The Day

Bishop Rance Allen, star of Gospel music, dies at 71

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New York (AP) — Gospel star Rance Allen, whose Rance Allen Group drew upon contempora­ry sounds for such 1970s hits as “Ain’t No Need of Crying” and “I Belong To You” and anticipate­d such crossover gospel artists as the Winans and Amy Grant, has died at age 71.

Allen’s wife, Ellen Allen, and manager Toby Jackson announced in a joint statement that Allen died early Saturday while recovering from a “medical procedure” at Heartland ProMedica in Sylvania, Ohio.

Allen was a longtime Toledo, Ohio, resident and most recently bishop for Church of God in Christ for the Michigan Northweste­rn Harvest Jurisdicti­on.

“I am so sorry to hear of the passing of Gospel Great, Bishop Rance Allen,” singer Gloria Gaynor tweeted. “He will surely enrich the heavenly choir now.”

A native of Monroe, Mich., Allen was a singer, songwriter and musician who formed his group with his brothers Tom and Steve. Another sibling, Esau, occasional­ly joined them. A promotion man for Stax Records heard them at a Detroit talent contest and they eventually signed with the label’s Gospel Truth imprint. Allen and his siblings were featured in the 1973 documentar­y “WattStax,” performing the funky “Lying On the Truth.”

Like the Winans and others later on, the Allens inverted the formula of soul performers like Ray Charles who used gospel sounds for secular themes. On “Just My Salvation,” the Allen Group reworked the Temptation­s melancholy love song “Just My Imaginatio­n” into an uptempo hymn.

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