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IMAC Conference heads to Nashville, TN



The 12th annual IMAC Conference heads to the Nashville, TN area October 7-9, 2010.  Produced by Jeff Robinson, the event will convene at Celebration of Life Church in Hendersonville, TN.  The conference is designed to empower and inform those involved in faith-based arts and ministries. This year’s conference features workshops including topics such as voice development, marketing & distribution, and artist management & development. Guest clinicians and performers include Lowell Pye, Claude Deuce, Benita Bellamy, Telisa Stinson, Stan Jones, Earnest Pugh, Kyla Jade, and BET Sunday Best finalist Maurice Griffin. The event will also feature a special salute to Angela Spivey.

You can register on the IMAC website.



Kenny Taylor


A Minister of Music and Musician from the Washington, DC area. Active in the Church Music Ministry 40 years Active in the Gospel Industry 25+ years Prolific in the areas of Marketing, Public Relations, and Promotions Journalist for Community, National, and Internet Gospel Publications.  Kenny Taylor advises PATH’s promotion division.

Affiliations:
Gospel Music Workshop of America

N.A.R.A.S
GMWA G.A.G
National Convention of Choruses & Choirs
S.A.G.M.A.
American Gospel Quartet Convention
Gospel Music Association



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Grammy Winner Beverly Crawford To Release Highly Anticipated New CD Sept 14th!



Grammy & Stellar Award winner Beverly Crawford is gearing up for the release of her highly anticipated new CD, Live from Los Angeles – Vol. 2, on September 14th. Featuring the hot new single “It’s About Time For A Miracle!”, Live from Los Angeles – Vol. 2 is the follow-up to Beverly’s #1 chart-topper “He’s Done Enough”, which dominated the Billboard Charts for over 70+ weeks & garnered 7 Stellar Award nods including Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, Female Vocalist of the Year, etc.

Universally regarded as one of the top vocalists in the world with a legion of ardent fans including Natalie Cole, President Obama, Patti LaBelle, Fantasia, etc, Live from Los Angeles – Vol. 2 features Beverly in her element – churching like a crazy woman!

“The incomparable Beverly Crawford is one of the truly great voices of our time!”-Ebony Magazine

“Beverly Crawford is my girl! Without a doubt, one of the baddest vocalists in the world!”-Natalie Cole

From traditional gospel, praise & worship, to contemporary, Live from Los Angeles – Vol. 2, (JDI/Universal) is a 10 song collection featuring gospel at its best. Produced by Michael Bereal and Professor James Roberson, Live from Los Angeles – Vol. 2 also features special guest appearances by the legendary Shirley Murdock & Shawn McLemore.

“With everything that is going on in the world right now, the Lord told me to tell his people that ‘It’s About Time For A Miracle!” says Crawford. “So no matter what you’re going through – financial trouble, sickness in your body, marital problems, whatever – God is about to turn that thang around because – It’s About Time For A Miracle!”

‘Don’t Stop, Git It, Git It!”

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW!



NFL Football Player Glen Coffee Says Faith Led to Retirement After 1 Year


 

NFL running back Glen Coffee has decided to end his professional football career after having played only one season.

And the decision wasn’t the result of an injury, an arrest, or any sort of scandal.

It was because of his faith.

“I found Christ in college. It changed my views on everything,” Coffee, 23, told a reporter with the Sacramento Bee the morning after announcing his decision. “But I still was a football player because it was expected of me, it was something I did all my life.”

Though Coffee was advised not to speak with the media, he decided to do so Saturday, feeling that the reasoning behind his decision needed to be known – especially amid speculation.

“His (Christ’s) will, I felt, wasn’t football,” he explained simply. And though Coffee believes that everything – including football – should be done to glorify Christ, the running back said Christ had told him “a long time ago to walk away from the game.”

“It’s giving in to his will, man,” he told the Press Register.

Selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the third round of the 2009 NFL Draft, Coffee had been competing for the No. 2 spot behind Pro Bowl running back Frank Gore before announcing suddenly on Friday his decision to retire.

Before joining the 49ers, Coffee was a starter for the University of Alabama and was named to the Associated Press All-SEC first team.

After the 2008 season, Coffee decided to forgo his senior year and declared himself eligible for the 2009 NFL Draft.

Now, with his latest announcement, Coffee says he’s going to return to the University of Alabama to get an undergraduate degree in consumer affairs. He also plans to get a master’s as well.

“It’s simple. I’m going back to school,” told the reporter from the Bee.

Mike Singletary, head coach of the 49ers, said Friday that he respected Coffee’s decision and did not try to convince him to stay.

“I appreciate his honesty and I appreciate him not coming out here and going through the motions,” said Singletary, who is himself a man of faith.

Coffee’s announcement was made just days before the 49ers’ first preseason game of the year and less than a month before the regular season was set to begin.

Singletary suggested Friday that running back Anthony Dixon was most likely to fill in Coffee’s spot. Veteran Michael Robinson is also in the running.

 

Also Read: Al Harris, an N.F.L. Cornerback and Kevin Soto, an Ex-Convict Will Release a Christian Rap Album in August



Men Get Real at Manpower Conference Hosted by Bishop T.D. Jakes


 
What: ManPower Conference equips men of all ages, races and spiritual backgrounds to tackle challenging issues including finances, romance, health, family life and leadership at work and home. Through a seminar-style setting, Bishop T.D. Jakes will encourage men to conquer the areas of their lives that have been disrupted by economic hardships, health issues, domestic challenges and other obstacles. The conference prepares men to build strong marriages, increase their confidence and take on community responsibilities. Jakes established ManPower more than 15 years ago to address the needs and struggles of men from all walks of life.

Highlights: Speakers joining Bishop Jakes include Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, Bishop Lester Love and:

Dr. Myles Munroe, Bahamas Faith Ministries
Topic: The Male and the Priority of the FamilyPastor Bill Winston, Bill Winston Ministries
Topic: Kingdom EconomicsBishop I.V. Hilliard, New Light Church, Houston
Topic: Faith Strategies for a Finan cial Makeover

 Artists include: Salvador, Dr. Marvin Sapp and Bishop Gary Oliver

 Free Health Station: ManPower will offer a free health station through MegaCare, the humanitarian organization affiliated with The Potter’s House. The health station will be available Friday, Aug. 27 from 11:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and will provide free screenings and health awareness. Prostate cancer survivors will be available to discuss their personal stories and provide prostate health information. In addition, medical and dental professionals will be on hand to offer general consultation and more.

Texas Offenders Reentry Initiative (TORI): In an effort to lower prison re-incarceration, and to inspire formerly incarcerated men as they transition from prison to society, TORI will sponsor 100 former inmates to attend the conference. The men will be encouraged to build their faith as they go through this transitional period of their lives.

When: ManPower will be held Thursday through Saturday, Aug. 26-28, 2010.
For session times and schedules, visit www.manpowerconference.org.

Where: Fort Worth Convention Center, Arena (1201 Houston St., Fort Worth, TX 76102)



Also Read: T.D. Jakes Teams up with Universal Music



T.D. Jakes Teams up with Universal Music



Prominent pastor and author Bishop T.D. Jakes has signed a distribution and marketing agreement between his imprint Dexterity Sounds and Universal Music Christian Group. The first project to be released under the new agreement will be Sacred Love Songs II, the much-anticipated follow-up to its nearly gold-selling 1999 predecessor that featured R&B diva Shirley Murdock and Marvin Sapp.

In addition, the team at Dexterity Sounds has begun work on the soundtrack for Jakes’ latest film titled Jumping the Broom. Produced by Jakes and Tracy E. Edmonds, the film tells the story of two families from totally different socioeconomic backgrounds who meet for the first time at a weekend wedding on Martha’s Vineyard.



OBAMA Says It’s Okay to Build a Muslim Mosque on Ground Zero



Obama says that its OK for Muslims to go ahead with plans to build a Muslim Mosque on ground zero.  Many Christians are appalled by the idea of a Mosque being built just a block from where planes crashed into New Yorks twin towers.  The video below shows the President’s press conference expressing his belief in freedom of religion.  What do you think?  Do you agree with the president? 




Win CoCo Brother’s New CD “Stand 2010”



THIS PRIZE HAS ALREADY BEEN WON! 
Subscribe to our Newsletter for more give-aways.  Also, you don’t want to miss next weeks giveaway!  “Stay on the Path”

Prize:
One winner will receive CoCo Brother’s new CD titled “Stand 2010” with songs by Israel Houghton, Joann Rosario Condrey, Tye Tribbett, James Fortune, Darwin Hobbs, BeBe Winans, Pastor Paula White, Canton Jones, Smokie Norful & More.


Exceptions
: See guidelines for eligibility.

Number of winners allowed: 1
Ends: The third email with the correct answer wins!

Question (Multiple Choice) : Where was CoCo Brother Born?
A). Atlanta, GA
B). Washington D.C.
C). Germany
D). Europe

Hint: Google it!

Guidelines: Must submit the correct answers by email to pathmagazine@hotmail.com, along with physical address and your email.  The winner will be contacted by email, and must respond back to our email to validate their reward.  We will then ship the CD to you within two weeks.  Have fun!



Al Harris, an N.F.L. Cornerback and Kevin Soto, an Ex-Convict Will Release a Christian Rap Album in August


POMPANO BEACH, Fla. — The cornerback steered his custom truck through familiar streets. The ex-convict sat shotgun and pointed out landmarks, this “drug hole,” that “crack house,” the best routes for eluding the police.

The cornerback is Al Harris. He wears No. 31 for the Green Bay Packers. The ex-convict is Kevin Soto. He wore No. 693430 in the Florida Department of Corrections.

They met 25 years ago, two boys from the same neighborhood north of Miami, bonded by break dancing and back flips and music above all else. That was before Harris went to the N.F.L., before Soto went to prison, before either man had heard of Christian rap.

“All these years, music kept coming up, kept bringing us together,” Harris, 35, said. “It always came back to music, no matter what we did, or where we went.”

In August, Harris and Soto will release a Christian rap album, the culmination of two lives that veered in opposite directions and converged again recently.

The cornerback wore shoulder pads for the first time at age 2, already certain his future was in football. The local boys’ club produced a stunning number of elite athletes, including the N.B.A. guard Eddie Jones and the seven players from Harris’s Blanche Ely High School teams who have played in the N.F.L.

The ex-convict preferred hip-hop. Soto owned one of the first portable stereos in the neighborhood, and he wrote rhymes about street life and Burger King commercials and rapped over the latest beats.

The boys rode the same bus to different schools, with Soto three years older. They engaged in enough adolescent mischief — lobbing batteries at buses, breaking car windows with rocks — that the bus driver separated them by at least two rows, they said.

Soto protected Harris as if he were his brother, wary of the dangers. Their hometown once consisted entirely of fields; beans, peppers, squash and tomatoes lined the horizon. Eventually it filled with families, lower and middle class.

Then came crack cocaine, which produced the usual byproducts: gangs, drugs and crime. The worst centered in Grace Apartments, at the dead end of a one-way street. Soto lived there for years, his favorite memory the night when police officers, clad in helmets and carrying shields, refused to advance beyond a certain point.

“When they tore down those projects, people were upset,” Soto said. “And I was one of them. To a juvenile delinquent, that was like Disney World.”

Even while their paths diverged, the cornerback kept tabs on his friend. Harris heard that Soto carried a gun and experimented with marijuana and cocaine. Harris’s father, Johnny, worked at the high school and noticed Soto driving stolen cars.

“Your boy, he’s heading down the wrong path,” he told his son.

Florida court records show what happened: felony arrests for aggravated assault with a firearm, battery, cocaine possession, robbery with a deadly weapon and marijuana distribution, all between 1990 and 1996.

Soto, 38, estimated he was picked up by the police more than 100 times. Eventually he served three terms in prison, where he said he felt more comfortable than outside.

He outlined his criminal past with detail but not emotion. He stashed drugs in lockers and went high to school, eventually being kicked out. He hid several stolen cars around the neighborhood. He escaped from juvenile detention. On and on it went.

A typical story: “The cops came to the house, and I ran out back. I jumped off a seven-story balcony and broke my kneecap. I have a full cast on my leg. I’m on the run from the police. My wife is tired. I can’t go back home. And I’m still going out trying to keep my drug spot going.”

The ex-convict felt abandoned and rejected by the father he never knew. In Johnny Harris, Soto saw the effect of parental influence. Johnny Harris never cared how many friends his son hosted. Their house sometimes filled with 20 children, but all under his watch.

The cornerback went to junior college, then boosted his N.F.L. stock at Texas A.&M.-Kingsville. Harris started 175 straight games with Philadelphia and Green Bay and became a Pro Bowl regular.

There were chance meetings with the ex-convict over the years, at gas stations or neighborhood haunts. Sometimes, Soto looked muscular, buffed by prison workouts.

After Harris spent 1997 on Tampa Bay’s practice squad, he visited a music studio back home, and recognized Soto’s voice inside the booth as Soto rapped with the lights off. Afterward, Harris asked Soto if he would consider a career in music.

But Soto was not ready. As recently as 2008, behind on child support, depressed and an alcoholic, Soto said he considered suicide. His wife, the mother of five of his six children, initiated a divorce.

What happened next made even Harris skeptical. On April 2, 2008, Soto went to church. He went again. And again. He fixed his marriage and became an usher. Now, the ex-convict counsels prisoners on Wednesday nights.

Eventually, Harris formed 31 Entertainment and teamed with Soto for this project. Last August, they started to make the album they long envisioned, with a twist.

Soto still rhymes about the life he lived, but he also speaks to consequences and incorporates his faith. What results is music at once gritty and introspective, a cross between traditional and Christian rap. Soto calls himself Proof — of God’s work, of redemption, he cautiously hopes.

“No one paints the whole picture,” Harris said. “Mothers who lost sons. Kids who lost their dads. All to live up to some lifestyle that isn’t worth it.”

Harris admitted that even friends were skeptical of the new venture. For years, he had tightened his inner circle, and then he went out and hired an ex-con.

Producers worried that Soto would return and rob their studio, Harris said. Others wondered if he had really changed.

“Al always believed in Kevin,” Johnny Harris said. “Sometimes, that’s what it takes.”

Soto recently finished a mix tape and distributed it to build buzz for the album they plan to release in August. Soto’s appendix burst during production, and less than one month later, Harris sustained a gruesome and rare knee injury that threatened his career and still requires rehabilitation. His future with the Packers appears somewhat uncertain, but he said he thought he would play this season.

The album reflects those struggles, along with their friendship, now 25 years strong. In recent discussions, Harris and Soto talked less about music and more about family, about faith, about men sharpening men.

“We’re going to change everything,” Harris said. “This is a movement. We’re saying, you can do all the right things and still be cool.”

Most Sundays during the off-season, the cornerback arrives late to the Word of Living God Ministries in his hometown. His longtime friend, the ex-convict, waits at the side entrance.

That, to Harris, is the essence of their story: friendship, faith and open doors.