A Legend In Southern Gospel Music

 
 

Ivan M. Tribe, 33°
111 East High Street, McArthur, Ohio, 45651-1111

Hovie F. Lister, Gospel Singer and Southern Baptist Minister, was one of the most beloved and popular country music entertainers of his time.

Southern Gospel, particularly that of vocal quartets, has been an important musical form to millions of Americans who find it both musically and spiritually satisfying. In the 1940s and 1950s, gospel quartet music moved from being almost totally performed by gifted amateurs to being a commercialized form dominated by professional groups such as the Blackwood Brothers and the Statesmen Quartet. The latter group was led by our recently deceased Brother, Hovie Franklin Lister, 32°, the subject of this biographical sketch. An especially skilled pianist, frequent vocalist, and gifted showman, Bro. Lister gained fame as the man who "put rhythm in religion."

Hovie Franklin Lister was born in the textile-mill city of Greenville, South Carolina, on September 17, 1926. He acquired his unusual first name from a Reverend Hovie whom his parents admired. When he reached the age of six, his parents had him take piano lessons. He soon progressed to the point where he became accompanist for an amateur quartet, the Lister Brothers, that included his father and uncles. They performed in local churches, at singing conventions, and on a local radio station. At age 14, Hovie accompanied the noted sacred composer C. Austin Miles of "In the Garden" fame. In addition, Lister furnished music for the well-known evangelist Reverend Mordecai Ham. Æ Aiming to further his already considerable musical ability, Lister continued his education at the Stamps-Baxter School of Music, one of the two leading publishers of the softcover hymnals favored by quartets and sponsored singing schools, song conventions, and touring quartets throughout the South.

After completing high school, Lister came to Atlanta, Georgia, in 1945. The city was emerging as the center for many of the professional gospel quartets, partially on the strength of the All-Night Singing Conventions. Over the next three years, Hovie gained additional experience playing with the Rangers Quartet, the Homeland Harmony Quartet, and the LeFevre Trio. In addition to their singing appearances in churches and auditoriums, these groups regularly appeared over WAGA and WGST radio in Atlanta.

Hovie Lister's ultimate dream, however, was to lead his own group, and in October 1948, this goal became reality when he organized the Statesmen Quartet. The group took their name from the newspaper, the Statemen, which served as the political voice of Georgia Senator and then Governor Herman Eugene Talmadge. This gave Hovie's new quartet a high degree of name recognition from the start. Other early members of the aggregation included Jake Hess, who subsequently went on after some 15 years with Lister to found his own group, the Imperials; James "Big Chief" Wetherington, a legendary bass singer; Mosie Lister, who ranked as their first lead singer; and baritone vocalist Doy Ott, an Oklahoman who was as renowned in his field as was Wetherington in his. In 1953, Denver Crumpler joined the Statesmen Quartet, remaining until his untimely death in 1957. Crumpler was replaced by Roland "Rozie" Roselle, who also spent many years with the quartet. Although Hovie Lister primarily worked as pianist, leader, and emcee, he switched parts and did vocals on occasion.

Hovie Franklin Lister became a Mason in Oglethorpe Lodge No. 655 in Atlanta, Georgia. He received his Entered Apprentice Degree on August 18, 1952, his Fellowcraft Degree on September 22, 1952, and was raised to the Sublime Degree of Master Mason on October 13, 1952. After a series of mergers, his membership was at Masters Lodge No. 295 in Decatur, Georgia, at the time of his death. He subsequently completed his Scottish Rite Degrees in the Valley of Atlanta on April 21, 22, 23, and 24, 1953, and became a Noble of Yaarab Shrine Temple in Atlanta on December 16, 1953. He served as Chaplain of the latter for several years. As a Shriner, he helped organize the annual Sundown to Sunup Gospel Singing in Waycross, Georgia, which, over a period of years, raised over a quarter of a million dollars for the Shrine Hospitals.

Meanwhile the members of the Statesmen Quartet continued to make their mark in the gospel music field. They secured a contract with Capitol Records and in 1954 began an 18-year affiliation with RCA Victor, ranking them second only to the Blackwood Brothers as long-term contractees on that major label. Hovie was surpassed only by the Chuck Wagon Gang on Columbia. For some time, they had two daily radio programs on WCON (owned by the Atlanta Constitution), and after this newspaper's merger with the Atlanta Journal, Lister had programs on WSB, the number-one station in all Georgia. As television gained in popularity, the quartet had programs on WSB. They also had a nationally syndicated program, "Singing Time in Dixie," under the sponsorship of the National Biscuit Company, the first gospel quartet to be so featured. The Statesmen also appeared on several network TV shows as guests including the Arthur Godfrey Show, Tennessee Ernie Ford Program, Dave Garroway's Wide Wide World, and the Jimmy Dean Show. The quartet appeared on WSM radio's legendary Grand Ole Opry a number of times. Motion picture opportunities also knocked on their door as they did the sound track for the popular 20th Century Fox 1955 film biography of Brother Peter Marshall. Titled A Man Called Peter, the film starred Richard Todd and Jean Peters in the lead roles. They also did the sound track in 1957 for another movie, God Is My Partner, starring Walter Brennan.

In 1964, Bro. Hovie F. Lister (seated at the piano) led the Statesmen Quartet, composed of (l. to r.) Roland "Rozie" Roselle, Jake Hess, Doy Ott, and James Wetherington.

Over the years, a number of personnel changes took place in the quartet. Jake Hess left in 1963 to form his Imperials. Jack Toney succeeded him as lead vocalist. "Rozie" Rozelle departed to be replaced by an Ohioan named James Vaughn Hill. When the Statesmen's association with RCA Victor expired, they recorded several albums for the all-gospel Skylite Records.

Not long after the death of James Wetherington in 1973, Bro. Lister decided in October 1974 to disband the Statesmen. Soon after, he organized what might be termed a super-gospel group that included himself as leader and pianist, the equally legendary James Blackwood and bass vocalist extraordinaire J. D. Sumner (formerly of the Sunshine Boys and the Stamps Quartet), and two former Statesmen, Rozelle and Hess, naming them the Masters V. This group won a Grammy during their years together but, after a time, disbanded. Hovie then reorganized the Statesmen remaining active until a few weeks before his death.

A tremendously energetic individual, Bro. Hovie Lister had a second career for a number of years from 1951 as an ordained Baptist minister. According to his friend former Georgia Governor and current U. S. Senator Zell Miller, "Throughout his years of travels, [Hovie] always came back to fill his country-church pulpit at the little Mt. Zion Baptist Church near Marietta . . . from which he refused to take any salary." More recently, he served as deacon at the Druid Hills Baptist Church in Atlanta. Several Governors of Georgia named him "Ambassador of Good Will," and he also served as a Field Representative during the 1987-1993 U. S. Senate term of Wyche Fowler. In spite of all his activities, Hovie and his wife, the former Ethel Abbott of Lithonia, Georgia, found time to rear two children, Lisa and Chip.

Numerous honors came to Brother Lister during his lifetime. He received eight Grammy nominations, winning one. In 1984, he was named to the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Two years later, he was chosen for the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. In addition, he received two honorary doctorates, one of them from Burton College and Seminary in Colorado. Together with his musical associates James Blackwood and J. D. Sumner, he was credited with founding the National Quartet Convention, the first of which was held in Memphis, Tennessee. He also served on the Board of Directors of the Gospel Music Association. In later years, Lister was the subject of a full-length biography by David L. Taylor, Happy Rhythm: A Biography of Hovie Lister & the Statesman Quartet.

Time eventually caught up with Bro. Hovie Franklin Lister. While long familiar with his music and name, my own interests grew more serious when I was asked to write an entry on him by the editor of the forthcoming Encyclopedia of South Carolina. When I contacted Hovie in November 2001, he sent me, in quick order, sufficient information for a 300-word entry. When his PR bio mentioned that he was a Mason and Shriner, my interest developed further, and I called him again concerning an article in the Scottish Rite Journal. He sounded flattered to be the subject of such an article, but the only question I asked him was if he had caught much criticism for his Masonic membership within Southern Baptist ranks. He responded that he had received very little, in part because many Southern Baptist ministers were numbered among his Masonic Brethren. Although Hovie never complained beyond apologizing for being somewhat hoarse voiced because he had just returned from three days of concerts in Indiana, I learned from my friend, historian Charles Wolfe, that Brother Lister was quite ill. He passed away on December 28, 2001, from what the newspapers termed "acute lymphoblastic leukemia." Thus this article is somewhat more limited in scope and quality than it might have been. Nonetheless, Brother Lister certainly earned his niche in the annals of Southern Gospel Music. Perhaps no better tribute could be paid to him than that of former Georgia House Speaker Tom Murphy who said "He [is one who] has given the world so many smiles."


Note: In addition to my brief conversations with Brother Lister and his wife in November 2001 and the material they furnished, I am indebted to the staff of the Grand Lodge of Georgia, the Valley of Atlanta, Georgia, S.J., Yaarab Shrine Temple, Atlanta, and Ill. John W. Boettjer, 33°, G.C., Managing Editor, Scottish Rite Journal, for assistance in developing this article.


Ivan M. Tribe
is a member of Albany Lodge No. 723 in Albany, Ohio, and the Scottish Rite Bodies of Cambridge, Ohio, N.M.J. In September 2000, he received the 33° in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A Knight of the York Cross of Honor and a Professor of History at the University of Rio Grande in Ohio, he was recently appointed Associate Editor for The Encyclopedia of Gospel Music and is a frequent contributor to various Masonic publications, including the
Scottish Rite Journal.