Mark Simpson on Horace Boyer–Remembering A Gospel Singer And Scholar

Horace Clarence Boyer had a profound impact on gospel music over the past 50 years. He rose to fame in the late 1950s as one half of the Boyer Brothers. He later embarked on an equally important career in music education, becoming one of the first scholars to formally study African-American sacred music.

Boyer died in July at age 74. This month, teachers, students and fans honored him at a memorial service in Central Florida.

The Boyer Brothers hit the road before they were even teenagers. But James Boyer says that their father, a pastor, set some ground rules.

“As little brothers will do, you fight. And my father didn’t want us to fight each other,” James Boyer says. “So he gave us an ultimatum when we were 10 and 11. He said, ‘You cannot go anywhere to sing until you stop fighting a year.’ That was the longest year of my life, and after that, I never hit him again.”

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