•
Oh Happy Day is the only traditional Gospel song ever to crossover and
become a hit on the Pop charts. "Oh Happy Day" is a Protestant hymn
that dates from 1755. It is included in the standard Baptist hymnal.
• Edwin Hawkins was a pianist at Ephesian Church of God in Christ in
Berkeley, California when he came up with the popular Latin/Soul version
of this song in 1968.
In an October 23, 2009 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, he explained that "Oh Happy Day" was one of eight arrangements he put together for the Northern California State Youth Choir, which was made up of 46 singers ages 17 to 25, and the plan was to sell an album of the songs to finance a trip to a church youth conference in Washington, D.C.
In an October 23, 2009 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, he explained that "Oh Happy Day" was one of eight arrangements he put together for the Northern California State Youth Choir, which was made up of 46 singers ages 17 to 25, and the plan was to sell an album of the songs to finance a trip to a church youth conference in Washington, D.C.
The tracks were quickly recorded live in church on a two-track tape
machine (industry standard at the time was eight-track), but the records
weren't pressed in time for the trip. They did attend the conference,
and the choir placed second in a singing competition, where they
performed two of Hawkins' arrangements, but not "Oh Happy Day," which
Hawkins said was "Not our favorite song."
500 copies of the album were made, and one of them found its way to the popular DJ Abe "Voco" Kesh at KSAN-FM in San Francisco. Other stations followed, and Buddah Records signed Hawkins to a record deal, rechristening the Northern California State Youth Choir "The Edwin Hawkins Singers" for their reissue of the album, which became a huge hit.
• The female lead is Dorothy Morrison, who signed her own deal with Buddah Records when this became a hit.
• This song was recorded for the Gospel market, and its secular success didn't go over well with everyone at the church: local officials of the denomination circulated a petition asking secular radio stations to stop airing the song. Hawkins had a different take. He told The Chronicle: "I think they thought they were doing the right thing. What confused me about it was they were teaching us all our lives that we were to take the message everywhere."
• Dan Sorkin, who was a famous DJ on radio station KSFO in San Francisco, was a big supporter of this song and gave it a huge push on his morning show. He even interviewed Dorothy Morrison and Edwin Hawkins.
• Oh Happy Day won a Grammy Award for Best Soul Gospel Performance.
500 copies of the album were made, and one of them found its way to the popular DJ Abe "Voco" Kesh at KSAN-FM in San Francisco. Other stations followed, and Buddah Records signed Hawkins to a record deal, rechristening the Northern California State Youth Choir "The Edwin Hawkins Singers" for their reissue of the album, which became a huge hit.
• The female lead is Dorothy Morrison, who signed her own deal with Buddah Records when this became a hit.
• This song was recorded for the Gospel market, and its secular success didn't go over well with everyone at the church: local officials of the denomination circulated a petition asking secular radio stations to stop airing the song. Hawkins had a different take. He told The Chronicle: "I think they thought they were doing the right thing. What confused me about it was they were teaching us all our lives that we were to take the message everywhere."
• Dan Sorkin, who was a famous DJ on radio station KSFO in San Francisco, was a big supporter of this song and gave it a huge push on his morning show. He even interviewed Dorothy Morrison and Edwin Hawkins.
• Oh Happy Day won a Grammy Award for Best Soul Gospel Performance.
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