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McClurkin, Donnie
Donnie McClurkinSinger Ordained in May of 2001, the Reverend Donnie McClurkin has taken a long road toward establishing his own ministry not far from the Long Island town where he grew up. The victim of childhood sexual abuse that left long-term scars, McClurkin turned to local church groups for support and became active in gospel choirs from the age of nine. Eventually, he formed his own gospel group as a teenager with family members and friends. As an adult, McClurkin served as an associate minister to the Reverend Marvin L. Winans, head of a famous gospel singing family, and continued to use his music to express his relationship with God. McClurkin also invoked his faith to overcome a string of serious illnesses that threatened not only to take away his singing abilities, but his life as well. After his solo recording debut in 1996, McClurkin balanced the demands of a successful recording and performing career with his need to continue his spiritual explorations; five years later, as an ordained minister, he founded a Perfecting Faith Church in Long Island. As McClurkin told Marjorie Ford of Dallas-Fort Worth radio station WFAA, “This is my job. The only reason He’s given me this platform is so that I can use it to evangelize the world, and let them know about Jesus. And then, step in the background, fade in the shadows, and let all the glory go to God.” Born on November 9, 1959, to Frances and Donald McClurkin, Donnie McClurkin grew up in a house full of children in the suburban town of Amityville, on New York’s Long Island. “In our household there were so many kids,” he remembered in an interview with Soul Train. “There were like two sets: the older set and the younger set. My mom and dad had ten kids all together.” Tragedy marked the family, however; when McClurkin was eight years old, a younger brother was struck and killed as he followed McClurkin across the street in front of their home. Compounding the tragedy, McClurkin was sent to stay with some relatives while his parents coped with the loss of their son; while in their care, the youth was subjected to sexual abuse by an older male relative. Later, as a teenager, he was molested by another male relative, and the combined incidents sent McClurkin on a long quest for spiritual recovery that fueled much of his later work. With his home life in disarray, McClurkin took an active role in his local church. “At nine years old, I received Him and I used to study the Bible,” he told Marjorie Ford, adding, “All I had was church. That’s all I did. I played no sports. I had no extracurricular activities. All I did was church.” In particular, the youth was drawn to the power of music in the Pentecostal and Evangelical churches that his family attended. “What I couldn’t verbalize,” he told Ebony, “I could express musically. It was an escape. When you sang, you left everything. You entered a place that was literally divine.” McClurkin was also inspired by meeting acclaimed gospel star For the Record…Born on November 9, 1959, in Amityville, NY; son of Frances and Donald McClurkin. Formed the McClurkin Singers and New York Restoration Choir as a young adult; ministered and sang at Perfecting Church in Detroit; released first solo record, Donnie McClurkin, 1996; published testimonial memoir, Eternal Victim, Eternal Victor, 2001. Awards: Dove Award, Traditional Gospel Recorded Song of the Year, 2001; Gospel Music Excellence Awards, Male Vocalist, Traditional Album, Producer, Song of the Year, Video Concert, Video Concept, 2001. Addresses: Record company —BMG Records, 1540 Broadway, New York, NY 10036, website: http://www.bmg.com. Publishing company —Pneuma Life Publishing, 4451 Parliament Place, Lanham, MD 20706, website: http://www.pneumalife.com. Website —Donnie McClurkin Official Website: http://www.donniemcclurkin.com. Andrae Crouch, who served as an informal mentor to the aspiring singer. As a teenager, McClurkin turned into something of a gospel music impresario. In addition to playing piano for a local youth choir, he formed the McClurkin Singers with four of his sisters and four of their friends. McClurkin also engaged in ministry work through music, taking another choir around New York City to sing on street corners in run-down neighborhoods. In 1983 McClurkin met one of the foremost African American ministers in the country at a gospel music seminar; his chance meeting with the Reverend Marvin L. Winans, head of the Perfecting Church, led to an invitation to join the ministry in Detroit, which McClurkin accepted in 1989. McClurkin’s period in Detroit allowed him to come to terms with his traumatic past experiences, which he began to incorporate into his sermons at the Perfecting Church. He also faced a number of new challenges, however, including a bout with leukemia in 1990. Rejecting his doctors’ advice to seek medical treatment, McClurkin decided to turn to the power of prayer to cure himself. After a month of intensive prayer, McClurkin claimed that the symptoms were in remission, and that they disappeared entirely in two months. “God healed me without any chemotherapy,” he told Ebony. “Whenever something like that happens, it’s amazing.” Later, McClurkin also invoked the healing nature of prayer to remove a cyst that had developed in his throat; after suffering with it for three years, it suddenly went away, a development that the singer ascribed to his religious faith. His association with Reverend Winans—a member of America’s best-known family of gospel singers—helped McClurkin secure a recording contract for a solo project, which he completed in 1996. The self-titled debut contained original songs, such as McClurkin’s composition “Stand,” as well as gospel classics like “Holy, Holy, Holy.” A critic from the Christian Music Review Headquarters website gave McClurkin a rave review, commenting, “This man can sing like few men I’ve ever heard…. He has a voice that’s hard to forget.” The album eventually earned a gold record for sales. McClurkin’s recording career was off to an excellent start; however, he now faced the challenges of keeping his success in perspective. “It challenges you to keep the message just as pure and just as strong as it was while you were in the church and never to compromise because of the different platforms,” McClurkin said in a Family Christian Stores website interview with Amy Meyering. “Stay just as committed to the gospel of Jesus Christ no matter where He puts you. It’s not that hard to do. It’s a pleasure for me.” McClurkin also faced the dilemma of retaining his credentials within the gospel community while enjoying mainstream success. After the release of his second album, Live in London and More… in 2000, McClurkin told Billboard ‘that “Some of the traditional gospel community is like a country club—they don’t want to let any ‘outsiders’ in, and they don’t want you associating with others who aren’t in the club. But I don’t believe that crossing over is wrong; it just gives artists like myself more latitude to interact with the secular folks. If anything, it’s in the secular arena where gospel music needs to be heard.” McClurkin admitted, however, that his own attempts to reach out to a wider audience sometimes left him disappointed. After contributing a track to inspirational talk show commentator lyanla Vanzant’s album, In the Meantime, McClurkin said that his participation was “a mistake,” as he commented to Melanie Clark of the Gospel Flava website. Upset at what he perceived as Vanzant’s lack of commitment to Christianity, McClurkin said, “She is a wonderful person, as a person. People get the devil and people mixed up. She is a wonderful person, and if you were to meet her you would love her and probably talk for hours, but aside from that, she deceived us royally.” McClurkin’s reputation as a leading new gospel artist was affirmed with his Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Recorded Song of the Year in 2001, which added to his Gospel Music Excellence Awards for Male Vocalist, Traditional Album, Producer, Song of the Year, Video Concert, and Video Concept that same year. Once again branching out into a number of projects, McClurkin returned to recording with his sisters and their friends, this time as the McClurkin Project. He also continued his ministry work, being ordained in May of 2001 and opening up his own Perfecting Faith Church on Long Island. McClurkin also published an inspirational memoir in 2001, Eternal Victim, Eternal Victor, which detailed his own recovery from sexual abuse and his struggle to define his sexuality in accordance with his Christian principles. Stirring up new criticism for his belief that homosexuality can be suppressed through prayer, McClurkin told Meyering, “I’m going to stir up a bee’s nest of controversy. I already have a few people in the gay community that have started to take up arms. But I don’t care…. If they want to fight, fine, let’s fight. Let’s fight but know that I’m fighting to win. I don’t care about their propaganda and their agenda. The bottom line, there’s a whole slew of [people] out there that want to be delivered.” Selected discographyDonnie McClurkin, Warner Bros., 1996. (Contributor) Prince of Egypt: Inspirational (soundtrack), DreamWorks, 1998. Live in London and More…, BMG/Verity, 2000. ‘Til So Sweet, Atlantic, 2001. SourcesPeriodicalsBillboard, March 17, 2001, p. 11; August 25, 2001, p. 35. Ebony, August 2001, p. 110. Jet, June 25, 2001, p. 18. Online“A New ‘Don,‘” Family Christian Stores, http://www.familychristian.com/music/interviews/donnie_mcclurkin.asp (December 6, 2001). “Donnie McClurkin,” Christian Music Review Headquarters, http://christianmusic.org/cmp/cmrh.htm (December 6, 2001). “Donnie McClurkin,” Gospel Flava, http://www.gospelflava.com/reviews/eternalvictim-eternalvictor.html (December 6, 2001). “Donnie McClurkin,” Soul Train, http://www.soultrain.com/star/donniebk.html (December 6, 2001). “Donnie McClurkin: Gospel Music’s Rising Star,” WFAA.com, http://www.wfaa.com/wfaa/articledisplay/0,1002,22833,00.html (December 6, 2001). “Praying for Change,” St. Petersburg Times, http://www.sptimes.com/News/072401/Floridian/Praying_for_change_.shtml (December 6, 2001). —Timothy Borden |
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Cite this article
Borden, Timothy. "McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. 30 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. Borden, Timothy. "McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. (May 30, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3495300053.html Borden, Timothy. "McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2002. Retrieved May 30, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3495300053.html |
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McClurkin, Donnie
Donnie McClurkinGospel singer As one of the most prominent figures on the contemporary gospel scene, Donnie McClurkin understands the transformative power of music. For McClurkin, gospel music has provided a sonic pulpit from which to preach and teach his spiritual beliefs. He told Essence magazine, "Through my music, I stress that what's important is your relationship with God. It's not about how often you go to church." It is with this belief that the singer, songwriter, and minister has made some of the most influential music of his generation. Although he was raised within a religious family, McClurkin's strong commitment to the church is also connected to his troubled childhood. Donnie McClurkin was born in Long Island, New York, on November 9, 1959, to Frances and Donald McClurkin Sr., who had nine other children. McClurkin sought emotional and spiritual refuge in the Amityville Gospel Tabernacle after being sexually abused by a family member at a young age. He became a devoted member, and found that the church helped him deal with his traumatic experience. Music quickly became another means for McClurkin to negotiate his personal struggles. While attending church services at Bethel Tabernacle in Jamaica, New York, a ten-year-old McClurkin had the opportunity to listen to and meet gospel legend Andráe Crouch. The meeting encouraged McClurkin to develop his own talent and to use music as a release from his troubled world. "What I couldn't verbalize," he told Ebony magazine, "I could express musically. It was an escape. When you sang, you left everything. You entered a place that was literally divine." McClurkin's decision to devote himself to the church enabled the young artist to focus almost entirely on gospel music. He learned to play the piano and began to form musical groups, most notably the McClurkin Singers, which was comprised of four of his sisters and four close friends. McClurkin would rent sound systems and bring his groups to the city's most dangerous and deprived neighborhoods to perform, as a way of spreading his gospel message. McClurkin quickly gained a reputation as a rising star on the local gospel music scene. In 1983 McClurkin met the Rev. Marvin Winans, of the famous Winans music family. Impressed by his talent and sincerity, Winans recruited McClurkin to help him start a ministry in Detroit, Michigan. McClurkin moved to Detroit in 1989 and became the associate minister of Perfecting Church. It was from Perfecting Church that McClurkin began to develop a national reputation, as he began to tour and perform at various churches and gospel venues throughout the country. As McClurkin's star began to rise, he once again experienced a personal setback. At the age of 31 he was diagnosed with leukemia. Instead of opting for the traditional chemotherapy as a method of treatment, McClurkin decided to rely on his religious faith as a vehicle for his own recovery. "I tell people to believe that God will save you," he said in Ebony, "[and] I had to turn around and practice the very thing that I preached." One month after receiving the diagnosis from his doctor, McClurkin reported that he was fully healed without the help of medicine. Buoyed by what he deemed a miraculous recovery, McClurkin began to pursue his music career more aggressively. He soon received a recording contract and began preparing his self-titled debut album, which was released in 1996. The song's biggest hit, "Stand," received a critical endorsement from daytime television superstar Oprah Winfrey. McClurkin told Jet, "She stood on television, held the CD up and said, 'This is my favorite CD in the world. After you've done all you can, stand. You all need to buy it.'" The popular reception for "Stand" and "Speak to my Heart," the album's other standout single, earned McClurkin a certified gold record and a Grammy nomination, positioning him among contemporary gospel's elite. For his second album, McClurkin Project, McClurkin reassembled the McClurkin Singers to create an eclectic blend of contemporary gospel. The project took three years to complete and debuted on the Top Gospel Albums chart at number 12. McClurkin's third album, Live from London, was recorded in September of 1999 and released in 2001 to rave reviews. The album featured the instant classic "We Fall Down," which remained at the top of the gospel charts for 40 weeks and frequently appeared near the top of R&B chart, enabling McClurkin's crossover into urban radio. As he told Jet, the song's lyrics resonated not only with his ever-growing audience but with McClurkin himself: "This is one of the most powerful songs I've ever heard, and it's the perfect summation of the Christian life. As saints, we are nothing more than sinners who fell down and then got back up again by the power and forgiveness of God." Unlike many artists, McClurkin has been willing to publicly address the personal struggles that have informed his musical and spiritual direction. In 2001 he published the book Eternal Victim, Eternal Victor, which details his struggles with leukemia, family abuse, alcoholism, and his sexual identity. In the book McClurkin shares his personal stories, in an effort to inspire and motivate through his Christian faith. In addition to publishing, McClurkin has devoted considerable time to preaching his faith on Sunday morning. In 2002 McClurkin opened the Perfecting Faith Church in Long Island, New York, where he serves as the senior pastor. Despite his efforts to spread his gospel message through other media, McClurkin has continued to make powerful music. In 2003 he released another LP, Again, which debuted at the top of the gospel charts. At a moment when the sounds of sacred and secular music are growing increasingly similar, McClurkin has been instrumental in keeping his traditional brand of gospel music in the public ear. McClurkin told Billboard magazine, "Urban may be the form of gospel that's recognized as growing, but that's not all there is. I'm serving it up straight, and that's what a lot of people are looking for." For the Record . . .Born on November 9, 1959, in Long Island, NY; son of Donald and Frances McClurkin. Formed group McClurkin Singers with family members and friends; met the Rev. Marvin Winans, 1983; moved to Detroit, became associate minister at Winans's Perfecting Church, 1989; released Donnie McClurkin, 1996; released McClurkin Project, 1999; released Live In London…And More, 2001; published autobiography Eternal Victim, Eternal Victor, 2001; opened Perfecting Faith Church in Long Island, NY, 2002; released Again, 2003. Addresses: Management—Sierra Management, 1035 Bates Ct., Hendersonville, TN 37075, phone: (615) 822-5308. Booking—The Alliance Agency, phone: (615) 824-0753, fax: (615) 824-2983, website: http://www.theallianceagency.com. Website—Donnie McClurkin Official Website: http://www.donniemcclurkin.com. Selected discographyDonnie McClurkin, Warner Bros., 1996. McClurkin Project, Gospocentric, 1999. Live In London…And More, Verity, 2001. Again, Verity, 2003. SourcesPeriodicalsBillboard, January 29, 2000. Ebony, August 2001. Essence, January 2001. Jet, June 25, 2001; January 6, 2003. OnlineDonnie McClurkin Official Website, http://www.donniemcclurkin.com (December 20, 2004). —Marc L. Hill |
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Cite this article
"McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 30 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (May 30, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3430500040.html "McClurkin, Donnie." Contemporary Musicians. 2005. Retrieved May 30, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3430500040.html |
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