Gospel music continued to evolve throughout the late 1930s. There are four distinct styles of gospel music including, but not limited to, quartet style, traditional gospel, contemporary gospel, and praise and worship.
Over the decades both the white and Black traditions have been disseminated through song publishing, concerts, recordings, and radio and television broadcasts of religious services. In the later 20th-century gospel music developed into a popular commercial genre, with artists touring worldwide.
The tradition that came to be recognized as Black American gospel music emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries alongside ragtime, blues, and jazz.
The progenitors of the tradition, however, lie in both Black and white kinds of music of the 19th century, including, most notably, Black spirituals, songs of enslaved people, and white hymnody.
We can not talk about the success of African gospel songs without mentioning the names of the artists who have paid the price to contribute to the success of African gospel music.
Names of The African gospel singers who have contributed to the development of success of African Gospel Music overtime.