At the beginning
of the 20th century, an African American gospel
tradition emerged which incorporated blues
sounds. Later in the century, gospel gave birth to rhythm and blues,
in which gospel music sounds were stripped of sacred lyrics and replaced
with secular ones. This evolution from gospel to rhythm and blues
occurred all over the South, and certainly in cities like Winston-Salem
with its large and vibrant African American community.
African American gospel is often viewed as a hybrid music form. Thomas
Dorsey, commonly cited as the father of gospel music, actually began
his musical career recording jazz and blues
compositions. He later integrated these musical ideas into older spiritual
traditions and helped create African American gospel music. Winston-Salem
gospel radio announcer Tim Jackson, Jr. concurs with this view:

"I think of gospel in terms of a blend of sacred, spiritual
and hyms with a jazz and blues style. I'm looking at the history
of our music, and this is how Thomas Dorsey put it together." 15

In the early 20th century, many African American families in the
Northwest Piedmont were rooted in the community quartet tradition
that would act as a predecessor to early gospel traditions. This
a cappella quartet tradition was based on the singing of the Fisk
Jubilee singers, and the gospel quartet groups were originally labeled
"jubilee quartets". Recording artist Bernice Johnson Reagon describes
their jubilee aesthetic as "characterized by a smooth, restrained…
style of choral singing". 16
Over time, the sound of these quartets was experiencing considerable
change. As Reagon explains,

"In the 1930s, solo leads evolved that mirrored the
preaching tradition, and the jubilee quartet became the gospel quartet.
This change saw the prolific creation of new songs and arrangement
techniques." 17

John Tanner, Sr. and the Tanner
Family
During this period, the Tanner brothers of Winston-Salem—John,
David, Purnell, Eugene Jr., and Fred—were among the many young
men soaking up the new sounds of gospel quartets and quintets. Sons
of E. E. Tanner and his wife Marie, natives of South Carolina who
moved to Winston in the ‘20s to work at RJR, the Tanner brothers
grew up in a very religious and musical family, performing gospel
songs with their parents in church and on the road.
Dr. Fred Tanner recalls spending Sunday afternoons after church
with his brothers practicing pieces for the inevitable Sunday evening
performance. As Dr. Tanner recounts,

"We got our repertoire from the recordings of "The Five
Blind Boys", "The Soul Stirrers", "The Pilgrim
Travelers", all those groups.... We'd go get the records
and … learned the parts right off the recordings." 18
The eldest Tanner son, John, was a member of the Royal Sons, a
local quintet consisting of voice and guitar helping to define these
new gospel sounds in Winston-Salem. The group sang in local African
American churches, as well as at gatherings for white Winston-Salem
residents. They also performed on radio stations WSJS and WAIR.
A friend suggested they send some of their recordings to New York's
Apollo Records. Their test cut, the gospel
standard "It's Gonna Rain", gained them an audition and finally
a record contract.
When the Royal Sons traveled to New York, they honestly didn't
know what kind of group they were about to become. At their first
session, the group, including Lowman Pauling, Johnny Holmes, Jimmy
Moore, and Otto Jeffries, recorded equal amounts of gospel and R&B
material. They had been regularly switching between gospel and the
secular music, depending on what their audience dictated. According
to John Tanner,

"We could (switch) easy… Oh yeah, we was singing in
different places, hotels and things, Christmas parties." 19

According to Tanner, at the Apollo recording session, "they
were testing to see which one went." Two subsequent number-one
R&B hits off back-to-back recording sessions, "Baby, Don't
Do It" and "Help Me Somebody", answered which
one "went". The gospel quintet the Royal Sons would
soon become the Five Royales, who would help father the new sounds
of rhythm and blues. During their fourteen-year career, the Five
Royales, described by Juke Blues magazine as "one of the most
important R&B vocal groups from the 1950s" 20, recorded five
top-ten rhythm and blues hits. |