The Associated Press speaks with Gospel legend Andrae Crouch recently. Andrae Crouch‘s songs have made him a gospel legend. He’s written dozens that he’s made classic hits, while others have been sung by the likes of Elvis Presley.
But for Crouch, the songwriting process isn’t actually about writing because of his dyslexia.
Crouch, whose signature songs include “Soon and Very Soon” and “My Tribute (To God Be the Glory),” usually starts off with drawings of how he thinks the song would sound before he begins to write lyrics. From there, he memorizes the images of his drawn characters and sometimes asks his twin sister, Sandra, to help him comprehend a difficult word, so the words do not “look like a bunch of hay stacks.”
“I memorized everything through sight, the shape of the word,” said Crouch, who also pastors at New Christ Memorial Church of God in Christ in San Fernando, Calif., which was founded by his parents. “Some things that I write, you’ll see a page with cartoon pictures or a drawing of a car — like a Ford — or a flag. I still do it on an occasion when a word is strange to me.”
Although dyslexia has been a lifelong struggle for Crouch, he thinks it played an integral role in his success.
“If I was sharp in every area, I might be too big headed or something,” he said in a recent interview.
Since he debuted in 1960, Crouch has collected eight Grammys. He also helped pioneer the burgeoning “Jesus Music” movement from the late 1960s and ’70s that initiated the spread of contemporary Christian music. He and his choir The Disciples have sung background for Madonna’s song “Like a Prayer” and he went on to arrange music for the 1985 film “The Color Purple” and the Disney’s “The Lion King” in 1994.
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