Kendrick began his songwriting career in the late 1960s. His most successful accomplishment is his authorship of the lyrics and music for the song, "Shine, Jesus, Shine", which is among the most widely heard songs in contemporary Christian worship worldwide. His other songs have been primarily used by worshippers in Britain. Kendrick is a co-founder of the March for Jesus. He received a Dove Award in 1995 for his international work. In 2000, London School of Theology and Brunel University awarded Kendrick an honorary doctorate in Divinity ('DD') in "recognition of his contribution to the worship life of the Church".[2]
He was awarded another DD in May 2008, from Wycliffe College in Toronto, Canada.[3]
Although now best known as a worship leader and writer of worship songs, Kendrick began his career as a member of the Christian beat group Whispers of Truth (formerly the "Forerunners"). Later, he began working as a solo concert performer and recording artist in the singer/songwriter tradition. He was closely associated with the organisation Musical Gospel Outreach and recorded several albums for their record labels. On the first, Footsteps on the Sea, released in 1972, he worked with the virtuoso guitarist Gordon Giltrap.
Kendrick worked for a time as a member of "In the Name of Jesus", a mission team led by Clive Calver. He was based at St Michael le Belfrey, York in the late 1970s and was involved in student and university ministry with British Youth for Christ. At this time he recorded the albums Triumph in the Air and Cresta Run. Calver went on to run British Youth for Christ and the Evangelical Alliance, and then left the United Kingdom for the Evangelical Church in the United States.
Kendrick also released "Let the Flame Burn Brighter" as a single in 1989, which reached 55 in the UK Singles Chart.
In more recent years Kendrick has developed the concept of "Psalm Surfing".[4]
In May 2020 he took part in The UK Blessing, a worship song video collaboration of 65 churches released during the national coronavirus lockdown.[5]
Popularityedit
"Shine, Jesus, Shine" is regularly highly placed in hymn popularity polls.[6][7] Fellow songwriter and former Kendrick bandmember Stuart Townend has said, "I have no doubt that in 100 years time the name of Kendrick will be alongside Watts and Wesley in the list of the UK's greatest hymnwriters".[8] Kendrick also has his critics, among them the journalist Quentin Letts, who has described him as "king of the happy-clappy banalities".[9]
Discographyedit
Albumsedit
Footsteps on the Sea (Key Records) 1972
Bright Side Up (Key Records) 1973
Paid on the Nail (with Peter Roe) (Key Records) 1974
Breaking of the Dawn (Dovetail) 1976
Fighter (Dovetail) 1978
Jesus Stand Among Us (Dovetail) 1979
Triumph in the Air (Glenmore Music) 1980
18 Classics (Kingsway) 1981
Cresta Run (Kingsway) 1981
The King Is Among Us (Kingsway) 1981
Nightwatch (Kingsway) 1983 - cassette only release
The Blame (Kingsway) 1983
Let God Arise (Kingsway) 1984
Magnificent Warrior (Kingsway) 1985
Make Way for the King of Kings: A Carnival of Praise (Kingsway) 1986
Lamb of God (Integrity's Hosanna! Music) 1988 (British version of a 1987 album by Jim Gilbert)
Make Way for Jesus: Shine Jesus Shine (Make Way Music) 1988
Make Way for Christmas: The Gift (Make Way Music) 1988
Make Way for the Cross: Let the Flame Burn Brighter (Make Way Music) 1989
The Millennium Chorus (Millennium Chorus Ltd) 2000
What Grace (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2001
Do Something Beautiful (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2003
Sacred Journey (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2004
USA Live Worship (Make Way Music) 2005
Out of the Ordinary (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2006
Dreaming of a Holy Night (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2007
The Acoustic Gospels (Make Way Music) 2010
Banquet (Make Way Music) 2011
Worship Duets (Make Way Music) 2013
Keep the Banner Flying High (Make Way Music) 2018
Singlesedit
"Let the Flame Burn Brighter" (single) (Make Way Music) 1989
EPedit
No Scenes of Stately Majesty (E.P; Megaphone/Alliance) 1998
Where It Began (Make Way Music) 2022
Collectionsedit
The Easter Collection (Make Way Music/World Wide Worship) 2001
Rumours of Angels / The Gift Double CD (Make Way Music/Furious!) 2001
The Prayer Song Collection (Make Way Music/World Wide Worship) 2002
The Psalm Collection (Make Way Music/World Wide Worship) 2002
Bibliographyedit
Graham Kendrick Worship (Eastbourne: Kingsway, 1984)
Graham Kendrick (Ed) Ten Worshipping Churches (London: Marc Europe, 1987)
Graham Kendrick, Gerald Coates, Roger Forster and Lynn Green with Catherine Butcher, March for Jesus (Eastbourne: Kingsway, 1992)
Graham Kendrick Public Praise (Altamonte Springs: Creation House, 1992)
Graham Kendrick, Clive Price Behind the Songs (Stowmarket: Kevin Mayhew Ltd, 2001)
Referencesedit
^ abKendrick, Graham Andrew | Praise! Retrieved 28 February 2018.
^
"Graham Kendrick interview". BBC. Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved 16 May 2008.
^
"Wycliffe College to bestow honorary doctorates on vital leaders in the Christian Community". Wycliffe College, Toronto. 30 April 2008. Archived from the original on 13 February 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2008.
^"Graham Kendrick on Psalm Surfing - video and how-to guide". 14 September 2012. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
^"The 'UK Blessing' is exactly that". THE DIOCESE OF SALISBURY. 7 May 2020. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
^Daykin, Tim (11 September 2006). "Top 40 Hymns". BBC. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
^Petre, Jonathan (27 October 2005). "Hymns ancient and extremely modern top viewers' chart". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
^Townend, Stuart (2009). "Songs of Praise - Top 10 Hymns". Archived from the original on 3 October 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
^Thompson, Damian (12 October 2008). "Will happy-clappy Graham Kendrick wage spiritual warfare on Quentin Letts?". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.