Photo of: Harold Lane

Mr. Harold Lane

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Speer Family
Huntington, West Virginia
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    sogospelnews.com/index/articles/comments/on-a-bus-headi - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/8/2008    Last Visited: 3/14/2007  

    When calling the roll of those who have been in the forefront of the world of Southern Gospel Music, Harold Lane, a veteran singer and songwriter, is not the first name mentioned, but his popular songs have been recorded and sung by thousands and heard by millions.For many years we have seem them appear in songbooks and choral arrangements, as well as on television, radio, cassette tapes, videos, and compact discs.

    Lane, born in 1929, in Huntington, West Virginia, started his music training in high school playing trombone in the band.He became a Christian while attending Marshall University in Huntington, where he continued his music education.He later became a high school band director and music teacher at Wayne High School in Wayne, West Virginia.

    At age 37, he joined The Speer Family, one of the most famous of all the Southern Gospel Music touring groups.G.T. "Dad" Speer, a native of Double Springs, Alabama, began the first Speer Quartet more than 80 years ago.They broke a major barrier in this genre of music by including female voices in a field totally dominated by all male quartets.For twenty-two years Harold Lane was part of the success of this group which recorded some seventy plus albums, five of which received Grammy Award nominations.They received eight Dove Awards for Best Mixed Group of the Year.Twice they received Dove Awards for Best Album of the Year, and four times, consecutively, for Best Female Vocalist of the Year.In 1996 they were recipients of the Alabama Music Hall of Fame Life Work Award for Performing Achievement.

    In the late 1970s, The Speer Family was on their bus traveling to another engagement, "probably to California," according to Lane, who had joined the group a few years earlier.As they rode along he fell to thinking of his son back home who was "messed up in the drug scene."His thoughts quickly turned to the one who can solve drug problems, or any other problem for that matter, and how Christians who trust in the Lord are standing on a firm foundation, Jesus Christ the Chief Cornerstone.Another musician, the Psalmist David, declares, He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings.And he hath put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God.Psalm 40:2,3

    As they rode along verses began to take shape in his mind and along with them came a melody.He took music paper and, calling on his college music training, put the whole song in manuscript form.From there it has made its way into every nook and cranny of the Southern Gospel Music world, including the Gaither Souvenir Songbooks, a product of the Gaither Homecoming Concerts and Videos.

    In the song Lane reminds us that through our disappointments, strife and discontentment, we can cast our every care on our Savior.In the chorus he tells us that we are safe from the storms that rage around us, and that we have untold wealth in our relationship to Jesus.

    Another of Harold Lane's songs that has reached great heights is a song written after a practice session of The Speer Family, in the home of Ben Speer.
    ...
    In that song Harold shares the message that as we tour the City of God we will find a place of pretty streets, made of gold, and Jesus our Savior who gave us the victory will be there with us forever.Even though we have burdens and problems on this earth, all will be made right when we reach that City.

    Harold Lane and his wife, Betty, live in Nashville, Tennessee, where he attends the Church of Christ and occasionally writes music.To date he has penned some eighty-eight Southern Gospel songs.He delights in going to the National Quartet Convention, held each year in Louisville, Kentucky, where he can renew fellowship with a great host of singers who have become his friends through the years.He appeared in the first three of the Bill Gaither Homecoming Gatherings.
    ...
    I'm happy to see someone giving Mr. Lane the respect and applause he so deserves.

    Commented by > On 03/01/2007 Harold Lane is the consumate Christian Gentleman.
    ...
    Never one to speak to his own work, Harold has simply, quitely left an unbelievable legacy few will ever attain.His marvelous talent, his personal interest in fans, and his unassuming nature have endeared him to thousands.Indeed we are fortunate that "H" chose Gospel Music as a career for without his contributions, this marvelous music genre would not be where it is today.

    Many of us here in WV are especially thankful for a contribution not discussed in this article.In 1952, Harold organized the Gospel Harmony Boys in Huntington, WV.After 55 years, it is one of the longest serving groups in the US and continues a viable music ministry yet today.That organization has provided many very talented people the opportunity to serve, and thousands of people the opportunity to accept Christ.

    Personally, I'd like to add my thanks as one of those people whose life has been greatly impacted by the work of Harold Lane."H" we love you and have the utmost respect your contribution to this great thing to which you have dedicated your life, Gospel Music.

    If the goal of the Hall of Fame is to truly reflect the historic individuals who have contributed significantly and left a model legacy to be emulated, it will never be complete without the etching of the name, Harold Lane

  • View Online Source
    www.gospelharmonyboys.org/art_2.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/10/2008    Last Visited: 9/1/2008  

    Harold Lane, Lead; Asa Legrand, Tenor; Homer Fry, Baritone; Gray Johnson, Bass; John Bruce, pianist
    ...
    This fine organization, probably the most outstanding quartet in the central states, is piloted by Harold Lane, second tenor.Harold is a graduate of Marshall College, with a master's degree in music.
    ...
    Mr. Lane is also an instructor of instrumental music in the West Virginia school system, and is Dean of Music at West Virginia Academy of Music.

    Arrangements are being made at this time for the personal appearance of this fine group to appear in the South.At one time, Mr. Lane was a member of the Homeland Harmony Quartet.

  • View Online Source
    www.gospelharmonyboys.org/art_4.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/10/2008    Last Visited: 9/1/2008  

    This year, my vote will go to Mr. Harold Lane.

    Harold Lane is a multi-talented individual that did much work behind the scenes in the field of gospel music.This former band director formed the Gospel Harmony Boys Quartet in the early 1950s.If you've never heard the Gospel Harmony Boys, then you missed a treat.This part time West Virginia quartet was on par with many of the top groups of the 1950s and 1960s.Mr. Lane's writing and arranging made a great impact on the Gospel Harmony Boys' style.Harold took a brief hiatus from this group to spend some time with the famous Homeland Harmony Quartet.He spent a year with the Homeland Harmony Quartet, but his influence was with that quartet until they disbanded for he supplied their vocal arrangements.

    Harold is a great songsmith, having written many top gospel tunes including "I've Done What the Lord Said Do," "What Sins Are You Talking About?", and his biggest hit, "Touring That City."Mr. Lane is probably best known for his tenure with the Speer Family.He joined the Speers in 1967, and his impact with this group was immediate.The Speers rose to new heights around the talents of Harold Lane.He did their arranging and wrote many of their hits.His solid tenor voice was paramount in their sound.

    After leaving the Speer Family, Mr. Lane continued to influence gospel music through his teaching at the Stamps-Baxter School of Music and his arrangements of hymns and gospel songs for brass.

    Harold Lane was quite the innovator in gospel music, and the world of gospel music is much richer because of the contributions of Mr. Lane.He will be my nominee for the living member of the SGMA Hall of Fame.

  • View Online Source
    www.gospelharmonyboys.org/art_6.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/1/2006    Last Visited: 9/1/2008  

    Southern Gospel News, 6/06 | Harold Lane
    ...
    SG History 101 - Harold Lane
    ...
    Lane was born to Curtis and Cassie Lane in Huntington, West Virginia on February 1, 1929.
    ...
    This is Harold in 1955 with the Homeland Harmony Quartet, he is at the far left

    Lane's unusual talents attracted the attention of one of the most renowned gospel quartets of all time, the Homeland Harmony Quartet offered Lane a job in 1955, so Lane went to Nashville and stayed with that famous quartet for a year, where he did all the arranging for the group.The Homeland Harmony Quartet was well known for its difficult and advanced arrangements, and Lane continued in that vein with the group.Unfortunately, the Homeland Harmony Quartet was struggling to make ends meet in the mid-1950s, and Lane opted to leave the group in 1956 and return to Huntington and rejoin the Gospel Harmony Boys.Nevertheless, Lane continued writing the arrangements for the Homeland Harmony Quartet from West Virginia, and mailed the sheet music south to group manager Connor Hall.
    ...
    The singers include Asa LeGrand, Harold, Homer Fry, Grey Johnson, and pianist Johnny Bruce
    ...
    The Gospel Harmony Boys had changed personnel drastically since Lane left them in 1955.
    ...
    By this time, the Gospel Harmony Boys were becoming a well-known group in the gospel business, and Lane was attracting more attention as a singer, writer, and arranger.By 1961, the group recorded its' first LP, I'm Redeemed.During all this time, Lane was augmenting his income by teaching.He was the band director at Wayne High School near Huntington, and he also managed to direct grade school glee clubs.He also wrote the alma mater for Wayne High School (how many other gospel performers wrote school alma maters, I wonder?).

    The Gospel Harmony Boys, 1963Gospel Harmony Boys in 1963.Front: Asa LeGrand (tenor), Dick Lucas (piano) Back: Homer Fry (baritone), Harold Lane (lead), Grey Johnson (bass)
    ...
    Also, Lane was beginning to make his mark as a writer, his "I've Done What The Lord Said ‘Do'" was recorded by the Prophets and a number of other top quartets of the day.

    The Speer Family, 1967The Speer Family 1967 Harold (middle rear)

    By 1966, the group scored again with Lane's arrangement of "Love Lifted Me," then, in Nashville, G.T. (Dad) Speer passed away, an event that would alter the course of Harold Lane's life and career.
    ...
    And in 1967, Lane joined the Speer Family, setting in motion a 22-year stint that would not only add to his considerable reputation that he had already earned, but his joining the group helped the Speers hit their commercial peak as a gospel singing group.

    Over that time, Lane wrote such classic gospel songs as "Thank You, Lord" (popularized by the Couriers, but arranged for them by Lane), "Touring That City" (a huge #1 hit in 1973 for the Inspirations), "What Sins Are You Talking About?", "I'm Standing On The Solid Rock" (a big hit for the Speers and the Florida Boys), "The Next Time He Comes", "But By Me, Saith The Lord", "He Was Willing", and many more.
    ...
    Lane was certainly an important transitional figure in gospel music's development from the 1960s to the 1980s.

    Lane himself made some changes in that period, one such change was ordered by the Speers.When he joined, he was told to let his hair grow out.The Speers were seeking a younger audience, and Lane's flattop (which he'd worn since his military days) was not conducive to the group's aims in that respect.

    Lane stayed with the Speers for 22 years, finally retiring from the road in 1989.But like most gospel music personalities, even in retirement, their work doesn't end.Lane has appeared since then on some of the Bill Gaither Homecoming Videos, and has continued to write and arrange music for many of the leading artists of today.

    And in recent years (up to today), he has resumed teaching on the faculty of the Stamps-Baxter School of Music, now being run by Ben Speer.

    Harold LaneStamps-Baxter School of Music Faculty

    So, at the age of 77, Harold Lane continues to contribute his God-given gifts of music to the world ...musical skills and talents have been put to use richly for the benefit of the Kingdom of God on earth, and they have been (and likely will continue to be) blessings and treasures to people now, and the heritage of gospel music, for years to come.

  • View Online Source
    sogospelnews.com/index/articles/comments/6822/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/8/2008    Last Visited: 3/1/2007  

    When calling the roll of those who have been in the forefront of the world of Southern Gospel Music, Harold Lane, a veteran singer and songwriter, is not the first name mentioned, but his popular songs have been recorded and sung by thousands and heard by millions.For many years we have seem them appear in songbooks and choral arrangements, as well as on television, radio, cassette tapes, videos, and compact discs.

    Lane, born in 1929, in Huntington, West Virginia, started his music training in high school playing trombone in the band.He became a Christian while attending Marshall University in Huntington, where he continued his music education.He later became a high school band director and music teacher at Wayne High School in Wayne, West Virginia.

    At age 37, he joined The Speer Family, one of the most famous of all the Southern Gospel Music touring groups.G.T. "Dad" Speer, a native of Double Springs, Alabama, began the first Speer Quartet more than 80 years ago.They broke a major barrier in this genre of music by including female voices in a field totally dominated by all male quartets.For twenty-two years Harold Lane was part of the success of this group which recorded some seventy plus albums, five of which received Grammy Award nominations.They received eight Dove Awards for Best Mixed Group of the Year.Twice they received Dove Awards for Best Album of the Year, and four times, consecutively, for Best Female Vocalist of the Year.In 1996 they were recipients of the Alabama Music Hall of Fame Life Work Award for Performing Achievement.

    In the late 1970s, The Speer Family was on their bus traveling to another engagement, "probably to California," according to Lane, who had joined the group a few years earlier.As they rode along he fell to thinking of his son back home who was "messed up in the drug scene."His thoughts quickly turned to the one who can solve drug problems, or any other problem for that matter, and how Christians who trust in the Lord are standing on a firm foundation, Jesus Christ the Chief Cornerstone.Another musician, the Psalmist David, declares, He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings.And he hath put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God.Psalm 40:2,3

    As they rode along verses began to take shape in his mind and along with them came a melody.He took music paper and, calling on his college music training, put the whole song in manuscript form.From there it has made its way into every nook and cranny of the Southern Gospel Music world, including the Gaither Souvenir Songbooks, a product of the Gaither Homecoming Concerts and Videos.

    In the song Lane reminds us that through our disappointments, strife and discontentment, we can cast our every care on our Savior.In the chorus he tells us that we are safe from the storms that rage around us, and that we have untold wealth in our relationship to Jesus.

    Another of Harold Lane's songs that has reached great heights is a song written after a practice session of The Speer Family, in the home of Ben Speer.
    ...
    In that song Harold shares the message that as we tour the City of God we will find a place of pretty streets, made of gold, and Jesus our Savior who gave us the victory will be there with us forever.Even though we have burdens and problems on this earth, all will be made right when we reach that City.

    Harold Lane and his wife, Betty, live in Nashville, Tennessee, where he attends the Church of Christ and occasionally writes music.To date he has penned some eighty-eight Southern Gospel songs.He delights in going to the National Quartet Convention, held each year in Louisville, Kentucky, where he can renew fellowship with a great host of singers who have become his friends through the years.He appeared in the first three of the Bill Gaither Homecoming Gatherings.
    ...
    I'm happy to see someone giving Mr. Lane the respect and applause he so deserves.

  • View Online Source
    www.gospelharmonyboys.org/newsvol4.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/10/2008    Last Visited: 9/1/2008  

    3/07 Harold Lane Nominated to HOF
    ...
    Our founder, Harold Lane

    We are overjoyed that the Gospel Harmony Boys' founder, Harold Lane, long a household name in gospel music, has been nominated to the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame.This prestigious honor is reserved for the relatively few in our field who have taken our music a rung or two higher, and we believe none is more deserving than our dear friend Harold.

    We are excited about supporting his induction, and will continue to add material about Harold and his accomplishments to this web site.We have also provided a way for you to express your support of Harold as well.Just click here to add your name to those who would love to see Harold inducted to the "Hall".

    Congratulations, Harold!
    ...
    The boys and I are pleased to launch yet another upgrade to their website to coincide with their latest recording, and with Mr. Lane's most recent honor.

  • View Online Source
    www.gospelharmonyboys.org/art_5.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 4/1/2007    Last Visited: 9/1/2008  

    Gospel Harmony Boys ca. 1954 with L-R standing, Harold Lane, Gray Johnson seated L-R Carlos Day, Homer Fry, and John Embry
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    Five men, Harold Lane, Leonard Adams, John Embry, J.B. Short, and Don Owens teamed up to call themselves the Gospel Harmony Boys.
    ...
    Adams sang tenor, Lane was the lead, Embry sang baritone, Short was the bass, and Owens accompanied the group on piano.
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    1954 - in the WSAZ-TV studio Standing (L-R): Gray Johnson, Leonard Adams, Carlos Day Seated (L-R): John Embry, Harold Lane
    ...
    It is said that a lot of arrangements used by many of the quartets in those years were actually done by Lane.

    Attention to Lane had gotten so intense that by 1955, he left the Gospel Hamony Boys to take a job with the famous Homeland Harmony Quartet.That group, however, was in its' last years and struggling.Nonetheless, Lane's reputation prospered while he was there, and his arrangements became standard fare for many of the nation's gospel quartets at that time.

    Harold Lane
    ...
    Harold Lane

    When the Homeland Harmony Quartet finally folded in 1957, Lane returned to the Gospel Harmony Boys.
    ...
    Their calling card was always their singing, and their ability to effortlessly execute the challenging vocal arrangements of Lane, and repeatedly entertain and bless their audiences with solid singing and a warm, friendly stage manner.And while it may have made them more famous to be more flashy, there is something to be said for just plain good gospel singing, something the Gospel Harmony Boys provided in abundance consistently.

    Gospel Harmony Boys, 1964ca. 1964 Clockwise: Richard Lucas, Gray Johnson, Harold Lane, Homer Fry, Asa Legrand
    ...
    Of course, with time, all things change ...Boys when once again Lane was lured away.This time, it was not by a group on its' last legs, but it was by one of the top groups in gospel music at that time.The Speer Family hired Lane away in 1967 not only to get his voice, but his original compositions and arrangements as well.It was a good move for Lane, who would spend the next 22 years with the Speers, and who would be their main musical force during that time, writing more than ever, and coming up with the majority of the gospel music classics he wrote during his long career when with the Speers.
    ...
    Group co-founder Harold Lane is surely destined for Gospel Music's Hall of Fame before too long, but regardless, the group he started and led for some 15 years, the Gospel Harmony Boys, have deservedly made their place in gospel music history.

  • View Online Source
    www.southerngospelnews.com/index/features/archives-mont - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/19/2008    Last Visited: 7/19/2008  

    When calling the roll of those who have been in the forefront of the world of Southern Gospel Music, Harold Lane, a veteran singer and songwriter, is not the first name mentioned, but his popular songs have been recorded and sung by thousands and heard by millions

    If You Cant Stand the Heat….

  • View Online Source
    www.dailymail.com/story/Entertainment/2007110845/Gospel - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/8/2007    Last Visited: 11/8/2007  

    The group was founded in Huntington in 1952 by lead singer Harold Lane.

  • View Online Source
    www.southerngospelnews.com/index/archives/articles/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/8/2008    Last Visited: 3/3/2007  

    When calling the roll of those who have been in the forefront of the world of Southern Gospel Music, Harold Lane, a veteran singer and songwriter, is not the first name mentioned, but his popular songs have been recorded and sung by thousands and heard by millions [1] Comments | Permalink

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