Local pastor chose ministry over music: Cousin to
singers Jerry Lee Lewis, Jimmy Swaggart and Mikey Gilley tells
why by William Wright
Before Elvis or the Beatles burst on the
scene, four talented teens from Louisiana brought the house down with
their own brand of rock ‘n’ roll in 1949, and had teenagers screaming in
a musical frenzy.
The boy band was made up of four cousins,
Jerry Lee Lewis, Jimmy Swaggart, Mikey Gilley and David Beatty who were
on the cutting edge of combining country, gospel and R&B music into
the first formula for rock ‘n’ roll.
Three of the four boys
became nationwide celebrities while one, David Beatty, took the road
less traveled as a small-town preacher — obscure to the world of the
rich and famous.
Beatty, pastor of Pine Hill Church of God in
McDonald, said he has never forgotten or regretted his decision to
become the first of the four boys to “get saved,” then go to Lee College
(Lee University) in Cleveland and later settle down in small town
America.
Still, the 75-year-old pastor said he shares a lot of fond memories with his famous cousins whose mothers were all sisters.
“They
lived in Ferriday (La.) and I lived on a farm out in the country in
Louisiana,” said Beatty. “We moved to Ferriday with them when I was 10.
Jerry and Jimmy was already playing the piano.
“I started
playing the guitar. Then Mickey also started playing the guitar. Jerry,
Jimmy and I were all born in 1935. Mickey was born in 1936. We were all
about 12 years old at the time.”
Beatty said Mickey played rhythm guitar in the band while he played electric guitar.
“Jimmy
played the bass end of the piano and Jerry played the treble end of the
piano. We played at church, primarily, then we got invited to play at
political events,” he said.
The charismatic teens touched a
nerve with music lovers unlike anything anyone was familiar with, and
their popularity at church and political rallies was unmistakable.
Jerry, Jimmy, David and Mickey were around the age of 14 when they
decided to take their music to a new level.
“In 1949 we entered a
talent contest held at the gymnasium/auditorium at Ferriday High
School. We won hands down,” said Beatty with a laugh. “Our song was
Wine, Wine, ‘Drink’in Wine — Spo-Dee-O-Dee.’ That was a real song back
then. It took off pretty good in the late 40s, early 50s.”
According
to Beatty, there were no microphones in the packed auditorium but the
energetic atmosphere was ripe for what he calls “boogie-woogie.”
“We
use to do the gospel boogie at church — they called it ‘everybody is
going to have religion and glory,’ but we called it ‘the gospel boogie,’
said Beatty. “It was a kind of boogie-woogie type. And we switched it
over to the ‘Wine, Wine’ beat.
“In the turnaround Jerry was
really hammering on the treble between the verses and the chorus. Then I
had the electric guitar and it was louder. And all the girls started
screaming! We had never seen anything like it.”
Everyone was
moving and shaking, dancing and screaming to a whole new sound of music.
No one knew exactly how to describe it, except they wanted more,
according to Beatty.
“We had seen people get happy at church but
not in a secular environment. It was very, very exciting. Jerry kept
saying ‘There’s something about our music that’s really electrifying!’”
The
charismatic teens had started something in Farriday which changed the
history of that small community and made it a tourist attraction half a
century later. It was clear in 1949 that music was in their blood and
theirs was a talent that could shake the music world.
But Beatty
said there were other interests the boys had to lay to rest before any
of their careers took center stage as adults. Influenced primarily by
Mickey’s mother, Irene, whom he called “aunt Rennie” as well as the
Assembly of God church they attended, Beatty said he made a
life-changing decision a year later in June.
“At 15 years old I
got saved, joined the church and quit playing that ‘bad’ music,” Beatty
said with a bit of a laugh. “Jerry got married at 16, Mickey got married
at 16 and Jimmy waited to the ripe old age of 17. I decided I wanted to
finish high school and I did.
“Then I decided I was going to be
in the ministry. I also wanted to go to college. So I came to Lee
College in September 1955. At that time Jerry Lee was my traveling mate
and music man for my revivals. We had four revivals in 1955. He played
the music, we sung together and I did the preaching.”
“Jimmy
Swaggart and I both were preaching at age 19 in 1954, but I wanted to go
to college first and get some training. When I came to Lee College I
started my studies and then I started conducting revivals here in
Tennessee while in college. Jimmy was married and he couldn’t afford to
go to college.”
While he was at Lee, Beatty met the woman who
would become his wife, Jo Ann, also a Lee student. The couple married in
December 1959.
“I graduated from Lee College in May, evangelized
until December and we got married later that month. Two weeks later Jo
Ann and I were full-time evangelists preaching revivals in Chattanooga,
Tuscaloosa, Ala., and Griffin, Ga.”
For more than half a century
the couple served in their ministry from parts of Tennessee to
Louisiana, even coming out of retirement to fill in as pastor at Pine
Hill Church of God in McDonald for nearly 10 years now.
Although
no one in Ferriday had ever heard anything as electrifying as their only
high school performance together in 1949, Jerry Lee Lewis went on to
become a rock ‘n’ roll legend, along with the likes of Elvis Presley,
Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and other stars in the 1950s.
In 1957,
Lewis released, “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On.” It spent 23 weeks on the
country charts, reaching No. 1, and hit No. 3 on the pop charts. His
follow-up release, “Great Balls of Fire,” also went No. 1.
Evangelist
Jimmy Swaggert went from preaching on the streets, in tents and in
country churches to filling major auditoriums and civic arenas around
the world. He is said to be most at home either behind the pulpit or
behind the piano to this day. It is estimated he has sold more than 13
million albums worldwide. Swaggart also built the 7,200-seat Family
Worship Center on the 270-acre site of Jimmy Swaggart Ministries in
Baton Rouge, La., where he remains a popular singer and televangelist.
Mickey
Gilley left town at age 17, worked bars in Houston and recorded “Tell
Me Why” in 1953. In 1971, he opened Gilley’s nightclub, considered the
most famous country night club in the world, and continued to record
music, putting out 17 no. 1 hits.
Gilley hit it big in 1974 with
“Room Full of Roses” which hit the top of the country charts and is
ranked among the best country music songs of all time. Gilley’s club was
so successful that it was extended to hold 3,500 customers, the entire
population of Ferriday.
When the city of Ferriday honored the
celebrity trio in 2002, Beatty was among the observers to celebrate the
accomplishments of his famous cousins.
“When I went to the Hall
of Fame induction in Louisiana in Ferriday — they took the old post
office and converted it to a museum for Jerry Lee, Jimmy Lee and
Mickey,” Beatty said. “The State set up a tourist attraction there.
“They
put a gold star in the concrete and fixed it all up. One of the guys
who knew me came and asked me, ‘Where is your gold star? What happened
to you?’ I said, ‘Man, what are you talking about? I got my star in 1950
when the Lord wrote my name down in the Lamb’s book of life — put my
star right on glory avenue and it’s been there ever since.”
Although
each of his celebrity cousins has seen their rise to fame and fortune,
Beatty was also there to see their fall from grace played out before the
nation. Never did he forsake his cousins in their hour of need.
“When
you look back at all that Mickey, Jerry and Jimmy have gone through —
they’ve had enough heartache for a bunch of lifetimes,” Beatty said. “I
haven’t had the fame and the fortune, but I’ve had the joy of being who I
am in Christ. I’m happy that I was able to grow up with these guys and
I’m proud of their achievements. But the Lord has been awfully good to
me.”
With less drama in his personal life, less media attention
and far less temptations, Beatty said he is truly content with all he
has done in his life.
Refusing to be judgmental, the Cleveland
resident remains somewhat sentimental toward the memory of four young
boys who were torn between music and ministry but were never forsaken by
one other.
Although Beatty has not seen Jerry Lee Lewis in 13
years, he said Jerry has been sending him checks since 1995, and he is
grateful for Jerry’s “offerings.” From 2002 to 2006, Beatty was the
morning speaker at several camp meetings at Jimmy Swaggart’s Family
Worship Center in Baton Rouge, La.
Beatty recently spoke with
Mickey Gilley who is paralyzed from the neck down due to a near-fatal
fall July 9, 2009. He said he encouraged the country music star to put
his trust in the Lord.
Through it all, Beatty said he loves his
cousins, prays for them and still enjoys their music. But the small town
preacher added that he never once regretted his decision to solely
pursue his ministry over music.
“I have had a wonderful,
wonderful life. I’m healthy, I’m happy and so is my wife. We’ve really
been blessed. I just don’t see how it could be any better,” he said with
a smile.
YOU ARE BIDDING / PURCHASING ITEM IN THE TITLE
ORIGINAL VINYL LP
PLEASE
CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE FOR MORE RECORDS THAT ARE SIMILAR TO THIS
ONE! ITEMS ARE SHIPPED MEDIA MAILTHIS MAY TAKE AS MUCH AS 10 DAYS
Beatty was the morning speaker at several camp meetings at
YOU ARE BIDDING / PURCHASING ITEM IN THE TITLE
ORIGINAL VINYL LP
PLEASE CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE FOR MORE RECORDS THAT ARE SIMILAR TO THIS ONE! ITEMS ARE SHIPPED MEDIA MAIL THIS MAY TAKE AS MUCH AS 10 DAYS