The couple co-pastored Mount Calvary Word of Faith Church in Raleigh for more than 30 years. Her late husband, Bishop Harold Ivory Williams, died in 2014. Well, I’m going to sing that,” Caesar said.Ĭaesar, is also known as, Shirley Caesar Williams. “I am going to sing 'I Remember Mama' and 'Take Your Knee Off My Neck.’ We are just going to let go and let God have the right-a-way.”Ĭaesar said “Take Your Knee Off My Neck” is in remembrance of George Floyd, the Black man was killed in 2020 by a white police officer who held his knee on Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes. “It’s going to be off the chain, girl!” said Caesar, as she listed the songs she will perform. A choir from Shaw University, her alma mater, is also expected to perform. It is one of the biggest shows for Caesar and the Caesar Singers since the start of the pandemic. Today, the 83-year-old sounds as bodacious and vibrant as she did on some of her most well-known songs, like her 1975 version of “No Charge.” “Hold My Mule” from her “Live in Chicago” album, remained number one on Billboard’s gospel chart for 52 weeks.Ĭaesar will likely sing her popular Mother’s Day song, “No Charge,” at Thursday's concert at The Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts in Raleigh. “So it is fitting that tonight, we honor the music that influenced all those genres. “Over the years we have had the quintessential sounds of America fill this room, from Jazz to Motown to Blues to Country,” said Barack Obama at the time. In 2015, she sang for Barack and Michelle Obama at the White House. “I started singing when I was three or four and I’ve been doing it ever since,” said Caesar, who also has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and has sung for U.S. As a solo artist, Caesar has won 12 Grammy Awards, 18 Dove Awards, and 14 Stellar Awards, presented by the Stellar Awards Gospel Music Academy. She spent the early part of her career singing with The Caravans. But hands down, the Queen of Gospel music is Pastor Shirley Caesar.Ĭaesar, a native of Durham, North Carolina, is known for keeping traditional, African American gospel music alive. You may recognize some of the big names in gospel music – Kirk Franklin, Yolanda Adams and Marvin Sapp.
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