Archive for "sagma"

We Don’t Really Celebrate Gospel Music Heritage Month, Do We?

September is Gospel Music Heritage Month!

To celebrate, this site will… well, there’s going to be a conference on… wait, no… an awards show will honor…

Nevermind. September is Gospel Music Heritage Month and, every year, very little is done to celebrate it. I’m chiefly guilty of it– I think I may have attempted to begin thinking about doing something a couple of years back.

A bit of background… the country has been celebrating Gospel Music Heritage Month since 2008, after Congress passed legislation acknowledging September as the month to honor gospel music. The initiative was spearheaded by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX) and the National Recording Academy for Arts & SciencesGospel Music Channel (now known as gmc) and the Gospel Music Association.

But did you even know it was Heritage Month? Do you support or celebrate it?

I bet you’re not among the 864 people who “like” its official Facebook fan page, nor are you among the 37 people who follow its official Twitter profile (don’t feel bad, I just learned of it as I wrote this). And I know you don’t visit the GospelMusicHeritage.com website, which now simply redirects to the homepage of gmc, the organization that hosted the web address as the movement grew.

Ok, it’s not completely as desolate as I’m making it seem.

At the top of this month, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts hosted its 3rd annual “Evolution of Gospel” celebration in honor of Heritage Month. With a “Kennedy Center Honors…” type of vibe, the night honored the contributions of Dr. Bobby Jones, Cathy Hughes and First Lady Michelle Obama, who was unable to attend. The evening featured performances by Kirk Franklin, Richard Smallwood, Marvin Sapp and more.

And Heritage Month’s social media properties are hinting at some OFFICIAL event taking place in Houston, TX this month, though they haven’t announced a date or location.

My thought is that, because the gospel music community does not have an official, unified trade organization representing it, there is no group charged with really celebrating anything in it, including Heritage Month. Plenty of organizations– from SAGMA to GMWA, GMA to BMI, NARAS to various acronyms in between– have done their part to honor the music and culture, but these groups are often overworked and understaffed, with other primary corporate objectives. Their celebrations are splintered across the country and across the calendar year. Who can plan a month’s worth of unified gospel music activities?!

Again, this is not a knock against anyone– GospelPundit.com hasn’t exactly been the hub of Heritage Month features, trivia and giveaways. I tend to tell myself “ahhh, next year!”

But my observations do raise the question– we don’t really celebrate Gospel Music Heritage Month, do we?

If you agree, fine. If you disagree, tell me where the party is and let’s have at it.

Either way, I think we all need to do a bit more.

In The News: Vote For Stellar Awards' Radio Stations & Announcers

I don’t… quite… understand this one.

Just in case you didn’t get your fill of public voting, SAGMA’s back with more for ya!  From now until December 1st, you can vote to determine the Radio Station Of The Year and Gospel Announcer Of The Year winners for the 2010 Stellar Awards.

To vote, visit http://www.thestellarawards.com and click the “official ballot” link on the right side of the page.  Like last time, all you’ll need is a valid email address to vote.

But don’t forget… you’re only allowed to vote ONCE, guys, okay?  We’re using the trusty, foolproof HONOR SYSTEM, just like last time, to make sure we have accurate and fair public voting.

:neutral:

I’m halfway between laughter and tears.  Someone is just BEGGING for an outcry.  Would it have been too much to prevent repeat voters by blocking I.P. addresses?  Even the polls on this website prevent people from voting twice, unless you use multiple computers or something.

Like… honestly, who sat in the meeting and said “we can trust ‘em to just vote once“?  And who ELSE sat in the meeting and said “y’know, you’re RIGHT!”

And on the heels of the backlash that they faced last time?!  REALLY?!

*sighing* Go vote.  Vote and pray. :roll:

ChitChat: Open Letter To SAGMA & CCP (Stellar Awards)

This afternoon, I announced on Twitter that I’ve drafted an Open Letter to the Stellar Awards Gospel Music Academy (SAGMA) and Central City Productions (CCP), the two bodies responsible for the Stellar Awards and its voting process.

As many of you know, there was a tremendous uproar among the gospel music community when this year’s Stellar Award nominees were announced last week, leading many to question the integrity and legitimacy of the awards program altogether.

Without making a statement either way, I believe that God led me to write what will, prayerfully, prompt an edifying dialogue within the gospel music community and, ultimately, lead SAGMA to address some very valid concerns regarding some of its operating procedures.

I have pasted the entirety of my Open Letter below.  I invite you to comment here, on the blog, about it.  Even more, I urge you to sign the petition that I started, so that SAGMA & CCP can understand how widespread some of these concerns truly are: http://www.petitionspot.com/petitions/sagma.

I look forward to hearing your thoughts!

*     *     *

 Open Letter ToThe Stellar Awards Gospel Music Academy (SAGMA)
And Central City Productions

I believe gospel music to be the greatest genre in the music industry.  More than the excellent musicianship and staggering vocal abilities, the message of the Gospel, often wrapped in a diversity of sounds, is the only message that has the ability to truly transform lives and set its listeners free, eternally.

Twenty-five years ago, Central City Productions (CCP) began the Stellar Awards, acknowledging the value of this genre of music and embarking on a journey that would better the gospel music industry for decades to come.  It is with great pride and gratitude that I applaud Don Jackson and his team at CCP for their commitment to gospel music, the people who create it, and the consumers who are blessed by it.  Understandably, then, it is with a great degree of sadness and frustration that I now pen this letter to express my concerns with the current state of the awards show, specifically as it relates to the voting process.

Immediately following the Stellar Awards press conference on October 29, 2009 in Nashville, TN, the gospel music community witnessed a rather significant outcry from consumers, media, commentators, artists and executives within the gospel industry on numerous social networking websites and new media outlets.  Shocked by the absence of several chart-topping, established artists from the nominees list, and by the presence of several lesser-known artists in some of the overall categories, the gospel community’s voice of dissension rose greater by the hour.

As I am certain you will agree, the value of any awards show is only as great as the perceived legitimacy of its voting process.  At present, the overwhelming sentiment of the gospel music community is that the SAGMA voting process has been compromised and no longer adequately reflects the voice of the gospel industry.  With prayer and thought, I have drafted this letter in hopes of creating a dialogue with SAGMA about how the gospel community can, collectively, ensure that integrity and legitimacy return to the Stellar Awards voting process.

I have pinpointed three key areas of concern, from which a litany of other issues flow—enforcement and accountability, membership criteria and, most recently, the public vote.  I briefly address each of these concerns below:

~ Enforcement and Accountability ~

At its core, I believe the issue to be one of enforcement and accountability.  SAGMA should enforce the rules it has in place and the gospel music community should be able to determine whether those rules are, in fact, being enforced.  Though I am a dues-paying member of SAGMA, I do not possess a copy of any governing by-laws for the organization, nor do I know that such by-laws even exist.  The gospel community has no way of ensuring that the SAGMA Executive Board follows protocol, as we have not been made privy to what the protocol is.  As a result, various decisions have been made for which we can trace neither the origin nor intent.

For example, for each of the past three years, the eligibility dates, by which an album must have been released in order to be considered for an award, has shifted for reasons not fully explained to the community.  Months are skewed and deadlines extended but, in the end, the validity of the award is diminished in the sight of the public.  The official website of the Stellar Awards states that a “confidential Nominating committee” ensures that eligibility criteria are met, but such a committee is of no effect if the eligibility criteria remain fluid and erratic.

Similarly, the website states that entries must be “charting on the Billboard or Nielsen Sound Scan charts” in order to be included on the first ballot.  If I were to audit the first ballot, which was made available to public voting, and compare the first-round nominees with the Billboard charts of that eligibility period, I am not convinced that each nominee would be listed.

Finally, I am absolutely certain that, this year, the first-round ballot was changed in the middle of the voting period to add an artist who was not originally on the list of first-round nominees.  No official statement was made by SAGMA about the addition of that artist’s name whatsoever—the gospel music community was expected to simply accept it and proceed accordingly.
 
Within SAGMA, decisions appear to be made unilaterally and behind closed doors.  The gospel music community is given information on a need-to-know basis, if at all.  While I can respect the notion that this process requires a certain degree of confidentiality, I believe that greater transparency is still necessary.  It is essential to the integrity of the organization.

~ Membership Criteria ~
 
According to the official website of the Stellar Awards, CCP formed the Stellar Awards Gospel Music Academy (SAGMA) to serve as the “official Stellar Awards voting body aimed at industry professionals.”  The website further states that, to acknowledge the numerous supporters of gospel music “who are not actively working in the industry,” a second level of membership was added to SAGMA—that of an Associate Member.

As it presently stands, any individual who desires to participate in the Stellar Awards voting process may do so after simply completing an application, which we assume has been reviewed by someone, and paying the annual membership fee of $85.  In fact, and perhaps in response to the national economic crisis, SAGMA boasted a “2-for-1” discount this year, such that two individuals were able to join the voting body for the price of one.

Though the SAGMA membership application designates that one must join either as an “industry professional” or as a “non-industry professional,” the criteria for what constitutes an “industry professional” seems unreasonably broad, allowing applicants to either select an industry role from among the roles listed, or to simply write-in a role, and submit a biography.

I believe that the integrity of SAGMA requires that voting members have their finger on the pulse of what has been driving the gospel music industry that year.  To discourage the tendency to turn an awards show into a popularity contest, it is essential that the voting body of SAGMA be comprised of professionals who work in this industry, not merely anyone who submits a membership payment that year.

I take note of the requirements of the voting bodies of other awards shows, such as the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (NARAS), which is responsible for the GRAMMY Awards.  In order to be a voting member of NARAS, one must have “creative or technical credit on a minimum of six tracks” on albums that have been “commercially released in the United States.”  Further, qualifying albums must have been sold on a non-consignment basis, such that a retailer must have purchased the albums in advance of individual sales.  If an album is only sold on Amazon.com, CDBaby.com, or similar websites, it does not qualify.

Clearly, because of the intricacies of our industry, SAGMA cannot adopt such a strict policy.  A great amount of albums released in the gospel music industry do not receive such broad distribution, and are often sold on a consignment basis.  Still, the NARAS requirements have merit and should at least be considered in restructuring the eligibility requirements of a “voting member” of SAGMA.

Also unique to our genre and industry is a consideration of the type of voting designation that should be extended to members of choirs and ensembles.  Perhaps a membership distinction of some sort should be made between a signed recording artist in our industry, and a person whose name is merely added to unverifiable liner notes as a member of a large mass choir, for example.  It seems unlikely that the two share equal footing in terms of expertise, leaving me to wonder whether they should share equal voting rights.  The current “pay-to-vote” structure strips SAGMA of its legitimacy in the public view.

~ The Public Vote ~

This year, the industry saw SAGMA undertake a positive and noteworthy initiative—allowing the public to participate in the Stellar Awards voting process.  I believe, however, that the weight of the public’s participation should have been tempered in some way.  Other awards shows have created special awards, such as “People’s Choice Awards” or “Fan Favorite” awards.  Similarly, some awards shows allow the members’ votes to carry greater weight than the internet votes of the public (i.e., in a 2:1 ratio).

In either case—by creating a special award or by weighing the votes accordingly—the governing bodies of other awards shows have successfully acknowledged the voice of consumers while resting on the expertise of industry professionals.  In so doing, the voting bodies have maintained the integrity of the voting process.  I believe this to be a viable option for SAGMA and the Stellar Awards.

I am not asking that SAGMA and CCP amend the current list of nominees or in any way change its plans for the upcoming awards program.  Despite rumblings on the internet about consumers who plan to boycott the upcoming awards show and future shows, I have no intention of doing so.  Instead, I am eager to celebrate the past 25 years of gospel music with CCP and SAGMA.

I respectfully urge you, however, to take these concerns into consideration for the upcoming year.  I believe I can speak for the gospel music community in requesting an opportunity for continued dialogue and a review and/or revising of the current SAGMA structure and operating procedures.  At the very least, I look forward to a public statement in response to the above-noted concerns.  Please be careful to not merely dismiss this letter as a shallow complaint.  I believe that the concerns in this letter represent the concerns of the full spectrum of the gospel music community.

It is vital that the gospel music community believes in the integrity of the SAGMA voting process.  It would be tragic to see the Stellar Awards, now in their 25th year, begin to flounder, as the designations of “Stellar Award winner” and “Stellar Award nominee” come to carry no significance in our marketplace.

Sincerely,

EJ Gaines
Editor, GospelPundit.com