The McKameys
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The McKameys | |
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Origin | Clinton, Tennessee, U.S. |
Genres | Southern gospel |
Years active | 1954-current |
Labels | Morningstar, Crossroads Music, Horizon |
Members | Ruben Bean, Peg Bean, Sheryl Farris, Connie Fortner, Eli Fortner, Roger Fortner |
Past members | Dora McKamey, Carol Woodard, Roger Fortner. Bonnie White |
Website | Official website |
The McKameys are a professional Southern gospel group based in Clinton, Tennessee.[1][2] Current members are Ruben and Peg Bean, Sheryl Farris, Connie Fortner, Roger Fortner, and Eli Fortner.
On average, the McKameys play approximately 150 bookings annually throughout the United States and Canada. With 16 No. 1 singles, the group was honored by Horizon Records in 1999 for having the most No. 1 hits in the history of Southern Gospel music. The McKameys also hold the record for having the most No. 1 songs on Singing News magazine's charts.
Group history
The group first organized in 1954 as a trio of sisters: Dora, Peg, and Carol McKamey. As their father was a Christian minister, the girls grew up singing in church. One day Dora announced to her astonished sisters that they were going to sing with her in church the next Sunday as a trio.
"She gathered us up in her kitchen, started singing and we each found our parts," Peg explained. "We just thought we were gonna sing that one time, in her home church, but different people heard us and invited us to sing at their church or at revivals. Then out of town evangelists heard us at the revivals and invited us to come to their church and we started traveling to Florida and Indiana and Ohio, and that's how it all started."
In 1957, Ruben Bean started playing guitar for the trio, and he and Peg married two years later. While their daughters, Connie and Sheryl, were growing up they traveled with their mom, dad and aunts when the group was on the road. After Dora and Carol retired from the trio in 1972, Connie and Sheryl stepped in to take over their parts.
In the mid 1980s, Sheryl left the group to join her husband as a pastor's wife. At that time, Carol returned to the group, now made up of Peg, Connie, Ruben and Carol with Roger Fortner playing guitar. From late 1988 until mid-1989, Bonnie White replaced Carol until she ultimately returned to the group.
The vocal lineup of Connie, Peg, Carol, and Ruben would perform together until April 2009 when Carol Woodard officially retired from full-time travel. Sheryl Farris returned to replace Carol. Since returning, Sheryl & Connie have traded the lead vocal for a change in the vocal lineup for standards like "The Shepherd's Point of View" and "When He Speaks" and "A Hill Worth Dying On".
In 2007, Eli Fortner joined his parents, Roger and Connie, on stage full-time as a guitarist and featured vocalist. Eli's solos appear on every project since their 2005 release, The Old Path. In 2012, Roger Fortner stepped up to sing a solo, "Unspoken Request". Much to the delight of fans, Roger's first solo captured the No. 1 spot on the January 2013 Singing News Top 80 Charts and received nominations for Song of the Year in the 2013 Singing News Fan Awards and 2013 NQC Music Awards.
Currently, all members of the McKameys perform at least one song during each program. Whether it is a mixed trio, mixed quartet, or male trio, the McKameys perform a variety of their classics combined with fresh favorites.
In September 2018, The McKameys announced on singingnews.com in an open letter that November of 2019 would be the end of their full-time touring. [3]
Select discography
Albums List
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Singles List
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Videos/DVDs List
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Awards
- 1989: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1989: Song of the Year - "God on the Mountain" (Tracy Dartt)
- 1990: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1991: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1992: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1993: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1994: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 1994: Song of the Year - "Arise" (Roger Ealey)
- 2001: Marvin Norcross Award - Ruben Bean
- 2002: Female Vocalist of the Year - Peg McKamey Bean
- 2003: Video of the Year - Hometown Live!
- 2012: Norcross-Templeton Award - Peg McKamey Bean
- 2016: Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame Inductee - Peg McKamey Bean
References
- ^ "Crossroads: Horizon Records", crossroadsmusic.com; accessed August 29, 2017.
- ^ Price, Deborah Evans (September 26, 1998). "Genre sees grass-roots revival". Billboard. p. 37. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
- ^ "An Open Letter From The McKameys". www.singingnews.com. Salem Publishing. Retrieved 21 September 2018.