Randy Matthews (born 1950) is an American Christian singer, songwriter, guitarist, and pioneer of
Jesus music
Jesus music, known as gospel beat music in the United Kingdom, is a style of Christian music that originated on the West Coast of the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s. This musical genre developed in parallel to the Jesus moveme ...
. He was born into a family with at least five ordained ministers, including his father, Monty, a founding member of the
Jordanaires
The Jordanaires were an American vocal quartet that formed as a gospel group in 1948. Over the years, they recorded both sacred and secular music for recording companies such as Capitol Records, RCA Victor, Columbia Records, Decca Records, Voca ...
. When Matthews was in high school in Lamar, Mo., he sang in a quartet called The Zionaires, which was also founded by his father. This quartet performed regionally and sang in quartet competitions. Other members of the group included Noel Scott, baritone; Spike (Carl) Bickel, tenor; and Dan Fields, bass.
Matthews briefly attended Ozark Bible College in Joplin, Mo. During this time he joined Noel Scott and Charlene Munger in the developing movement of Christian folk music. This experience helped Matthews to choose a less traditional path to ministry. After leaving college, he founded a coffee house ministry in Cincinnati with the purpose of promoting social activities among Christians and providing a safe haven for street people.
In 1971, Matthews was signed as the first contemporary Christian artist to record for
Word Records
Word Records is a Christian faith-based entertainment company based in Nashville, Tennessee. It is owned by Curb Records, and is a part of Word Entertainment. It is distributed by Warner Records (the former Warner Bros. Records).
History
In ...
, a gospel label which had, up to that point, released spoken word recordings and albums of traditional gospel music. His first album was ''Wish We'd All Been Ready''. With the release of his second album, ''All I Am Is What You See'', Word launched a new label called
Myrrh Records, created specifically to tap into the musical interests of the burgeoning
Jesus movement.
Matthews' music and concert style has always pushed the envelope. In 1974, Matthews was invited to perform at The Jesus Festival, a Woodstock type event in which attenders camped out and listened to Christian music and Bible teaching for three days. When Matthews' band took the stage, the promoters and many in the crowd were shocked at their rock and roll presentation; up to this point most contemporary Christian music was more influenced by folk than rock. Matthews' band was unplugged by the promoters and chased off the stage by the concert-goers. Matthews referenced this experience on his fourth album, 1975's ''Eyes to the Sky'', with the track, "Pennsylvania Song": "you pulled the plug and drained my soul, but I know I left a ring around the tub of tradition, I saw some dance and sing" and again in his ninth solo album, titled ''Plugged In''.
Matthews is currently working under the stage name Red Beard,
performing frequently at the Trade Winds Resort in St. Petersburg Beach, Florida and the Palm Island Resort. He recently released an album of pirate songs and tall tales called ''Red Beard Pirate King''.
In 2015 ''Son of Dust'' was remastered by Bim Ingersoll at Rockroach Studio, and independently released on CD by Stowaway Music. This was the first time any of Matthews albums from the 1970s was available on CD.
Discography
* ''Wish We'd All Been Ready'' (1971)
* ''All I Am Is What You See...'' (1972)
* ''Son of Dust'' (1973)
* ''Eyes to the Sky'' (1975)
* ''Now Do You Understand'' (1975) - double live album
* ''Matthews, Taylor & Johnson'' (1976)
* ''The Best of Randy Matthews'' (1976)
* ''Live in Australia'' (1978)
* ''Randy Matthews'' (1980)
* ''Plugged In'' (1981)
* ''Streets of Mercy'' (1987)
* ''The Edge of Flight'' (1990)
* ''Red Beard Pirate King'' (2008)
References
*
*
External links
Randy Matthews on musicmoz.org
{{DEFAULTSORT:Matthews, Randy
1950 births
Living people
American performers of Christian music
American male singers
American male guitarists
20th-century American guitarists
20th-century American male musicians