August 28, 2011 7:54 PM

How "Gospel for Teens" is saving the music

 

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Lesley Stahl spends a year following the inspirational leader of a gospel music program for teenagers in Harlem. Students learn to sing the original American art form and gain the confidence and character it inspires.

(CBS News) 

There's a street in Harlem that comes alive every Saturday with the sound of gospel music. As Lesley Stahl first reported last spring, you won't find any church there - just a brownstone full of teenagers and the woman who draws them in.

Her name is Vy Higginsen, a New York radio personality and theater producer. Five years ago she created something called "Gospel for Teens."

Never heard of it? Well, we think you'll be glad you did. And if you're thinking that Vy Higgensen thought up this program as a way to save the teens, you'd be wrong. She did it to save the music.

The faces and voices of Gospel for Teens include kids between the ages of 13 and 19 who gather in Harlem each week from all over New York and New Jersey to study the tradition and the art of singing gospel.

"It's uniquely American. It's a story of a people in song created out of an American experience," Higginsen told correspondent Lesley Stahl.

"And you are not gonna let it die," Stahl remarked.

"No," Higginsen replied, with a beaming smile.

Extra: The risk of losing gospel
Link: Libby Roderick, songwriter of the Gospel for Teens theme "How Could Anyone."

Higginsen runs an advanced class, but each fall she brings in a new group, putting out a call for auditions in local papers, on radio, and in churches. She calls them her "beginners."

Yolanda Howard, age 14, had arrived by subway from the Bronx before the microphones were even set up. "I was so happy because I was the first person," she said.

And she brought along her friend Rhonda Rodriguez, who started off a little shaky. Asked if she was nervous, Rodriguez told Stahl, "I was really nervous."

When Stahl asked Rodriguez if she thought she had gotten into the program, she admitted, "No."

"Did they really have to be great in the audition?" Stahl asked Higginsen.

"Absolutely not," she replied. "They simply have to carry a tune. We don't expect them to be great. They're teenagers."

"60 Minutes Overtime"
Harlem's Yolanda Howard sings a cappella to her absent father in this week's most captivating moment on 60 Minutes

Of course great is welcome too. Higginsen's goal is to bring gospel to kids more likely to have been raised on hip hop. One girl who auditioned only knew the first six words of Amazing Grace. "That's why we have this school!" exclaimed Higginsen.

So she and the teachers she calls music masters - including her own daughter Knoelle - want to accept as many kids as they can, but there were a few who seemed to throw them, like 16-year-old Gabby Francois.

Something about her seemed to puzzle Higginsen. "I was curious. And I couldn't put my finger on it," she said. "What is it? There was something else going on behind the music."

While singing "This Little Light of Mine," Francois stopped singing mid-phrase, looking down and rubbing her eyebrows.

"Part of me wanted to say, 'Is this gonna be trouble?'" Higginsen said.

"Why didn't you say that?" Stahl asked.

"Something stopped me from saying it. It's almost like, 'I want to take a chance with this,'" she explained.

If there was a star of this audition, it would be 14-year-old David Moses from Brooklyn, who walked in just before the audition ended. He sings in his church choir and knew the song "Amazing Grace" all the way through.

Extra: A gospel duet

"It fills me with a lot of joy when I sing. So I just sing," he told Stahl.

David Moses had heard about Gospel for Teens from a friend and thought his dad was going to drive him to Harlem that day.

"He said, 'Listen, Dad, you gonna take me to the audition?" I said, 'What audition?'" his dad admitted.

Turns out his parents had forgotten about the audition.

So they asked a friend to take David and hold up a cell phone during his audition so they could listen in.

"My son was singing. The place was going crazy. Let me tell you, the next week, I made sure Daddy and Mommy was bringin' him back to class," David's dad said, laughing.

And that next Saturday, there they were: the 46 kids Higginsen chose as her new beginners class, including Yolanda Howard and her friend Rhonda Rodriguez, who thought she wouldn't get in.

Gabby Francois also got in. Higginsen had decided to give her a chance.

Produced by Shari Finkelstein


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Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by jubileeshowcase August 29, 2011 2:14 PM EDT
Now you can enjoy the pioneering music and uplifting songs of Jubilee Showcase. Will you vist our site? http://www.jubileeshowcase.com
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by ramonalady August 29, 2011 1:15 PM EDT
enjoyed this story so much. thank you!!!! please let me know if there i a cd of this chorus, thanks
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by morris2196 August 29, 2011 8:56 AM EDT
I am White, but have a great appreciation for traditional Black church music. Doris Akers, Marion Williams, the Harmonizing Four, and on and on. I am so happy to see this effort to keep it alive. Why anyone would make the noise called "rap" instead of sing this is beyond my comprehension.
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by skmasoudi August 29, 2011 7:47 AM EDT
Picard42at I too grew-up in a strong black family with black role models who were giants in my eyes, but this story touched my soul. You are luck, as I am, but this is not the norm for so many others. I am so glad there is someone out there making a difference and that is what this story is about. I am so glad that the music is being saved that is the other thing this story was about.

Count your blessings and see the story for what it is...yeah, I cried when I heard that Gabby's parents didn't come to the performances. I couldn't understand how they could ignore her effort. I have one child who is 28 years old that I can't bear not making contact with on a daily basis.

BeforeWeSang, you have to have a catalysis to have the desire to improve.
I love the answer that Ms.Higginsen gave at the end about this being "the answer"... Stop bashing this was a wonderful story. I guess black males would have a problem with this story. Believe me I know better than anyone how wonderful black males can be, but there are two sides to that coin.

Ignoring the fact that there are problems in many black neighborhoods will not fix the problem nor will it improve the situation.
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by BeforeWeSang August 29, 2011 8:27 AM EDT
Limited understanding limited vision....limited future. Thanks for creating fertile ground for more 'poor little negor' stories to be run on 60 Mins.

Clearly, your comment adds light to the numerous problems within black neighborhoods. Oh, and by the way...why do you think they are 'black' rather than integrated neighborhoods in the first place? Why are we...we..us..the only group featured singing gospel? Or maybe you believe being black gives us an exclusive on spirituals and soul? ---making a mockery of the very thing you proclaim to believe ie the love of Jesus.

As long as minds continue to revel in the ole negro spiritual --- looking for a savior (rather than saving self)and not taking bold steps to do better, our true abilities will never be realized.

I would encourage you to think about it, but you'd probably prefer to sing and dance about it. Good luck!
by skmasoudi August 29, 2011 10:38 AM EDT
My understanding may be limited, as I have never lived in a black environment. Who said I was christian? Who says I believe in Jesus or God? Nor do I sing and dance. Insults are the last refuge of those who have no real solutions.

Truth be told, I don't know much about being black. I have spent most of my life running from stereotypes and most things "black". I am finding that everything comes full circle. No one says this is a solution to anything, but it is apart of the black experience and one that deserves more respect and appreciation. We have a culture and a history. We don't have to embrace it, but it is real. I am learning to be black...be patient...God is not finished with me. There I go again...uplifting that slave music.
by picard42at August 28, 2011 11:42 PM EDT
I am so tired of this story. In one way or another the media loves to talk the narrative of the poor black child abandoned by evil, black fathers. For once I would enjoy a story of a black american family (not african, not west indian) where the children know and love the fathers and mothers. I knew my father; He was in my life from the first day I was born. He knew his father; and so on. My uncles, my cousins, all had children. All were responsible men who didn't beat their wives, abadon their families, or were unskilled enough to not have employment. I hate these sorry stories about sorry, people. Sixty minutes should know better. Wishing for Ed Bradley.
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by albertholmes7 August 28, 2011 11:02 PM EDT
WOW.....! IM 6'2 AND I WIEGHT 254 LBS AND AFTER I WATCHED THE SHOW ON TEENS FOR GOSPEL.....I CRIED DURING AND AFTER......AND AFTER LISTING TO THE GIRL SING ABOUT HER DAD.IT BROKE ME UP BECAUSE AS A MAN MY DAD WAS NOT IN MY LIFE BUT I WAS FOR MY DAUGHTERS I ACTUALLY RAISED MY DAUGHTERS BECAUSE OF MY DADS ABSENCE....I LOVE YOU FOR BRING THIS STORY AND I LOVE TO DIRECTOR AND THE CHILDREN ...IF ANY OF THE KIDS NEED ANYTHING ....IF I CAN HELP PLEASE CONTACT ME AT AL`S BARBER SHOP MY NUMBER IS 707-450-5892 AND GABBY AND THE HOWARD GIRL JUST TORE ME UP.PRAISE GOD FOR BLESSING YOU ALL , YOU ALL MUST STAY TOGETHER PLEASE.
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by ladycast August 28, 2011 10:15 PM EDT
I REALLY HOPE THAT GOSPILE FOR TEEN CONTUINS,NOT ONLY DOES IT SEND A POWERFUL MESSAGE,IT GET OUR YOUTH OFF THE STREETS&AWAY FROM ALL THE BAD OUT THEIR.I WAS IN CHOIR IN BOTH CHURCH&HIGH SCOOL,&I STILL SING OFF&ON HEAR & THERE AT KAROE&HERE AT HOME ALOT.MUSIC IS PART OF YOUR SOUL IT ALLOWS YOU TO RELEASE THAT ENERGY OUT IN SONG,&WHAT BETTER WAY TO EXPRESS YOURSELVES THAN YOLANDA HOWARD WHEN SHE SANG THAT SONG "FATHER"KEEP THE FAITH& DON'T EVER LET ANYONE TELL YOU THAT YOU CAN'T SING.BLESSED BE&AMEN
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by SINGYOURHEART August 28, 2011 9:37 PM EDT
I so loved this show. The the young woman that had a hard time, I can relate to her. No matter what your color or age you sing your heart out. I am so very proud of these young women and men who travel a long ways to sing. Good luck to all those choice children of our Heavenly Father. May God bless you in your life. Stay in School.
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by sheboygan1958 August 28, 2011 9:06 PM EDT
I am a 69 yr old white and was in tears over the song about the missing father. I can relate because of a Church, Old St. Pats in Chicago that we attend once a week. A lady studied to be an opera singer and was good at it. She decided that she would rather have a ministry so she gathered and gathers poor Black kids from the inner City area, gets them off the street and does the same thing that this show, Gospel for Teens does. She has them singing with love of music, pashion and total emotional commitment to their singing. This program,once a month, is so inspiring and the music like that on your show, so beautiful that we take the train 35 miles to get there a half hour early while they warm up (the Church is Full) so we can enjoy their spirit and their music.
Larry Norgaard, St Charles, IL
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by stafleetk9 August 28, 2011 8:59 PM EDT
I also loved this story and yes a white girl can learn "Negro Gospel", it has been a very long and traditional way for African-Americans to still communicate with our pasts, but needs to be shared with every American. Here in Saginaw, Michigan we have some really nice gospel choirs, many of who sport a rainbow coalition of races. This form of communication is not only uplifting but educational as well. Nice job 60 minutes, very nice job. Actually brought tears to these old eyes!
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