With eight Grammy Awards to his credit, Ricky Skaggs can perform anywhere he wants.
”You can’t be the salt if you don’t go to places where they need salt,” Skaggs said of why his venues have included casinos and clubs. “You’ve got to get the salt out of the shaker,” he told a crowd of more than 3,300 gathered on the campus of the University of Mobile (UM) April 22.
Skaggs, along with Christian recording artist Alicia and former UM student Jason Guy of CBS’ “Big Brother 3” reality show, headlined the university’s first StarLight at the University of Mobile.
The high-energy, fast-paced outdoor music festival featured performances by UM students and included choral music, jazz, piano, guitar, wind ensemble and opera. The family-oriented event drew people from Alabama, Florida and Mississippi to the 800-acre campus.
Roger Breland, a member of the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, founder of the contemporary Christian group Truth, and the director of UM’s new Center for Performing Arts, organized the concert as a way to raise the region’s awareness of the Baptist university, its mission and its many talented students (see story below).
Changing lives for God’s work
That mission — changing lives to change the world through graduates who live out their Christian faith in their work, family, community and church — drew high praise from Skaggs.
“I really like what y’all are doing down here,” Skaggs said. “I don’t mean that lightly. I believe God’s hand is on this place.”
Skaggs, a member of First Baptist Church of Hendersonville, Tenn., shared both his music and his message of God’s faithfulness during an evening which showcased the university’s music program and ended as UM President Mark Foley led the audience in a prayer for the nation.
UM students joined Skaggs onstage and led the crowd in “God Bless America” as fireworks lit the sky.
Defining himself as “a recording artist that’s a Christian” rather than a “Christian recording artist,” Skaggs related how his stand as a Christian sometimes hurt his career. He described his desire to focus on gospel music — a desire that was delayed for many years because the record labels he was signed with didn’t believe the album would be a success.
That belief proved false when Skaggs formed his own recording company, Skaggs Family Records, and released “Soldier of the Cross.” The album was named Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album of the Year in 2000.
Throughout his career, Skaggs has 12 No. 1 singles, 14 country albums, five bluegrass albums and a gospel album. He’s been named “Christian Country Artist of the Year” and was named as one of the 100 most important artists of the last 50 years by Billboard magazine.
“Our bluegrass sound draws unbelievers, but when they get to our show, they hear the gospel — whether it’s the words in the song or the words I say between songs, somehow they will be confronted with the gospel,” Skaggs writes on his Web site. The Web site address is www.skaggsfamilyrecords.com. (UM)
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