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The LeFevres, or The Singing LeFevres, were an American Southern gospel singing group, active for nearly 50 years in the middle of the twentieth century. The LeFevres were a family from Smithville, Tennessee, and their singing group centered around brothers Urias (1910β1979) and Alphus (1912β1988). As children, they sang with their sister Maude until she married, then their sister Omega (Peggy) until she married; their career as an ensemble began in 1921. Both sang in quartets at the Bible Training School in Cleveland, Tennessee. Urias and Eva Mae Whittington (1917β2009) married in 1934; she became the pianist and alto in their newly formed trio. They moved to Charleston, South Carolina in 1937 and then Atlanta in 1939, where they would remain for the rest of their professional career, aside from a short stint in Philadelphia in the middle of the 1950s. They won slots performing on WGST radio as The LeFevre Trio, but as they added other family members and accompanists, they decided to refer to themselves simply as The LeFevres. Though they had previously recorded transcription discs, their first commercial recordings were made in the 1940s and released on Bibletone Records. Later releases were issued on Word Records and their own label, Sing Music Company. As the new medium of television became more popular, the group started appearing on local stations such as WAGA and traveled to other regional stations to appear on their programs as well. In the 1960s, the group's Gospe
Steppin' On The Clouds
Bibletone: The Lefevres Vol. 2
Bibletone: The Lefevres, Vol. 1
Close Harmony: A History Of Southern Gospel Music - Vol. 1 1920-1955
Southern Gospel Classics
Bibletone: Best of the Lefevres, Vol. 1
Keep On The Firing Line
Southern Gospel's Top 20:Songs Of The Century
The Lefevres
Southern Gospel Classics [Disc 1]
Scatter Sunshine
The Iconic Artists Of Southern Gospel Music