Gabriel Hardeman | |
---|---|
Birth name | Gabriel S. Hardeman |
Also known as | Gabriel S. Hardeman, Jr. |
Born |
Atlanta, Georgia |
December 13, 1943
Died | June 23, 2012 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
(aged 68)
Genres | Christian R&B, gospel, traditional black gospel, contemporary R&B, urban contemporary gospel, soul |
Occupation(s) | Singer, songwriter, pianist |
Instruments | vocals, singer-songwriter, piano |
Years active | 1916–2001 |
Labels | Savoy, Crystal Rose, Birthright |
Associated acts | Gabriel Hardeman Delegation |
Gabriel S. Hardeman, Jr. (December 13, 1943 – June 23, 2012), was an American gospel musician, pianist, and leader of the Gabriel Hardeman Delegation that included his wife Annette. He started his music career, in 1976, with the release of Gabriel Hardeman Delegation by Savoy Records. Along with his wife, they formed Birthright Records, and in 1981 they released the album Talk along with Feels Like Fire in 1983. His fourth album, To the Chief Musician, released in 2001 by Crystal Rose Records, and this placed at No. 12 on the Billboard magazine Gospel Albums chart. Hardeman was a noted songwriter along with his wife Annette of such songs as 1987's "I Feel Good All Over" by Stephanie Mills and "Love Under New Management" by Miki Howard in 1989.
Hardeman was born on December 13, 1943 in Atlanta, Georgia, as Gabriel S. Hardeman, Jr., the son of Reverend Gabriel S. Hardeman Sr, who pastored and founded the Hickman Temple A.M.E. Church in West Philadelphia, and his mother, Daisy. Hardeman was a pianist at his fathers church as a youth. He graduated from High School at William Penn High School, and he went onto graduate from West Virginia State University with a physical education bachelor's degree, where he was a football player and a glee club participant. Subsequently in 1990, he went to Lutheran Theological Seminary, where he graduated with a master's degree in divinity and became a minister in 1995.
He began his music recording career in 1976, with the release of Gabriel Hardeman Delegation by Savoy Records, yet this did not chart. His subsequent two albums were released by the label him and his wife started, Birthright Records, and they released in 1981, Talk, along with 1983's, Feels Like Fire. The next album, To the Chief Musician, was released on May 8, 2001, and it placed on the Billboard magazine Gospel Albums at No. 12.