A new wave of artists is transcending traditional notions of Christian music, drawing young global audiences to faith-based rap, Afrobeats and R&B.
Often boosted by social media, many of them got their start with independent labels or by uploading self-made songs to streaming platforms. Now, bigger labels and streaming services are catching on.
People are looking for ''something soul-feeding, something forward-looking, positive,'' said James ''Trig'' Rosseau Sr., CEO of Holy Culture Radio. ''They find a sonic coziness, but then a message that is feeding that need.''
Interest in the music has proliferated since 2022, said representatives at Spotify and Amazon Music. However, breaking into the mainstream has been challenging for this group of mostly Black and/or African artists who are making music that can't always be defined and that hasn't been well-represented in the Christian music industry.
''Over the last two years, there's something happening momentum-wise, and it still feels underground, but now it's starting to get the visibility that it's deserving,'' said Angela Jollivette, who previously oversaw the Grammy Awards' Gospel/Contemporary Christian categories and runs Moonbaby Media, a music supervision and production company.
Christian rap's star rose around 2013 when rapper Lecrae Moore won his first Grammy. Today, newer artists are modernizing Christian hip-hop. Florida rappers Caleb Gordon and Alex Jean are among those leaning into rap's subgenres as well as Afrobeats, the popular blend of West African music styles. Nigerian Christian Afrobeats pioneer Limoblaze is now signed to Moore's Reach Records label, and Afrobeats artists such as CalledOut Music and ''The Voice UK'' winner Annatoria are on the rise.
''I think the world is now like, we can hear ourselves represented,'' Moore said. ''To me, that is a picture of the faith. We're a global faith.''
Dallas-based Ghanaian Canadian artist Ryan Ofei, a former member of Christian act Maverick City Music, pivoted to Afrobeats-R&B fusion, releasing his first solo album in 2024. He said the growing vein of Christian music is less ''preachy'' but still a ''massive evangelistic tool'' for nonchurchgoers.