized for moans and slurs and leaps into falsetto. He was instrumental in transforming the ensemble
jubilee quartet style of the 30s into the lead-focused hard gospel style of the 40s and 50s. He was inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 as a member of the Soul Stirrers; the group was also inducted into the
Vocal Group Hall of Fame
The Vocal Group Hall of Fame (VGHF) is an American-based hall of fame that honors vocal groups throughout the world in every genre of music. Headquartered in the Columbia Theatre in Sharon, Pennsylvania, it includes a theater and a museum.
It was ...
in 2000. He was the fountainhead of numerous gospel and soul singers, and direct model to
Sam Cooke, who replaced him as lead singer of the Soul Stirrers.
Early life
Harris grew up on a farm 13 miles outside
Trinity, Texas
Trinity is a city in Trinity County, Texas, United States. The population was 2,343 at the 2020 census.
History
Trinity was founded in 1872 on land purchased from the New York and Texas Land Company. The town was a railroad station on the Houston ...
in the former "Blackland" settlement (named after the darkness of its soil, not the racial constitution of its residents). James and Katie Harris and their nine children (Rebert was their sixth) lived about 300 yards from the barbed wire fence of the Eastham Prison Camp, where convicts would toil in the fields and sing themselves back home with a mixture of spirituals and blues.
Musical career
Rebert says he started arranging his first gospel quartet, with his brother Almo and two cousins, before he even knew what the quartet style was. The group was called the Friendly Four and then the Friendly Gospel Singers when Harris moved to town to start seventh grade at the Trinity Colored High School. After tenth grade, which is as far as the school went, 15-year-old Harris attended Mary Allen College in nearby Crockett and weighed a tempting offer to join (Silas) Roy Crain's (aka "Senior" Crain or S.R. Crain) group the Soul Stirrers, who had moved to Houston. At the time the Soul Stirrers were a jubilee group, singing poppy, up-tempo numbers such as "Down By the Riverside". But as soon as Harris finally committed (Rebert says the year was 1931; gospel historians usually put the year at '35 or '36), he helped change the group's sound to a slower, deeper, more passionate hard gospel style.
Harris claimed to have no musical influences besides ones he found in the trees and fields of his family's farm outside Trinity.
In the late 1940s, Harris helped to create the
National Quartet Convention
The National Quartet Convention (NQC) is an annual gathering of Southern Gospel quartets and musicians. It is held at the Leconte Center in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, United States.
History
The first National Quartet Convention was held in 1957. ...
to help "professionalize" the African-American gospel music community.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harris, R. H.
1916 births
2000 deaths
American gospel singers
20th-century American singers
People from Trinity County, Texas