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View Full Version : BREAKING NEWS: Christian rock pioneer Larry Norman dies.


ABlairican Pie
02-25-2008, 12:09 AM
It has been announced that Christian rock pioneer Larry Norman, who gave the world early Christian music classics as "I Wish We'd All Been Ready", "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music?", "The Rock That Doesn't Roll", and "Sweet, Sweet Song Of Salvation" in the early 70's, has died this morning. He was not in the best of health in the past several years, but was still active in music. He was 60 years old. Many people who are fans of Christian music may not be familiar with him, but he was the one person responsible for starting it in the late 60's.

I met him at a concert in Seattle in 1982.

:rip:

AKA
02-25-2008, 11:16 PM
While it's been well-known he'd been in poor health for years, his death is certainly a loss to the genre of Christian rock. He was definitely a trailblazer, if not the trailblazer.

R.I.P.

Zoneboy
02-26-2008, 02:37 AM
Link (http://blog.christianitytoday.com/ctliveblog/archives/2008/02/father_of_chris.html)

February 25, 2008 9:07PM
“Father of Christian rock” dies
Larry Norman left a large footprint before he eventually became estranged from the Christian music industry.

By Sarah Pulliam

Christian music legend Larry Norman died Sunday of heart failure, according to his brother Charles Norman. He was 60.

Norman, a blonde, long-haired rocker who is often called the father of Christian rock music, was a giant in the Christian music industry, Chris Willman, senior music writer for Entertainment Weekly told Christianity Today.

“His influence outweighed his sales so much that it’s comical,” Willman said. “He certainly had a heart for evangelism, almost to his detriment I might say. He really could’ve been a star if he were singing about something other than Jesus.”



Norman’s 1972 Only Visiting This Planet album is regarded as one of the top contemporary Christian music albums of all time. His many hits were cutting edge, said Larry Eskridge, associate director of the Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals at Wheaton College.

“The song ‘Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music?’ was one of his enduring trumpet blasts against the stogie, old Christian establishment,” Eskridge said. “‘I Wish We’d All Been Ready’ fit with the end times, apocalyptic feel that was in the air at the time.”

“I Wish We’d All Been Ready” was also featured in the 1972 end times film A Thief in the Night. In concerts, the singer would give his trademark "One Way" gesture, pointing an index finger toward heaven. Eskridge said Norman was an icon during the Jesus People of the 1960s but distanced himself from the movement when it became a fad and eventually faded.

Norman became less prominent on the music scene after suffering head injuries in an airplane accident 30 years ago, and later he had severe heart problems. He dictated a message to a friend just before his death.

“I feel like a prize in a box of cracker jacks with God’s hand reaching down to pick me up,” Norman said. “I have been under medical care for months. My wounds are getting bigger. I have trouble breathing. I am ready to fly home.”

He officially retired in 2001, the same year he was inducted into the Gospel Music Association’s (GMA) Hall of Fame along with Elvis Presley and Keith Green.

“His flame burned the brightest in the 70s, but he set a lot of things in motion that are reverberated through those decades,” said GMA President John Styll. Norman’s songs have also been recorded by contemporary Christian artists such as Rebecca St. James, DC Talk, and Audio Adrenaline.

Styll called Norman a Bob Dylan figure for the Christian world because he combined social commentary with good music.

“He sang about Gonorrhea on Valentine’s Day,” Styll said. “Another group today wouldn’t sing that. It was pretty raw.”

Although Norman left a large footprint, he also became estranged from the music industry because of strained relationships. He was diagnosed with bipolar trauma and clashed with fellow singers like Randy Stonehill and Daniel Amos, who said they were mistreated financially and personally, according to the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music.

Stonehill declined to take questions from CT about his relationship with Norman, but in a statement, he said he knew Norman better than anyone else and that the singer introduced Stonehill to Christianity.

“For as brilliant and insightful as Larry was, I'm not sure that he understood himself completely,” Stonehill said. “This issue became apparent in the way he consistently seemed to ‘derail’ relationships throughout his life.”

Stonehill said that he and Norman experienced friction and distance for 20 years before standing on stage together for the last time in 2001.

“It’s a strange sorrow that leaves you feeling hollow, like someone knocked the wind out of you,” he said. “The light of hope, however, that lifts my spirit is the knowledge that Larry’s profound contribution to the work of God’s Kingdom is eternal and that his struggles with his own demons is over.”

David Di Sabatino, who is working on a documentary on Norman that will be released later this year, said that the 1980s were a real turning point for Norman.

“He implodes on a personal level, his marriage unravels, his peers want him to be more accountable, and he throws a fit. From that point on, something degenerates inside of him,” Di Sabatino said. “He’s like King David. The highs are higher than most and the lows are like, ‘whoa.’”

Di Sabatino said Norman was unpredictable and often exaggerated stories.

“There’s a possibility that he’s living in Thailand and this is all a ruse. That might offend a lot of people, but that’s how he was,” Di Sabatino said. “I don’t believe that, but then again, if you told me that’s where he was, I wouldn’t bat an eye.”

Even though Norman has been out of the music industry for a while, Di Sabatino believes his music may see a rise in interest.

“He stands at ground zero and carved out this place for people like Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith,” Di Sabatino said. “His death now will introduce other people to his music again.”

http://blog.christianitytoday.com/ctliveblog/upload/2008/02/Concert%20pic-thumb.jpg

AKA
02-26-2008, 04:11 PM
Message Larry Norman left for his fans on his website (via his brother) the day before he died:

I feel like a prize in a box of cracker jacks with God's hand reaching down to pick me up. I have been under medical care for months. My wounds are getting bigger. I have trouble breathing. I am ready to fly home.

My brother Charles is right, I won't be here much longer. I can't do anything about it. My heart is too weak. I want to say goodbye to everyone. In the past you have generously supported me with prayer and finance and we will probably still need financial help.

My plan is to be buried in a simple pine box with some flowers inside. But still it will be costly because of funeral arrangement, transportation to the gravesite, entombment, coordination, legal papers etc. However money is not really what I need, I want to say I love you.

I'd like to push back the darkness with my bravest effort. There will be a funeral posted here on the website, in case some of you want to attend. We are not sure of the date when I will die. Goodbye, farewell, we will meet again.

Goodbye, farewell, we'll meet again
Somewhere beyond the sky.
I pray that you will stay with God
Goodbye, my friends, goodbye.

Larry