The King James Boys release new bluegrass gospel single “Everything Heaven Won’t Be”

TEXAS GOSPEL VOLUNTEER

Some songs bring comfort, the kind that comes from a song that doesn’t pretend life is easy, but reminds you that none of it lasts forever. That’s the territory The King James Boys are working in with their new single, “Everything Heaven Won’t Be,” the latest cut to be pulled from their celebrated record Get A Transfer.

The band, lineup intact since their 1994 formation in upstate South Carolina, isn’t chasing trends. Randy Spencer handles guitar and lead vocals, his brother Cole Spencer rounds out the harmonies on bass, Curtis Lewis carries the banjo work, and Will Hart fills in mandolin and harmony. More than three decades in, they’ve built their reputation on a simple premise: stay rooted in traditional bluegrass, stay rooted in faith, and let the songs do the convincing.

This one was written by Daryl Mosley, a four-time Songwriter of the Year, who says he never expected to hear his own words come back to him in The King James Boys’ voice. “I’ve been a fan of The King James Boys for a long time, so I’m especially excited that a song I wrote has found its way into their repertoire,” Mosley says. “They absolutely made this song their own! I’m grateful they liked the song and their recording truly knocks it out of the park!”

The song itself plays a clever trick. It runs through the everyday jobs and worries that eat up people’s attention, the deadlines, the anxieties, the noise, and then quietly sets all of it against the backdrop of eternity, where none of that weight exists. It’s not a heavy-handed sermon; it’s more of an invitation, nudging listeners toward what Mosley and the band clearly believe sticks around: faith, relationships, and the long view.

“Everything Heaven Won’t Be” doesn’t arrive in a vacuum. It follows a run of singles from Get A Transfer that have already found an audience, including “Glory Ride,” “Ready and Waiting,” “The News That Never Changes,” “The Best Selling Book Of All Time,” and “Power of Prayer.” The album as a whole has quietly become one of the most decorated of the group’s career, landing multiple No. 1 spots on both the Roots Music Report Charts and the Bluegrass Today Gospel Weekly Airplay Chart. “The Best Selling Book Of All Time,” written by Christopher Burton, has gone further still, advancing to the second round of voting on the IBMA Awards ballot.

For a band thirty years into its run, that kind of momentum isn’t an accident. It’s the product of consistency: the same lineup, the same convictions, and a catalogue that keeps finding new listeners without ever needing to chase them.

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