Since striking out on her own in 1966 after eight years as star soloist of the Caravans, Shirley Caesar has been sweeping across America and around the world, delivering her electrifying Christian messages in song and sermon, picking up 11 Grammy Awards, 18 Dove Awards, 14 Stellar Awards and numerous other honors along her journey. She has been a standard-bearer for traditional African American gospel music, yet at the same time has been unafraid to challenge conventions and take the music in daring new directions.

Born October 13, 1938, in Durham, North Carolina, she was greatly inspired by her father, Big Jim Caesar, a tobacco farmer who sang with an a cappella quartet called the Just Come Four. He died of a brain seizure when she was ten. To help support her semi-invalid mother and a dozen siblings, she hit the road as a gospel soloist with a one-legged evangelist named Leroy Johnson. Billed as “Baby Shirley,” she cut her first single, I’d Rather Have Jesus / I Know Jesus Will Save, for Federal Records in November 1951. The label on the 78 r.p.m. single described her as a “12 year old lass,” although she had actually just turned 13 at the time of the recording.


Release

The Best Of Shirley Caesar With The Caravans

Millennial Reign


Videos

YouTube player
YouTube player
YouTube player