Willie Morganfield Explained

Willie Morganfield
Birth Name:Willie Morgan Fields
Alias:Rev. Willie Morganfield
Birth Date:July 11, 1927
Birth Place:Stovall, Mississippi
Death Place:Clarksdale, Mississippi
Instrument:Vocals, singer-songwriter, piano
Genre:Gospel, traditional black gospel
Occupation:Singer, songwriter, minister
Years Active:1959–2003
Label:Jewel, Paula

Reverend Willie Morganfield (July 11, 1927 – October 18, 2003), was an American gospel musician and minister. He started his music career, in 1959, with the release of a single, "What Is This?", which was made into a popular arrangement by the gospel music singer and pastor Walter Hawkins in 1980. His albums were primarily released by Jewel Records with a few by Paul Records. The only release that charted, Golden Hits, was released by Jewel in 1984, and this placed on the Billboard magazine Gospel Albums chart.

Early life

Morganfield was born on July 11, 1927, in Stovall, Mississippi.[1] He was raised in Memphis, Tennessee, by a father who preached at King Solomon's Church.[1] He was the pastor of Bell Grove Baptist Church of Clarksdale, Mississippi, until his death.

He was a cousin of McKinley Morganfield, better known as the blues musician Muddy Waters, who also lived on the Stovall plantation.[2]

Music career

His music recording career commenced with the single, "What Is This?", that became a gospel music standard, the likes of Brother Joe May would go on to record another version of the song already popular with gospel music radio stations at the time being the most played track.[1] He released albums primarily with Jewel Records with a few released by Paula Records.[3] [4] The album, "Golden Hits" in 1984 with Jewel Records, was the only release to chart on a Billboard magazine list of the Gospel Albums, where it placed at No. 34.[5]

Personal life

Reverend Willie Morganfield was married to Jane Anna Morganfield. Together, they were parents to Cassandra, Reginald, Delories, and Theresa Morganfield. Their grandchildren include Cynthia Williams, Tiffany Williams, Tanesha Williams, Regina Chambers and Cory Williams. Their great-grandchildren include Rayshun Williams and Jayden Williams. Reverend Morganfield died in Memphis, Tennessee, on October 18, 2003, of a sudden cardiac arrest.[1] [6]

Discography

Title! scope="col" rowspan="2" style="width:16em;"
Album detailsPeak chart positions
US
Gos
Golden Hits
  • Released: 1984
    • CD, digital download
34

Notes and References

  1. Uncloudy Days: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia. Bil. Carpenter. 2005. 302–3.
  2. Web site: Muddy Waters's Cabin . The Mississippi Blues Trail . 14 February 2022.
  3. Web site: Willie Morgan Fields : Discography . AllMusic. AllMusic. April 18, 2015.
  4. Web site: Rev. Willie Morganfield : Discography . AllMusic. AllMusic. April 18, 2015.
  5. Web site: Willie Morgan Fields : Awards . Billboard. AllMusic. April 18, 2015.
  6. Web site: October 2015 events . Gloryland Gospel. April 18, 2015.