Is Contemporary Christian Music Dead?

Is Contemporary Christian Music Dead? June 9, 2017

Amy_Grant_and_Michael_W_Smith

Contemporary Christian music used to sell some 50 million albums per year.  Lately, it’s been more like 17 million.  An article in The Week, excerpted and linked after the jump, documents the genre’s decline and speculates about the reasons.

One is “America’s waning interest in Christianity as a whole.”  I question that.  There is probably a waning interest in a kind of Christianity–a tone, a posture, a set of associations– that CCM represents.  That might be a good thing, an opening for a different mode of Christianity, one that is richer and more substantive.

We confessional types have long been critical of “pop Christianity” and the music that conveys it.  Pop culture, by its nature, is going to be simple, content-lite, and culturally conformist.  So pop music at the service of Christianity has built in limits.  And the problem with it is that can create the impression that Christianity is also simple, content-lite, and culturally conformist.

Am I being too hard on CCM?  Are there artists who are exceptions to what I have said?  Is there hope for a rebirth of the genre?  If so, what might that sound like?

From Tyler Huckabee, Who killed the contemporary Christian music industry?, The Week:

Derek Webb’s old band, Caedmon’s Call, was once the darling of the contemporary Christian music (CCM) industry. Their eponymous debut, released in 1996, sold over 250,000 copies, and their follow-up, 40 Acres, sold about 100,000 more. Caedmon’s Call’s live shows frequently sold out, and really broadened CCM’s demographic. You were as likely to see college students as their parents at Caedmon’s Call’s shows.

“We had some very unexpected success, very early,” Webb explains. “We backed into a moment of success we could have never anticipated. But a wise man once said to me, ‘The two things that will ruin an artist are success and failure. And especially in that sequence.'”

Today, Caedmon’s Call is a dusty afterthought of a bygone industry. Chances are you’ve never heard of Caedmon’s Call. But the band’s story is an interesting microcosm, if not a metaphor, of CCM as a whole. In CCM’s heyday, approximately 50 million CCM albums were sold annually. In 2014, that number had plummeted to 17 million. CCM Magazine has long since ceased printing issues, and modern Christian songwriters struggle to penetrate the masses, outside of writing worship songs for church gatherings.

The descent of CCM is a reflection of America’s waning interest in Christianity as a whole. The precipitous dropoff in CCM sales has left Christian labels and artists staring into the void alongside their pastors, scratching their heads, wondering where they went wrong.

[Keep reading. . .]

Photo of Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith by Ruth Daniel [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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